Ecclesiasticals VS Canonical

Andrew

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It's ridiculous to repeal the consensus of the whole church through most of its history because two men--Origin, who was anathematized, and Rufinus, who was neither a theologian nor a bishop but was influenced by Origin, held some contrary views in their day.
Contrary?? Prove it, there are over 300 quotes from 1rst 2nd and 3rd Christians that beg the differ
 

Origen

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there are over 300 quotes from 1rst 2nd and 3rd Christians that beg the differ
I have a question please. What is your source for the above claim?
 
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Albion

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Contrary?? Prove it, there are over 300 quotes from 1rst 2nd and 3rd Christians that beg the differ
That would be a silly exercise. Yes, in the first several centuries of Christian history there were many different views on almost everything from the nature of God to the books of Scripture to church membership and on and on. It is estimated that there were over 80 different Christian denominations in the first century.

But the Church as a whole settled almost all of those disagreements, and that settlement held for centuries. To a great extent it still does. But to say now, "Hey, there were these two guys, all but forgotten today, who disagreed" just doesn't matter. There were a few people who disagreed on just about everything. So of course you are free to follow whatever doctrinal variation appeals to you, even the long-dead ones, but that's all this is.
 

Josiah

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It's ridiculous to repeal the consensus of the whole church through most of its history because two men--Origin, who was anathematized, and Rufinus, who was neither a theologian nor a bishop but was influenced by Origin, held some contrary views in their day.


Albion, Andrew...


I think what Andrew our brother is proving is that there seems to have been quite a lot of FLUIDITY on this topic... different opinions, even among esteemed Christian leaders.

And what makes it all very difficult is that we KNOW very little about the Early Church (33-311 AD) and what was held universally. Perhaps the most incorrect and misleading thing posted in all these threads about the "Deutercanonical" and "apocrypha" books is our brothers STRESS (twice now) of what "ALL" Christians held. We don't even have a guess on how many Christians there were during this period! And NOTHING about what they all believed... In part because very little of what they wrote about the Christian faith survived. We have a couple of dozen (note that's FAR from "ALL") who were esteemed and whose writings were quoted... but several of those came to be seen as heretics. My (admittedly very limited) study of the ECF taught me that this was a chaotic time, with much diversity. We DO see some things very early (say in the Didache) such as infant baptism, real presence in the Eucharist but a lot of controversy. This seems to be a characteristic of the Early Church. Much of what we know about early Christian thinking is DEBATES among themselves, someone writing to refute what another is saying.


On THIS topic, that's true for the NT. My class stressed that very early, it SEEMS (by the lack of KNOWN debate) is that 20 books were accepted (well, AS FAR AS WE CAN KNOW FROM WHAT VERY LITTLE WE HAVE) : The 4 Gospels, Acts, Paul's 13 letters, 1 Peter, 1 John. Now, were some or all of these debated? Maybe.... we have no EVIDENCE of that. BUT there were others that WERE debated, where we have evidence of rejection (not by "unbelieving Jews" as Nathan insists) by esteemed Christian leaders: Hebrews, 2 Peter, 2-3 John, James, Jude, Revelation of John, Epistle of Barnabas, the Shepherd of Hermas, the Didache and the Gospel of Hebrews (and perhaps a few others). EVENTUALLY (from what little evidence exists) 7 of these 11 + ceased to be disputed (we have no clue why!!!!!) and the others simply were mentioned less and less (less and less is said of them). But it took three hundred years! And even after that, the Eastern Churches often didn't include Revelation in the Lectionary and these seven became known as "Antilegomena" (spoken against) and were considered LESS canonical than the 20. WHY these 27? No one knows...for one very simple reason: no one said. At least in any document that survived. A consensus of sorts..... but it took 400 years and we have no clue how or why this consensus formed (but I'll bet Nathan is wrong about unbelieving Jews). Note: there was NEVER any official ecumenical decision on this.... no Ecumenical Church Council, nothing official, nothing formal, nothing authoritative. A pretty solid consensus around 20.... a lesser one around another 7.... and this resulted in a "two-layer" canon - 20 higher ("homologomenia" - agreed upon), 7 lesser. This distinction was lost after the Reformation, for the past 500 years, Christianity has come to accept all 27 equally, a fairly new view.


It's even more true for the OT. For one very, very simple reason: We have NOTHING outside the OT itself, no "Early Jewish Fathers", no writings about debates on this topic (or any other), NOTHING until shortly become the time of Christ (a few very esteemed rabbis arose but again, not until close to the time of Christ, and they didn't breach the topic of Scripture). WE JUST DON"T KNOW. There are names of other books mentioned in the OT but were THEY ever considered Scripture? We don't know. Surely, the two tablets written by God were seen so.... but the rest is clouded in history. It is often thought that the "Books of Moses" were widely if not universally accepted (the Sadducees and Pharisees both insisted on this acceptance) but the Prophets/Histories and the Wisdom Literature is just unknown. Were they READ? Well.... the LXX certainly suggests they were widely used by then.... and we find them in the Dead Sea Scrolls (both quite late) but what was there status? Were they considered inerrant? Fully/equally canonical with the Ten Commandments or Books of Moses? We have no evidence, no voices - until nearly the time of Jesus. And what about things like Psalm 151 or 152 or 153? What about the books the Syrian and Coptic Orthodox have had in their OT for longer than the RCC canon has existed, far more than Trent's 7? What about those the Greek Orthodox Church has that the RCC does not? SOME of them were found in the LXX (I don't think any in the Dead Sea Scrolls but I'm not sure about that) but we actually find little use of these among JEWS.... and the Council of Jamnia in 90 AD doesn't mention any of these, perhaps suggesting that they were not accepted as fully canonical (at least at that point but more likely, never were). For JEWS, the status of these books seems to have been not great.... and they fell from use. A member of our community has supplied some significant material about this here: O.T. Canon Lists IMO, Nathan's point that Christ-hating Jews ripped them out because they so clearly spoke of Jesus is just... well.... beyond absurd. First of all, they RARELY do and secondly, why not rip out Isaiah and the Psalms - BY FAR the most quoted OT books by early Christians. No..... it ssems these books not mentioned at Jamnia were probably never fully accepted.... no Jew disputed Jamnia, no promenant Jew arose to defend Psalm 151 or any other. But what about Christians? Well..... it seems SOME had SOME embrace..... which ones? No two denominations agree on that.... and How so? There's lots of debate on that, too. I think there is sound reason to hold to Luther's view (and that of the Anglican Church) that what has been held as DEUTEROcanonical (lesser, secondary, under) are just that.... both Luther and the Anglican Church held these are historic, they are helpful and inspirational, Luther INCLUDED 8 in his translation, the Anglican Church INCLUDED even more than that - both MORE than the modern Catholic Church. DEUTEROcanonical books included in the Lectionary of Lutherans and Anglicans, folks encouraged to read them. Used as sermon texts, Luther lectured on them. But NOT to be used in a full canonical manner.... as the Rule for dogma... they can be used to support CANONICAL books but not on their own. OF course, Luther and Anglicanism also agrees that we can use the 3 Ecumenical Creeds and the 7 Ecumenical Councils this way, too.



There is a Catholic MYTH that that singular, individual (and exclusive) denomination knew (directly from the Apostles) what Books are and are not Scripture.... they gave it the list.... and eventually (perhaps in the 16th Century) that denomination finally told the rest of the world. This is pure myth. MUCH of the debate on all this was from men that church calls "Early Church Fathers" and there was no univeral statement on that until the Council of Florence in the 15th Century (and that not authoritative - thus the need to do so at Trent in the 16th Century). And if this was known from ancient times by all Christians (because the Apostles said so) then why does the RCC agree with NONE on this topic? Every other church on the planet disagrees with it on this.

There is a Evangelical MYTH (specially in the USA) that essentially, God sent out this mass email in 33 AD to all Christians, telling them exactly what Books are and are not Scripture and that all these are equally canonical. So all Christians had the exact same set of books, embraced in exactly the same way (no debate, no controversy). UNTIL the Council of Trent when the Catholic Church added 7 books in order to support its wrong teachngs according to Sola Scriptura. This too is pure myth. Now, Nathan's Myth is a truly strange variation on this: that this email included a bunch of books beyond Calvin's 66 (he just will not tell us WHICH books)... so 100% of Christians had the same set of books, embraced equally, no debate, no controversy, all identical Bibles embraced and used identically (he just won't tell us what books all these contained) until the 16th Century when some unidentified person gathered up all the pew Bibles in Western Europe and ripped out these books (he won't identify) - and no one seemed to notice until he did (evidently recently). This is just PURE MYTH. Reality isn't always as neat or nice as we'd like.




My half cent.



- Josiah



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Josiah

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Following up on post 24...



Here's MY Take. I don't know HOW inspiration happened (I consider it miracle). I don't know HOW canonicity happened (WAY too little evidence). And I know there was a LOT of writings around (some even Gnostic). But Jesus promised to send the Holy Spirit upon the church (no promise that He would do that for just John Calvin or just the RCC or Nathan or me), US - all of us. And while it took a long time.... and perhaps was very messy and rather chaotic.... I think the Holy Spirit was working. 27 NT books and 39-46 or so OT books seem to have floated to the top... while others rather disappeared. I think God was behind that. BUT two things are important to keep in mind:

1 This was TRADITION. Never anything official or formal or authoritative.... no church councils, no church decisions. I know this really bothers American Evangelicals who are taught that Tradition is a nasty word and to be rejected, but that's EXACTLY what we have here. No mass emails from God. No Ecumenical Ruling. And it was messy, even chaotic.... a growing, informal consensus (as Tradition tends to be) - not perfect, not universal (but pretty close, LOL)

2. I tend to agree with the position of Luther (NEVER officially adopted by Lutheranism - which is silent on this topic), that DEUTEROcanonical books should be considered Deuterocanonical - useful, inspirational, informational... read them, include them in the lectionary if you desire, use as sermon text if you desire.... Luther INCLUDED 8 of them in his translation (one MORE than modern Catholics do), Anglicanism many more than that in its 39 Articles.... but DEUTEROcanonical books are not to be confused with canonical books. And because they are not canonical, IMO, it probably doesn't matter A LOT exactly what books are so considered. Which perhaps is why none of this seems to have mattered until Trent when the RCC needed to use one of them canonically.




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Origen

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The Ante-Nicene Church Fathers volumes 1-7
That does not answer my question.

You said:
there are over 300 quotes from 1rst 2nd and 3rd Christians that beg the differ
Where in the Ante-Nicene Church Fathers does it actually state there are over 300 quotes from the 1, 2, and 3 century? Where exactly is that information found in your source? Volume and page number please?
 

Andrew

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That does not answer my question.

You said:

Where in the Ante-Nicene Church Fathers does it actually state there are over 300 quotes from the 1, 2, and 3 century? Where exactly is that information found in your source? Volume and page number please?
David Bercot provides many quotes in his lectures on the volumes but here is a 3700 hour project done by someone on the internet


and here you can fact check

 

Origen

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David Bercot provides many quotes in his lectures on the volumes but here is a 3700 hour project done by someone on the internet


and here you can fact check

The site you provide no where states there are over 300 quotes from the 1, 2, and 3 century.

Do you have a source which can verify your specific claim there are over 300 quotes from the 1, 2, and 3 century?
 

Andrew

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This Catholic apologists' video on Rufinus was made after I posted my understanding of his canonical list (in the thread where you fist introduced me to his work) and actually came up with the exact understanding I had, I found that delightful. The second video is on Origins homilies on psalms where he quotes the book of Wisdom as coming from the LOGOS... which is interesting



 

Andrew

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The site you provide no where states there are over 300 quotes from the 1, 2, and 3 century.

Do you have a source which can verify your specific claim there are over 300 quotes from the 1, 2, and 3 century?
I am sure you read that whole website in just a few minutes.

Anyway help yourself, go watch David Bercots videos on the (Apocrypha:Fact vs Myth) if you want to hear someones voice say "300+ quotes". I never claimed that the volumes actually say the line "300+ quotes", that wouldn't make sense for an ante Nicene father to even state that.

Read the volumes yourself, sorry Im not doing what took a guy 3700 hours to accomplish.
 

Origen

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I am sure you read that whole website in just a few minutes.
I know how to do a search.

I never claimed that the volumes actually say the line "300+ quotes", that wouldn't make sense for an ante Nicene father to even state that.
Then please explain how you came up with the figure over 300 quotes?
 

Andrew

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I know how to do a search.


Then please explain how you came up with the figure over 300 quotes?
David Bercot, or you can count the quotes from that website I showed you, or you can take a copy of the "apocrypha" and compare it to every quote from the Ante Nicene fathers and put a check mark next to every quote from the "Apocrypha" and then add those up.
You add the more recent discovery of Origens homilies on psalms to that as well, for me personally I haven't read every single quote yet, that alone would take hours but I have read plenty, well over a hundred easily, I honestly forget sometimes if I read the same one twice or not lol

Anyway have fun with that.

For the "300+ quote" claim, here you go

 

Origen

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David Bercot, or you can count the quotes from that website I showed you, or you can take a copy of the "apocrypha" and compare it to every quote from the Ante Nicene fathers and put a check mark next to every quote from the "Apocrypha" and then add those up.
You add the more recent discovery of Origens homilies on psalms to that as well, for me personally I haven't read every single quote yet, that alone would take hours but I have read plenty, well over a hundred easily, I honestly forget sometimes if I read the same one twice or not lol
Shouldn't you be the one to count them after all you make the claim? I don't think it is too much to ask someone to provide sources and verification for their claims.
 

Andrew

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Shouldn't you be the one to count them after all you make the claim? I don't think it is too much to ask someone to provide sources and verification for their claims.
Yeah I just don't have 3700 hours to spare sorry
 

Andrew

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The 300+ might include the apocrypha plus the LXX in general, both which are in error right? Let me get back with you in a few years about this

Edit: No just from the Apocrypha
 

Origen

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Yeah I just don't have 3700 hours to spare sorry
Then just don't make a claim for which you do not have the evidence or a source.
 

Andrew

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Andrew

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Then just don't make a claim for which you do not have the evidence or a source.
The source is in the VOLUMES and I gave you all the means necessary but I WILL not jot down EVERY SINGLE CITATION for YOU.
I have read enough quotes, God knows how many, to convince me its pretty much near that number.
 

Origen

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The source is in the VOLUMES and I gave you all the means necessary but I WILL not jot down EVERY SINGLE CITATION for YOU.
I have read enough quotes, God knows how many, to convince me its pretty much near that number.
Have you check them all?
 
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