Origen
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I can't understand how he came up with that either.I'm not sure that's true,
I can't understand how he came up with that either.I'm not sure that's true,
I can't understand how he came up with that either.
Again, Rufinus gives us a list of divine scripture divided into two classes, the class of canon and the class of ecclesiastical, how did I come up with that??? I quoted Rufinus! Ask him!
The "other writings" he calls Apocrypha and says that they wouldn't have been read in churches.
I imagine you are very well versed in the works of Origen, who in one of his Homilies stated that the book of Wisdom comes from the divine Logos just after he himself quotes from it.
I'm not sure that's true, but pray tell, HOW does that confirm the point that these mysterious, unidentified books you call "apocrypha" are thus inerrant, fully/equally canonical, divinely-inscripturated words of God and there must be a law requiring all publishing houses to include this unidentified "them" into every tome with "BIBLE" appearing on the cover?
How does it confirm that "ALL Christians (100% of them) accepted this unidentified "them" as inerrant, fully/equally canonical, divinely inscripturated words of God?
Lost me....
so if that's true, pray tell, specifically HOW does that confirm the point that these mysterious, unidentified books you call "apocrypha" are thus inerrant, fully/equally canonical, divinely-inscripturated words of God and there must be a law requiring all publishing houses to include this unidentified "them" into every tome with "BIBLE" appearing on the cover?
How does it confirm that "ALL Christians (100% of them) accepted this unidentified "them" as inerrant, fully/equally canonical, divinely inscripturated words of God?
How does it confirm that all these (unidentified books) were IN the collection of books "EVERY CHRISTIAN" from 33 AD until the 16th Century accepted as fully canonical, all Christians having the identical same Bible of books accepted identically, until my unidentifed person gathered up all the Bibles and ripped out "those" books?
How does that confirm that Chrsitians are not allowed to read "those" books?
Now IF you are now taking the opposite position from Nathan.... and taking quite the Lutheran and Anglican position that there are books beyond Calvin's 66 that are worthy to be read, worthy to be placed with Scripture, worthy to be read in church and as texts for sermons, but NOT fully canonical (but rather DEUTEROcanonical) then fine. But what about all your earlier claims about how ALL CHRISTIANS accepted "them" as Scripture?
Daniel 8 prophesies Alexander the Great will defeat the Persians, and His Kingdom divide up into 4 sections. That’s fulfilled in 1 Maccabees chapter 1.
You said:Seriously?
The above comment makes no sense. No one said that as far as I can see.No Apocrypha books were ever allowed to be read in church
Andrew...
So Andrew, which is it? You posted that these unidentified books were not read in churches. NOW you say that one individual person said that "they" would not be read. Which is it?
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Yes, Rufinus didYou said:
The above comment makes no sense. No one said that as far as I can see.
Because Rufinus literally tells
the church fathers literally quote them as being Scripture
Andrew said:Christians were not allowed to quote from Apocrypha books, that's how we know that what they quoted from was only Scripture
You have misunderstood Rufinus. When Rufinus states: "The other writings they have named Apocrypha" he does not mean the Ecclesiastical book.Yes, Rufinus did
You have misunderstood Rufinus. When Rufinus states: "The other writings they have named Apocrypha" he does not mean the Ecclesiastical book.
"But it should be known that there are also other books which our fathers call not “Canonical” but “Ecclesiastical:” that is to say, Wisdom, called the Wisdom of Solomon, and another Wisdom, called the Wisdom of the Son of Sirach, which last-mentioned the Latins called by the general title Ecclesiasticus, designating not the author of the book, but the character of the writing. To the same class belong the Book of Tobit, and the Book of Judith, and the Books of the Maccabees. In the New Testament the little book which is called the Book of the Pastor of Hermas, [and that] which is called The Two Ways, or the Judgement of Peter; all of which they would have read in the Churches, but not appealed to for the confirmation of doctrine. The other writings they have named Apocrypha. These they would not have read in the Churches."
Rufinus mentions "the other writings." It is "the other writings they have named Apocrypha.” It is those books, not the ones he mentions, "they would not have read in the Churches."
I am not arguing for it or against it. I provide helpful information in order to correct misinformation and for those who make not be aware of the facts.
They were never mysterious and publishing houses did include them.
Because Rufinus literally tells us the traditional books handed down by the church fathers, the church fathers literally quote them as being Scripture and no early church father has been reported to have protested against "them"
Deja vu
because Christians were not allowed to quote from Apocrypha books, that's how we know that what they quoted from was only Scripture
Again you have indeed proven my point, Ecclesiastical books are not the Apocrypha but ARE of the SO CALLED "Apocrypha"!!You have misunderstood Rufinus. When Rufinus states: "The other writings they have named Apocrypha" he does not mean the Ecclesiastical book.
"But it should be known that there are also other books which our fathers call not “Canonical” but “Ecclesiastical:” that is to say, Wisdom, called the Wisdom of Solomon, and another Wisdom, called the Wisdom of the Son of Sirach, which last-mentioned the Latins called by the general title Ecclesiasticus, designating not the author of the book, but the character of the writing. To the same class belong the Book of Tobit, and the Book of Judith, and the Books of the Maccabees. In the New Testament the little book which is called the Book of the Pastor of Hermas, [and that] which is called The Two Ways, or the Judgement of Peter; all of which they would have read in the Churches, but not appealed to for the confirmation of doctrine. The other writings they have named Apocrypha. These they would not have read in the Churches."
Rufinus mentions "the other writings." It is "the other writings they have named Apocrypha.” It is those books, not the ones he mentions, "they would not have read in the Churches."
Read post 78
What "them?" Why won't you or Nathan ever LIST what books (and only those books) that ALL Bibles contained? The Didache? The Shepherd of Hermas? The Epistle of Barnabas? Why TO THIS DAY are there many different Bibles, why has there NEVER been one Bible among all Christians? Why do not two denominations on the planet in 2000 years that IN SOME WAY accept SOME books beyond the 66 do not agree on WHICH ones? If all Bibles have always been the same, why was there so much debate for FOUR CENTURIES on what is and is not Scripture, and what level of canonicity each has?
.... his opinion. One person. He is not "ALL Christians". He is not Christianity. And where does he give his own opinion (of ONE MAN) that no one EVER quoted from any book beyond Calvin's 66 (because I can tell you, Origen QUOTED - as "Scripture" - from at least 2 books you don't accept - at all)? Where does he give his individual opinion that First Maccabees is inerrant, fully/equally canonical, divinely-inscripturated words of God?
You look to Origen.... he literally quoted and used and specifically called "SCRIPTURE" the Epistle of Barnabas and the Shepherd of Hermas.... and he often used and quoted the Didache and Gospel of the Hebrews. Are they in your "them" that were in ALL BIBLES until the 16th Century? Or what about Clement of Alexandra who quoted, used and specially called "Scripture" the the Epistle of Barnabas and also the Revelation of Peter?
You can show every "Church Father" quoting from all the "them" you've never identified? All of them quoting all of "them" and all of them referring to all of "them" specifically as "Scripture?" Really? Is this more radical, baseless hyperbole?
1. Quote that law.
2. Then in your "them" must be the Shepherd of Hermas, the the Epistle of Barnabas, the Didache, the Gospel of the Hebrews, and the Revelation of Peter because we have very high level ECF specially quoting from these, using them, specifically calling these (and many others) by the title of "SCRIPTURE."
Read post 78
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Friend, READ Daniel 8. IF you bother to do it, you will discover (perhaps an epiphany for you) that Alexander the Great isn't even mentioned. IF you have read it, why speak falsehood about it?
But if you THINK, 3 things will be unavoidably clear:
1. YOU share an interpretation that Alexander's actions fulfill that prophecy (and I would not challenge that) but that's your INTERPRETATION, it's not what the Book of Daniel states. A bit of honesty.... telling the truth.... would really help your case.
2. It's possible to know this without anything from Frerst Maccabees. You ASSUME that there is only one place where Alexander's actions are recorded - and this (silly) assumption is just false. There are THOUSANDS of books that convey the actions of Alexander. Indeed the Greeks and Romans knew all this history well but never heard of First Maccabees.
3. You perpetuate a silly, absurd, baseless idea that if a book contains helpful history, THEREFORE it just has to be inerrant, fully/equally canonical, divinely-inscripturated words of God (Scripture). I strongly suspect that if you THOUGHT about that, even for a second, you too would realize what a laughable claim this is.
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Friend, READ Daniel 8. IF you bother to do it, you will discover (perhaps an epiphany for you) that Alexander the Great isn't even mentioned. IF you have read it, why speak falsehood about it?
But if you THINK, 3 things will be unavoidably clear:
1. YOU share an interpretation that Alexander's actions fulfill that prophecy (and I would not challenge that) but that's your INTERPRETATION, it's not what the Book of Daniel states. A bit of honesty.... telling the truth.... would really help your case.
2. It's possible to know this without anything from Frerst Maccabees. You ASSUME that there is only one place where Alexander's actions are recorded - and this (silly) assumption is just false. There are THOUSANDS of books that convey the actions of Alexander. Indeed the Greeks and Romans knew all this history well but never heard of First Maccabees.
3. You perpetuate a silly, absurd, baseless idea that if a book contains helpful history, THEREFORE it just has to be inerrant, fully/equally canonical, divinely-inscripturated words of God (Scripture). I strongly suspect that if you THOUGHT about that, even for a second, you too would realize what a laughable claim this is.
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I NEVER claimed they were. Therefore your point is moot. Moreover Rufinus is only one person and not everyone agreed with him.Again you have indeed proven my point, Ecclesiastical books are not the Apocrypha but ARE of the SO CALLED "Apocrypha"!!
Some thought they were others did not. For example your source Rufinus did not and clearly says just that.The books of Maccabees are confirmed Holy Scripture
You are so sad.Is that because you’re too scared to have an opinion, or because you’re too scared to share your opinion?