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Author | Topic: Superiority of the 'Protestant Canon'? | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Artemis Entreri  Suspended Member (Idle past 4477 days) Posts: 1194 From: Northern Virginia Joined: |
This thread will be for foreveryoung and others who share his view on the superiority of the 'protestant canon' (or any canon, for that matter) to defend their position and present evidence in its favor. I'd like to see the discussion follow along these lines: uh i'm not protestant so i hope i'm not disqualified already.
First, those arguing for superiority of one of the canons will have to define that canon. This will mean listing all of the books that make up the canon as well as the versions of those books where significant variations exist. May as well start with the old testament:
Genesis, Exodus, Leviticus, Numbers, Deuteronomy, Joshua son of Nun, Judges, Ruth, 4 books of Kingdoms, 2 books of Chronicles, Job, the Davidic Psalter, 5 books of Solomon, 12 books of Prophets, Isaiah, Jeremiah, Daniel, Ezekiel, Tobias, Judith, Esther, 2 books of Ezra, 2 books of Maccabees As determined by the Council of Carthage in 397ce. We have 46 books in our old testament Canon. The Protestants and evangelicals have 39 books in their old testament. The variation is 7 books. I'd have to look at the protestant OTC to determine which books are missing. (NOTE: Eastern Orthodox have 51 books). Everyone agrees on the new Testament and it is the same in all the main christian churches.
4 books of Gospels, 1 book of Acts of the Apostles, 13 letters of the Apostle Paul, 1 letter of his to the Hebrews, 2 of Peter, 3 of John, 1 of James, 1 of Jude, and one book of the Apocalypse of John It is 27 books. Also decided at the council of Carthage in 397ce (397ad). Interestingly the protestants did not drop the 7 books of the old testament from their canon until the 15th-16th century.
Second, these folk will have to define and defend the criteria behind labeling one canon as superior or better than another. What is it about a canon that would make it superior? For example, foreveryoung seems to think that supernatural inspiration is a criterion for a superior canon. maybe just different instead of superior. We are old school and they are new school. In our early church there was no canon, and there was no bible, it was a community of believers. the bible was the book of the church and the people in it. Whereas I see the protestants as the church of the bible. our church started from scratch, from the 12 apostles (notably Peter), The whole bible came centuries later, and thus is not nearly as important in our church. the protestants created their church at least a thousand or more years after we did, and used the book to created their church. Us - The original apostolic church. Them - the church of the bible.
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Dr Adequate Member Posts: 16113 Joined:
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My newest writing on the subject is here: ...al criticism - CreationWiki, the encyclopedia of creation science Essentially we have the Dead Sea Scrolls showing the Old Testament was in its current form before the time of Christ, around 250-50 B.C. The Great Isaiah Scroll in particular was even carbon dated as old as 335 B.C. Concerning the New Testament, we have more than 24,000 manuscripts with 99.5% internal consistency showing the New Testament we have today is accurate with regard to the original autographs. No other ancient historical document has nearly this level of evidence. The closest is the Iliad with 643 manuscripts. Many documents like Caesar's Gallic Wars are considered accurately preserved with just 5-10 manuscripts dating 1,000 years or more after the originals. However, we have manuscripts for the New Testament dating less than a century after the original documents (autographs) like the John Rylands Papyrus (P52), P104, P90, P64+67, and P98. We have complete or nearly complete copies of the New Testament dating as early as 200-400 A.D. like the Sahidic Coptic Version, Sinaitic Curiac Version, and Codex Vaticanus and Sinaiticus. Thus, we can look at these early documents to see whether later translations (like the King James Version) were reliable translations of the original Greek/Hebrew text seen in such early manuscripts. But this has nothing to do with what should or shouldn't be included in the canon, does it? The Dead Sea Scrolls also contain: (1) The Book of Enoch in the original Aramaic. This is regarded as orthodox by Ethiopian Jews, the Ethiopian Orthodox Church and the Eritrean Orthodox Church, but not by Protestants. One interesting thing about Enoch is that it is quoted in the book of Jude, which Protestants do count as canonical.
Enoch, the seventh from Adam, prophesied about them: See, the Lord is coming with thousands upon thousands of his holy ones to judge everyone, and to convict all of them of all the ungodly acts they have committed in their ungodliness, and of all the defiant words ungodly sinners have spoken against him. It would seem on the face of it that a Biblical literalist would have to believe that the book of Enoch really was written by Noah's great-grandfather, and was a genuine prophetic work rather than pseudephigraphic. (2) Fragments of three copies of the Wisdom of Sirach in Hebrew. This is is the Catholic Canon, the Eastern Orthodox canon, and the Septuagint, but not the Protestant Canon. (3) The book of Tobit in Aramaic and Hebrew. This is in the Catholic and Orthodox canons and the Setuagint, but not the Protestant canon. (4) The Epistle of Jeremiah in Greek. This is in the Orthodox canon, the Catholic Canon, and the Septuagint. (Of course, when one says 'the" Protestant canon, there's a certain amount of ambiguity there. Luther for example, put the Epistle of Jeremiah in his translation of the Bible into German. Now, if Luther wasn't a Protestant, who was?) So, anyway, the point is that it doesn't matter what is or isn't in the Dead Sea Scrolls --- or if it does matter, then the Protestant canon is definitely wrong. So what does justify the Protestant canon? Edited by Dr Adequate, : No reason given. Edited by Dr Adequate, : No reason given.
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Evangelical Humanists Junior Member (Idle past 4502 days) Posts: 14 Joined: |
Josh McDowell in "More Than a Carpenter" addressed these tests for historicity (Ch. 4 I believe - need to find my copy), and by them the New Testament is more reliable than any other ancient document in antiquity. I would hardly call the NT a reliable document. Scholars are not even sure of the authors of some of the books. Matthew, Mark and Luke practically copy each other with a few word changes here and there. McDowell as a biased opinion no doubt.
By checking McDowell's sources and consulting works of NT scholars, I was eventually able to discover that much of what McDowell presents is untrustworthy, misleading or simply incorrect. Bob, The above is from a rebuttal on his book "Evidence that Demands a Verdict" Quite frankly christian apologists will say or do anything to prove it true and McDowell is no different. I believe in order to establish its superiority as you say I think one would have to prove that the very person it was written about ever existed.
OFF TOPIC AdminPD Edited by Evangelical Humanists, : Add something. Edited by AdminPD, : Warning
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AdminPD Inactive Administrator |
Welcome to EvC Evangelical Humanists,
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Jzyehoshua Member (Idle past 1010 days) Posts: 153 Joined: |
But this has nothing to do with what should or shouldn't be included in the canon, does it? The Dead Sea Scrolls also contain: (1) The Book of Enoch in the original Aramaic. This is regarded as orthodox by Ethiopian Jews, the Ethiopian Orthodox Church and the Eritrean Orthodox Church, but not by Protestants. One interesting thing about Enoch is that it is quoted in the book of Jude, which Protestants do count as canonical. Enoch, the seventh from Adam, prophesied about them: See, the Lord is coming with thousands upon thousands of his holy ones to judge everyone, and to convict all of them of all the ungodly acts they have committed in their ungodliness, and of all the defiant words ungodly sinners have spoken against him.It would seem on the face of it that a Biblical literalist would have to believe that the book of Enoch really was written by Noah's great-grandfather, and was a genuine prophetic work rather than pseudephigraphic. (2) Fragments of three copies of the Wisdom of Sirach in Hebrew. This is is the Catholic Canon, the Eastern Orthodox canon, and the Septuagint, but not the Protestant Canon. (3) The book of Tobit in Aramaic and Hebrew. This is in the Catholic and Orthodox canons and the Setuagint, but not the Protestant canon. (4) The Epistle of Jeremiah in Greek. This is in the Orthodox canon, the Catholic Canon, and the Septuagint. (Of course, when one says 'the" Protestant canon, there's a certain amount of ambiguity there. Luther for example, put the Epistle of Jeremiah in his translation of the Bible into German. Now, if Luther wasn't a Protestant, who was?) So, anyway, the point is that it doesn't matter what is or isn't in the Dead Sea Scrolls --- or if it does matter, then the Protestant canon is definitely wrong. So what does justify the Protestant canon? Good point about 1 Enoch. I was aware of its possible mention in Jude (although some dispute whether it's definite) and that's why I said earlier:
quote: 1 Enoch and Jubilees are the two books found in substantial numbers and thus could merit consideration. I actually wondered about 1 Enoch myself recently. As for who the real Protestants were, Protestantism actually goes back about 1700 years. It's a common misconception that it began during the Reformation. There's a chart called the "Trail of Blood" by J.M. Carroll for example which purports to show a lineage of groups tracing the real Christian Church back, separate from Catholicism. I've written a lengthy post here addressing it, and my disagreements with Catholicism: -->Update Your Browser | Facebook I'll quote the info about groups I think were Protestants before Luther and persecuted by Catholicism: quote: OFF TOPIC AdminPD Edited by AdminPD, : Warning
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jar Member Posts: 34140 From: Texas!! Joined: |
And not one word of all that is realted to the Topic which is "Superiority of the 'Protestant Canon'?"
Do you have anything to offer on the topic?Anyone so limited that they can only spell a word one way is severely handicapped!
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Adminnemooseus Inactive Administrator |
You know, it would be nice if you picked what you think is the best link to support each of your points, rather that giving us a bunch for each point. I think that the more links per point, the less likely any are going to get looked at.
I'm not focused on this topic, but it appears that Jar (the first reply to your message) is correct. I detect no comparison of the "Protestant Canon" to some other canon. Adminnemooseus
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Jzyehoshua Member (Idle past 1010 days) Posts: 153 Joined: |
I basically was just pointing out in the post that I agreed 1 Enoch and Jubilees are the two books that are well-sourced by the Dead Sea Scrolls separate from the Old Testament. I did get side-tracked with the mention of Protestants though. The beginning of the post was on-topic though.
And actually, the latter part does somewhat relate to the topic since it relates to what Protestants are. By showing that Protestants have been around long before the Reformation, the information is useful in showing that Catholicism was not necessarily the preserver of the Canon through the centuries resulting in the Bible we see now. Edited by Jzyehoshua, : No reason given.
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Dr Adequate Member Posts: 16113 Joined: |
As for who the real Protestants were, Protestantism actually goes back about 1700 years. I didn't say Luther was the first Protestant, just that he was one --- if he isn't, who is? So the idea of a Protestant canon is a bit dubious, and becomes more so if we throw in the other groups we mentioned. Not everyone whom we would call Protestants would have removed the Apocrypha from the canon.
Enoch and Jubilees are the two books found in substantial numbers and thus could merit consideration. I don't see why you would figure out canonicity by counting Dead Sea Scrolls. Why would we assume that the people who hid the scrolls had the right canon?
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Jzyehoshua Member (Idle past 1010 days) Posts: 153 Joined: |
I think the information I provided is useful because canonicity deals with who is preserving the canon. Too often people assume Catholics were the only religious group around that first milennia A.D. and thus the canon was constructed and preserved entirely by them. The information I provided shows groups that did provide canons and non-Latin Bibles (e.g. the Waldenses) long before the Reformation. Thus, the Protestant Canon and Protestants were around long before the Reformation. And therefore, my post was perfectly on-topic.
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Jzyehoshua Member (Idle past 1010 days) Posts: 153 Joined: |
quote: Well, thing with Luther is he supported persecuting Protestants like the Anabaptists in the same way the Catholic Church did. Calvinists and Lutherans were actually right there with Catholicism in warfaring persecution and martyring of Protestants like the Anabaptists. So I've never really liked Luther as a Protestant example myself.
quote: Well, I figure if the Bible is God's Word, and God did want it preserved, then the strongest examples of that preservation should show what that Word is. The Dead Sea Scrolls against much probability have come down to us from over 2,000 years ago, providing an accurate record with which to cross-check the Old Testament. So it stands to reason what they best preserve might well be God's Word, and if that includes 1 Enoch and Jubilees, well, that's more reason for me to give those two books serious consideration in canonicity. The Dead Sea Scrolls otherwise preserve perfectly all the books of the Old Testament - the scrolls best preserved are the books of the Old Testament - along with those 2 books.
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Jzyehoshua Member (Idle past 1010 days) Posts: 153 Joined: |
As recently as 2010, the Lutheran World Formation issued a formal statement apologizing for previous violent persecution of Anabaptists.
Lutherans Seek Forgiveness for Persecution of Anabaptists | Church & Ministries News Lutherans often executed Anabaptists by beheading or drowning. Persecution of the peaceful Anabaptists in the 16th century actually exceeded the persecution of the early Christian Church by Rome. Most people just don't know about them. http://www.anabaptists.org/writings/excerpts/meneu-1.html
OFF TOPIC AdminPD Edited by AdminPD, : Warning
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jar Member Posts: 34140 From: Texas!! Joined:
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Topic.
The Dead Sea Scrolls have nothing to do with a Canon. Why is the Protestant Canon superior to the Roman Catholic Canon, the Samaritan Orthodox Canon, the Ethiopian Long Canon, the Ethiopian Short Canon?Anyone so limited that they can only spell a word one way is severely handicapped!
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Adminnemooseus Inactive Administrator
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Maybe I missed it upthread, but my guess your position is something along the lines of:
1 - We have no way of telling or... 2 - Chances are, they're all about equally good and bad or... 3 - It really doesn't matter or... ??? In all, my impression (which could be wrong) is that you're criticizing others answers without offering up your own answer. Adminnemooseus Edited by Adminnemooseus, : Add an "ing" to an "offer".
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jar Member Posts: 34140 From: Texas!! Joined: |
Are you posting as admin or just a participant?
Anyone so limited that they can only spell a word one way is severely handicapped!
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