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Josiah said:
A bit of history recorded in a book CAN help us understand something in the Bible. Scholars OFTEN use secular sources such as the Jewish historian Josephus and many others (even archeology).
Where I disagree with our friends here is that ERGO those secular history and archeology books MUST be the the inerrant, verbally-inspired, inscripturated words of God and THUS the canon/rule/norm for faith and practice equal to the Five Books of Moses and the Epistle to the Romans. They can be HELPFUL in understanding Scripture without being canon. Indeed, for 2000 years, probably the two most quoted, most used books to help us understand the Bible have been Josephus' "History of the Jews" and the "Didache". NEITHER of which has ever been regarded as the inerrant, verbally-inspired, inscripturated words of God and THUS the canon/rule/norm for faith and practice equal to the Five Books of Moses and the Epistle to the Romans. Have these two books been regarded as extremely helpful? Absolutely! Accurate? Yes! Canon? Nope.
MANY agree that there are LOTS of books (probably thousands) that are good to read, inspirational and informational, and that can help us better understand Scripture and that contain accurate history and sound theology... books often quoted and used by Christians.... but THAT per se does NOT in any way mandate that THEREFORE those books are the inerrant, verbally-inspired, inscripturated words of God and THUS the canon/rule/norm for faith and practice equal to the Five Books of Moses and the Epistle to the Romans. The whole apologetic is illogical and quite absurd, IMO.
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There’s a difference with Maccabees though. Maccabees was declared to be scripture by multiple early church councils.
NONE of the Seven Ecumenical Councils ever declared ANYTHING to be canonical. Yes, 3 regional, non-authoritative synods (all just Western) said it was okay to include 1 and 2 Maccabees in the Lectionary but they never declared them to be "Scripture" or "canonical" - and it would matter if they had because none of them were authoritative or had any role outside of their limited jurisdiction (they were not ). Friend, not until the 15th century did ANY denomination say ANYTHING about what is or is not canonical - and the Council of Florence (the first) was not binding and so it had to be redone at the Council of Trent - but neither of those were Ecumenical, they were meetings of just one individual denomination (totally ignored by the several Orthodox churches)
My point was addressed to those claiming that because some book(s) might perhaps contain interesting and helpful information DOES NOT for that reason mean it MUST be the inerrant, verbally-inspired, inscripturated words of God Himself and therefore the canon/rule/norm or faith and practice equal to say the Five Books of Moses or the Epistle to the Romans. LOTS of books contain accurate and helpful information.
And my point was addressed to those claiming that because something was quoted by some Christian DOES NOT for that reason it MUST be the inerrant, verbally-inspired, inscripturated words of God Himself and therefore the canon/rule/norm or faith and practice equal to say the Five Books of Moses or the Epistle to the Romans. LOTS of things were quoted by Christians, some a LOT more than any book that anyone might consider to be DEUTEROcanonical (and therefore NOT canonical).
Maccabees was in every Christian’s Bible for the first 1500 years of Christianity until the Protestants took it out.
Curious if you can prove that, but so what? Was it there as CANONICAL or in some other way?
Protestants did not "take it out". 1) You must prove someone put it in (quote some Ecumenical Council) before you can argue someone took it out. 2) How did the Anglican Church take it out in the 39 Articles. It will suprise you to know it was IN the AV and is IN the 39 Articles, it also will surprise you to know it was IN Luther's translation. CALVIN removed it but Calvin does not equal Protestants. What the Anglican Church said was what nearly all Chrsitians said: it is IN the Bible (in the collection to be found in tomes) but NOT canonical, it's DEUTEROcanonical, it was not a matter of removing it from tomes but clarifying it's status in terms of rule/canon/norm. This had never been done before the 16th Century.
Josephus was not. Is that really an honest comparison that you’re making?
Josephus' book contains MUCH helpful information and is quoted a LOT. But no one considers it canonical. Just because a book contains helpful information and is quoted a lot does not mean it must be canonical; THAT was my point.