The American Bible Society
Is not Christianity. Is not "every Christian." Is not "all the ante-nicean fathers." Is not Protestantism. Is not even a single denomination.
And this "society" did NOT rip out anything, they were not legally mandated to do anything by any government or denomination. It CHOSE to PUBLISH and SELL a tome that didn't have all the books listed in Article 6 of the 39 Articles of the Church of England in it. Can you buy and read and use and quote from a tome with BIBLE written on the cover that HAS in it all the books listed in Article 6 and only those books? YES.
If one "bible society" published a book with only 66 books in it, that does NOT substantiate ANY of the claims you and Nathan have made.... it doesn't prove that Christianity put some unidentifed "THEM" into the Bible and then Protestantism ripped this same "them" out. It doesn't prove that if a book was written in Hebrew it's therefore canonical and inerrant and normative. It doesn't prove any of the Jewish or Assembly of God conspiracies . It doesn't prove that all Christians had the exact same Bible since some unstated year (or even that they all do now). It doesn't prove that if some unnamed person quoted from a book, ergo Christianity declared it to be fully canonical, inerrant, divinely inspired. It proves NOTHING except what I've stated to you (for what, a couple of YEARS?) that publishing houses and book stores are able to print and sell what they want - there are no mandates or prohibitions here. That's the only thing you've proven.
Protestants rejected the "Apocrypha" as canon but never protested that be removed from their BIBLES!
Well, most. But no one here disagrees with that.
But friend, how does that prove that Christianity or Judaism or Protestantism "RIPPED OUT" books from the Bible? That some unidentified Ruling Body forbids any book to be read or published? All those Jewish conspiracies you and Nathan have pointed to? That all Christians always accepted the specific books listed in the Anglican 39 Articles as canonical, inerrant, "equal" (a word often used) Scripture? How does it prove that the majority of ECF considered that exact list of books to be canonical and Scripture?
Now, SURE, there were INDIVIDUALS who liked and disliked these books....and publishing houses who chose to not include them. But how does that prove any of your claims?
Friend, ALL those (and DOZENS MORE) of books at times by somewhere were considered good to read but not canonical. And they ALL are available to read, to use, to quote. NO ONE is forbidden to do so. Is there some international law mandating that books labeled "BIBLE" must legally contain all of them? No. That forbids them? No.4,
You NOW seem to admit these were NEVER put "in" the Bible (except as NON-canonical, just USEFUL). Frankly, I give them more "credit" than you do, I regard them as DEUTEROcanonical. Nathan finally admitted this too - those synods he constantly pointed to never put anything in anything, they were not binding, not ecumenical, NOT "Christianity", NOT "every Christian" NOT "most Christians" NOT "all ante nicean fathers." Just 3 regional, non-binding synods of a denomination he (and you) reject.
Okay, so FINALLY, you withdraw your entire "PUT IN" point. Good, it was baseless. Now you seem to be pushing away from your "Ripped out" claim. Yes, a couple of Bible societies chose not to include them in tomes it sold - but neither of them is Christianity or all Christians or Protestantism. And NEITHER of these demanded that no one read, use or quote from those not-included books. You CAN and COULD buy a tome WITH Luther's apocrypha, with the Church of England's apocrypha, with the modern Post-Trent RCC's list, with the Greek Orthodox list, with the Coptic Orthodox list. You can even read, use and quote from Psalm 152, from the Didache, from the Revelation of Peter, from the Shepherd of Hermas, from First Clement, etc., etc., etc., etc. Your whole "PUT IN" and "RIPPED OUT" claim is... well....
IF.... IF.... you and your friend had written, "There are a number of books not included in the 66 always found in our Bibles today that many Christians used, read, quoted and found inspirational, books - but not canonical, inerrant or inspired " well, there would have been no debate here (well, maybe MoreCoffee, LOL) and all your posts on this subject would have been unnecessary (and not glaringly false or at least baseless). Even if you had ENCOURAGED us to read them, you would just be echoing Lutheranism and Anglicanism - together about half of Proestantism. Many of us would have agreed! And noted readings from some of them appear in many Anglican and Lutheran lectionaries. What FILLED countless threads of you and Nathan were the wild, false and baseless claims, the accusations, the conspiracy theories, the countless times you proved that you yourself reject your own apologetics on this.
Again...
I STILL don't have a clue what your "beef" is. Unlike Nathan (whom it seems you echo), you don't consistently argue that ANY book (perhaps beyond the 66) is canonical or normative or inerrant or divinely-inscripturated, ONLY that some (the exact list in Article 6 of the Church of England's 39 Articles) were USED by some Christians - a point NONE here have challenged or disagreed with. So what's your beef? Explain this "bee in your bonnet" (as my mother would put it).
Now, Nathan just seems MAD that evidently his Assembly of God pastor intentionally kept him ignorant of these books so that he could not understand some verse in Hebrews. Okay. He's offered no substantiation for this but I have no reason to doubt the claim. But then his beef is with his pastor - not Protestantism, not Christianity, and with no one here. IMO, he is simply misapplying his anger.
Friend, if you want to buy a KJV translation WITH all the books mentioned in Article 6 of the 39 Articles, you may. NO ONE is forbidding such. They are easily available. I've given you a link where you can purchase such online - in paperback or hardbound. Nathan can buy one too. There is no law anywhere (that you've referenced) that forbids or commands what publishing houses and book stores MUST have and MUST exclude from any tome with the word "BIBLE" on the cover. As I've explained, my "BIBLE" has 2780 pages in it, with over 300 things listed in the Table of Contents. The publishing company and book store violated no laws. What's your "beef" in this?
And if you want to read, use, quote from Psalm 151 or 152 or 153.... from the Epistle of Barnabas or the Didache or the Revelation of Peter or the First Epistle of Clement, YOU CAN. YOU MAY. Easy.
No one is forbidding it. THE ISSUE IS CANONICITY - whether such is broadly accepted in Christianity (since no later than 200 AD) as FULLY CANONICAL (to be used to form and norm dogma), inerrant, inscripturated words of God. You MAY read them, use them, quote them - you are ENCOURAGED in some cases to do so!! Luther ENCOURAGED it. The Church of England ENCOURAGED it. I'm sorry if YOUR pastor does not but that's an issue with your pastor - not Christianity, not Protestantism, not me, not anyone here (Or anyone known to anyone here). True - a LOT of Christians have not and do not consider any beyond the 66 to be EQUAL to the 66 in every way but I know of none who insist that you are forbidden to know of them, can't read them, can't use them, can't quote from them.
You've been following Nathan around on this for a LONG TIME now. It seems to be your over-riding passion above all else. And I fail to understand why or even what. Nathan - YES, he's mad (just at the wrong persons). But YOU?
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