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ANDREW.... NATHAN.....
Where Nathan and Andrew are correct ...
+ Yes, some material has largely fallen out of use by most Protestants, things like the Prayer of Manasseh, A Letter of Jeremiah, 4 Maccabees, Psalm 151.... (and also The Didache and some "New Testament Apocrypha). Yes. Several of the books found in the "Apocrypha" section of Article 6 of the 1563 Thirty-Nine Articles of the Church of England (the books they insist must be legally required to be in all Bibles) WERE used and quoted by some Christians and found in some books marketed... some were in some lectionaries. Yup. Some still ARE in some lectionaries of the two largest Protestant families - Lutheran and Anglican... but admittedly neither use them as much as they once did. And Calvinists and American Evangelicals often don't use them (and sometimes don't even know about them). Correct. Today, "Evangelicals" still use lots of "extra" stuff but it's far more likely to be clips of TV shows or movies, modern inspirational stories, song lyrics, quotes from Max Lucado, etc.
Where Nathan and Andrew are wrong....
+ No, Christianity never declared the specific 15 books they insist upon as "IN" the set of Scriptures (or any others for that matter) ... and then contradicted itself to take some OUT. This "IN" and "OUT" action of "all Christians" of "the church" or "Christianity" is completely false, pure MYTH - neither ever happened. And that some unidentified Body ripped out 15 books from Article 6 of the 39 Articles of the singular Church of England is also false, pure myth. Article 6 has NEVER been deleted, edited or changed...
+ Wrong. Anyone can still buy Bibles with those specific 15 books IN them. No Ruling Body EVER took anything out. The Anglican Church and Martin Luther actually had MORE IN their tomes than the Catholic Councils at Florence or Trent, MORE than those tiny regional meetings they quote but whose authority they reject. And the claim that Christians don't read books if they are not included in a tome with the word "BIBLE" written on the cover is just absurd. I personally doubt that the pastors of our two friends prohibited them to read anything other than Calvin's 66 books.... or that any publishing house in the world is legally prohibited from including anything other than Calvin's 66 in any tome marketed with the word "BIBLE" on the cover. Lots of absurd claims on this. And if either wants a Bible WITH these 15 books IN them, they are EASILY available - in paperback hardback and leather covered editions, Amazon Prime can get it to them tomorrow with free shipping, they don't even have to leave their house. And I doubt again that anyone told them they can't read these 15 books (or any book for that matter).
+ No, just because they can find 2 or 3 or even 10 Christians with an opinion does NOT mean THEREFORE this is the official position of Christianity. You can probably find 10 Christians who believe in alien abduction or that the landing on the moon never happened,sorry, individual opinions may indicate a larger view but they do NOT indicate official or universal or authoritative actions. And it seems absurd to quote Cbristian persons and meetings they do NOT accept as authoritative or necessarily correct; since they don't consider them necessarily correct then it's silly to insist that we do (at least on one point they think so - that's agreeing with THEM, not the meeting).
It seems our brothers are very disturbed by something in their church or denomination. And perhaps they have a valid point. But that's THEIR church and/or denomination - NOT CHRISTIANITY and not anyone here. Perhaps they need to switch to Anglicanism or Lutheranism. Or just go to Amazon.com and buy an edition they like. They are easy to buy, cheap, and can be delivered to their door tomorrow: NO ONE has forbidden it. NO ONE has taken OUT anything.
My thoughts....
IMO, we can (and should) rejoice in an amazing tradition in Christianity that embraces 66 books (by our count) as our Holy Writings (inerrent, fully canonical, divinely inspired). Perhaps no definitive ruling has been made on this in nearly 2000 years because it has never been needed - this Tradition is so solid. I think that's wonderful and worthy of praise.
Yes, this Tradition has never been COMPLETELY perfect or universal.... but the differences appear to be in 7-20 or so books that seem to be of little consequence and perhaps not embraced as inerrent, fully canonical, divinely-inscripturated but simply as good and helpful, as DEUTEROcanonical. Christians are still VERY open of using supportive and helpful stuff that is not canonical - Catholics like to use historic stories and examples of the saints.... American Evangelicals love to use TV shows, movies, song lyrics and various illustrations. It seems not unusual for Bible tomes to include extra stuff - beautiful artwork in lettering and wonderful pictures, inspirational stories, prayers, historical stuff... and more recently: maps, concordances, notations, cross referencing (MOST of the stuff in the tome I use is NOT regarded as canonical). I think this is fine.... and yes, personally, I give special consideration to what some Christians regarded (and prehaps still do) as such.
Listen to any Evangelical sermon or Bible study are you are likely to hear ALL KINDS of things used, read, quoted - clips of TV shows or movies, snippets from some popular book, lyrics to a song, LOTS of stuff considered helpful, useful, inspirational. Doesn't mean ERGO Christianity declared all this to be canonical Scripture.
- Josiah
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