why should I accept your claim that they don’t belong
Do you actually READ posts? Do you pay any attention WHATSOEVER to the words? Do you even notice them?
I said - repeatedly, clearly, literally, verbatim, in real black and white words - that I do NOT claim to have ANY authority to add or delete ANYTHING from any tome or collection.
NOR DO YOU. Nor does any Catholic pope or Early Church Father or any denomination gathering of the RCC or any other, nor Martin Luther or John Calvin, nor any meeting of any diocese or any synod.... and NOT YOU.
Brother, NO pan-Christian "council" has decided ANYTHING in this regard, didn't even voice an opinion or question regarding it. There have been 4-7 such meetings in history and NONE of them even mentioned a word about what is and is not canonical.
Now, you seem to be confused by the word "council" and
you seem to have this weird, incredible, very silly idea that if the word "council" is used, it MUST be pan-Christians (Ecumenical) and must be binding and authoritative on all believers. Friend, every month, on the first Tuesday of the month, my little parish has a "CHURCH COUNCIL" meeting. It's called a "CHURCH COUNCIL." Like million of other churches, we have a CHURCH COUNCIL meeting every month. We call it our CHURCH COUNCIL. Last month, we decided to get a new photocopier. Now, your absurd, beyond laughable, "logic" is THEREFORE every congregation until Jesus returns is mandated to get a new photocopier. How absurd! Friend, "council" just means "meeting." "Church council" just means a meeting of a church. You forget to ask, "WHICH church?" Not every meeting with the title of "church council" is pan-Christian. Not every meeting with the title of "church council" is made up of all Christian (or all bishops), Not every meeting with the title of "church council" is binding on all Christians for all times. Brother. there was a church council to buy a new photocopier.... are you therefore buying a new photocopier?
These were tiny, REGIONAL synods, each of a given, individual, WESTERN, Latin, diocese. NOT pan-Christian, NOT ecumenical. And you don't accept them! You are not Catholic! Since you yourself don't accept the thousands upon thousands of Catholic meetings as BINDING on YOU, why do you insist everyone else accepts them as inerrant and binding.... everyone BUT YOU?
Let's look at these:
The Council of Leodicea. A diocese meeting, a synod, in 363 for the clergy in an area of Lydia and Phrygia. Although little is known for sure about this, it seems to have decided that "privately written psalms" are not to be in the Lectionary, but only the canonical books. Some claim those books were listed but that's disputed and seems unsubstantiated. No one outside that diocese mentioned this meeting, it seems none outside that area knew about it (and certainly didn't follow it). You reject such meetings, you don't abide by them.
The Council of Hippo. Also just a local synod, it was held in 393, this is even more obscure. But in the 16th Century, the Catholic Church claimed that it in some way affirmed the list of books that Athanasius wrote about. You reject such meetings, you don't abide by them.
The Third Council of Carthage. The best known of the 3 "forgotten" little regional meetings for one reason: Augustine participated and wrote about it. It resolves that nothing "beyond the canonical Scriptures" is to be read in the churches of that diocese. The issue was the LECTIONARY in that diocese, not some official declaration of what is and is not Scripture. You reject such meetings, you don't abide by them.
For centuries, there is little evidence that Christians of the East or West knew about these meetings - or cared - or followed their decisions. There were different acceptances of what is Scripture WELL into the Fifth Century and into the Eighth. The Apostolic C0onstitutions held to a very different set of books. It wasn't until 740 that we have evidence that Hebrews and the Revelation of John were universally accepted (athough in some cases NOT allowed in Lectionaries for several more centuries!). And of course, many Catholic tomes INCLUDED a 28th NT book, the Epistle to the Leodiceans (common in Luther's time). And to this day, the Eastern Orthodox Church as a DIFFERENT canon than any other.... the Greek Orthodox Church has a DIFFERENT canon than any other... the Syrian Orthodox Church has a DIFFERENT canon than any other... the Coptic Orthodox Church has a DIFFERNT canon than any other... the Anglican Church has a DIFFERENT canon than any other. IF your claim that one of these forgotten, obsure, regional synods DECLARED the canon in some final, definitive, offical way - then why didn't and don't anyone know that? Why have we not since then all had the SAME, IDENTICAL canon? In truth, few (if any) outside that area knew a thing about these meetings - for one simple reason, it didn't concern them. No, brother, there has been NO official, formal declaration of all Chritianity as to the canon. That's a Roman Catholic MYTH invented in the 16th Century to try to support the UNIQUE Canon of that one, singular denomination, a canon NONE other had EVER agreed with... one even the RCC often ignored (example: Epistle of the Leodiceans).
Now, back to your point: One of the Maccabee books MUST be the inerrant, canonical, divinely-inscripturated words of God BECAUSE it's one of the books that records an historical event which Jews even today celebrate.
YES, Jesus and all Jews today celebrate an event which many books (including at least one of the books with "Maccabees" in the moniker) record. Yup.
No one doubts that. I had a Jewish friend in college who celebrated that event. Now, How does the reality that many Jews celebrate an event PROVE that every history book that mentions that event
THEREFORE must be The inerrant, canonical, divinely-inscripturated words of God (Scripture) and must be seen as such by Christians and in every tome with "BIBLE' on the cover? How does the reality that Jesus and my friend David celebrate the event prove that books that speak of that event MUST therefore be canon Scripture? Brother, it seems to me that an historical event can be true WITHOUT it being mandated that all accept any book that mentions it as therefore be accepted as the inerrant, canonical, divinely-inscripturated words of God, and it being mandated to be in every tome with "BIBLE" written on the cover or used by Jews or Christians.
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