What I’m saying is that people should look at what the early church said
It said nothing on this. We know that you have CLAIMED very much about what "The Church" and "The Apostles" and "Christianity" said on this, but there's a reason why you've so consistently refused to quote it doing so. It didn't say a THING about what books are and are not inerrant, canonical, inscripturated words of God... and not a word about what law should be enacted mandating what printers, publishing houses, Bible soceities, and book stores may or may not have in tomes with the word BIBLE on the cover.
True, you can find 2 or 3 (maybe even more) individual, singular Christian people giving their view... but no one person (or 2 or 3 persons) IS "The Church" or "Christianity". And you've not yet quoted even one Apostle saying anything at all about this.
NathanH83 said:
what the church councils said
None said anything on this.
Yes, you can find three tiny, obscure, regional, diocesan meetings that did say SOMETHING related to this, but as you have already admit, these were not meetings of The Church, these were not ecumenical meetings. Indeed, there's no evidence that most churches at the time were even aware of them (and if so, paid any attention to them). It's generally accepted that there were 7 Ecumenical Councils.... virtually all Christians embraced the first 3, less the last 4 - but these are the only times in history that it can even remotely be claimed that "The Church" spoke (and that's pushing it!) and at NONE of them was there any statement about any books or any mandated international law about what books labled "BIBLE" must and must not contain between the covers.
NathanH83 said:
Ignatius knew John. Polycarp knew John. And these guys quote the Apocrypha. Clement quotes Judith. John and Polycarp quote Tobit.
1. None of these is The Church.
2. None of these is an Ecumenical Council.
3. None of these is an Apostle.
4. None of these states that some list are all inerrant, canonical, inspired words of God equal to all the rest and that printers, publishers and book sellers must be forbidden to including anything in Bibles other than this list of books.
Origen lists 7 books together - in the same category - Hebrews, 2 Peter, 2 & 3 John, James, Jude, The Epistle of Barnabas, The Shepherd of Hermas, the Didache and The Gospel of the Hebrews. He specifically states that Barnabas and Hermas are "Scripture" and "Catholic epistles. So, since your rubric is that if some person had a VIEW about what is "Scripture" then that proves The Apostles said that, The Church declared that - then why aren't you arguing for Barnabas, Hermas, Didache and the Gospel of the Hebrews?
So people should look at this evidence and make up their own minds what to believe.
We can if you presented any. So far, all we have is a long, long, long list of CLAIMS - all baseless, all unsubstantiated.
why the earliest of church authorities quoted them as scripture,
You've presented NOTHING that indicates that the reason some writing is quoted is because The Church declared it to be inerrant, canonical, inscripturated words of God. They quoted from each other A LOT - does that mean their writings are also Scripture because the Apostles all said so, because The Church declared so? Early Christians also quoted from philosophers (as Paul himself does in Scripture). In your church, if your pastor quotes from some book or newspaper or the lyrics of a hymn or even from some some TV show or movie, does that prove ERGOall that is thus inerrant, canonical, inspired Scripture equal to all the rest, obviously all 12-14 Apostles believed so, The Church declared it so? Obviously not.
Now, I'll yield that you can find a FEW (a very tiny number) of cases where some singular, individual person quotes something and suggests such is Scripture. This only proves that what is and is not Scripture was not fixed at the time, it does not prove that all 12-14 Apostles sent out this email to all Christians saying so... that The Church at one of its Seven Ecumenical Councils declared it so .. it shows that ONE MAN felt it was Scripture. Sorry, but one man is not The Apostles, not The Church, not an Ecumenical Council.
So it’s dishonest to say that I’m just willy nilly adding books to the Bible
I think what you are doing is "willy nilly" making claims that you won't support as true, that you don't substantiate. And I think you are making huge, olympic, amazing, remarkable LEAPS that are entirely unsubstantiated.
I’m only agreeing with what really church leaders said belongs in the Bible.
It might help if you quoted them.... maybe just 12, only 12, just a dozen. NONE Apostles. NONE the Church. NONE an Ecumenical Council. I'll even permit you to forget you said "Church Leaders." Just 12. Just 12 saying: "Here's the complete list of all books that are inerrant, canonical, inspired books equal to all the rest, no others are" Just 12. Only 12. That would substantiate NOTHING about Christianity but would show 12 saying what you claim they did.
Go for it.
We all know you won't. And why.
Now,
IF... IF... IF you can Andy said, "Look, for much of Christian history, some Christians have read and used several books beyond "the 66" even holding them in great esteem and at times listing them with Scripture and including them in biblical tomes... and at times some of these are often seen (even today) as very useful, helpful, informational and inspirational, at times included in lectionaries and to support teachings. And it would be good if today we were more often encouraged to read these." IF, IF, IF you had said THAT, most here at CH would have said "AMEN!" I could have noted how Luther so often quoted from 8 of them and how he included those in his translation, how Lutherans have entire lectionaries that fully embrace them and conduct studies of them.... Ablion would note Article 6 of the 39 Articles of the Church of England and how Anglican churches include it's set of them in the lectionary and not infrequently use them as sermon texts...
But that's not what you've claimed. The issue is the claims you've made. And how you've not once even attempted them to be true. For people who think truth matters, THAT'S the problem.
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