Title: Lecture 13b: Canonicity
1Lecture 13b Canonicity
- And on the day called Sunday there is a
gathering together into one place of all those
live in cities or in the country, and the memoirs
of the apostles or the writings of the prophets
are read, as long as time permits. Then when the
reader has ceased the president leader or head
presents admonition and invitation to the
imitation of these good things Justin Martyr
(A.D. 100-165).
2- If the Scriptures are indeed inspired by God then
a significant question arises Which books are
inspired? Historically, it was important for the
people of God to discover which books God has
inspired and which ones were not.
3The Canonicity of Scripture
- I. Definition of Canonicity
- II. Canonicity of the Old Testament
- III. Canonicity of the New Testament Debate of
N.T. Apocrypha. - IV. Completeness of the Canon
- V. Confirmation of the Canon
- VI. Preservation of the Canon
- VII. Conclusion
4The Canonicity of Scripture
- I. Definition of Canonicity
- A. The word canon is used to describe the
inspired books. The word comes from the Greek
kanon and probably from the Hebrew qaneh,
signifying a measuring rod. The terms canon
and canonical thus came to signify standards by
which books were measured to determine whether
or not they were inspired. It is important to
note that religious councils at no time had any
power to cause books to be inspired, rather they
simply recognized that which God inspired at the
exact moment the books were written.
5The Canonicity of Scripture
- B. Jews and conservative Christians have
recognized the 39 books of the O.T. is inspired.
Evangelical Protestants have recognized the 27
books of the N.T. as inspired. Roman Catholic
have a total of 80 books because they recognize
the Apocrypha as part of the Canon.
6The Canonicity of Scripture
- It is not the antiquity, authenticity, or
religious community that makes a book canonical
or authoritative. A book is valuable because it
is canonical, and not canonical because it is or
was considered valuable. Its authority is
established by God and merely discovered by Gods
people. - Dr. Norman Geisler.
7The Canonicity of Scripture
- 1. Incorrect View presupposes the
following - A. Authority of Scripture is based upon the
authority of the church - B. Places the church over the canon
- 2. Correct View presupposes the following
- A. Authority of the church is to be found in the
Scripture. - B. The Church is under the canon.
- It is God who regulated the canon man merely
recognized the divine authority God gave to it.
God determined the canon, and man discovered it.
Dr. Norman Geisler
8The Canonicity of Scripture
- Authority Relationship Between Church and Canon
- Incorrect View Correct View
- - Church is determiner - Church is
discoverer - - Church is mother of canon - Church is child
of canon. - - Church is magistrate - Church is minister.
- - Church is regulator - Church is recognizer
- - Church is judge of canon - Church is witness
of canon - - Church is master of canon - Church is servant
of the canon.
9The Canonicity of Scripture
- In this affair, then, the Church is a servant
and not a mistress a depository and not a judge.
She exercises the office of a minister, not of a
magistrate.She delivers a testimony, not a
judicial sentence. She discerns the canon of the
Scriptures, she does not make it she has
recognized their authenticity, she has not given
it.The authority of the Scriptures is not
founded, then, on the authority of the Church
It is the church that is founded on the authority
of the Scriptures. - Louis Gaussen, Theopnesustia.
10The Canonicity of Scripture
- C. Definition of Apocrypha
- This word refers to disputed book that
Protestants reject and Roman Catholic and others
accept into the O.T. - The word apocrypha means hidden or doubtful.
So those who accept these documents prefer to
call them deuterocanonical or books of the
second canon.
11The Canonicity of Scripture
- D. Definition of Apocrypha
- This word refers to disputed book that
Protestants reject and Roman Catholic and others
accept into the O.T. - The word apocrypha means hidden or doubtful.
So those who accept these documents prefer to
call them deuterocanonical or books of the
second canon.
12Why Canonicity? Adapted from McDowells New
Evidence That Demands a Verdict, pg. 23.
-
- 6 Reasons
- why the N.T.
- Books were
- Collected
131. They were Inspired. Adapted from McDowells
New Evidence That Demands a Verdict, pg. 23.
-
- Because these
- books were
- inspired,
- written by a
- prophet or an
- apostle of God,
- they were
- inherently
- Invaluable. Thus,
- needed to be
- preserved,
- collected,
- circulated.
142. The Needs of the Early Church. Adapted from
McDowells New Evidence That Demands a Verdict,
pg. 23.
-
- Assemblies
- needed to
- know which
- books should
- be read,
- revered, and
- applied.
153. The Rise of Heretics and False Teachers.
Adapted from McDowells New Evidence That Demands
a Verdict, pg. 23.
-
- As early as A.D. 140,
- the heretic Marcion
- developed his own
- incomplete canon
- and began to
- propagate it. The
- church needed to
- counter influence these false teachings by
- collecting all
- the N.T. Scriptures.
164. The circulation of counterfeit Writings.
Adapted from McDowells New Evidence That Demands
a Verdict, pg. 23.
-
- The church needed to gather the inspired books in
order to set them apart from the counterfeit
writings and other religious materials that were
being written and circulated.
17Missions. Adapted from McDowells New Evidence
That Demands a Verdict, pg. 23.
The need to circulate and translate the
Bible into other languages as the Bible began to
spread among people-groups.
186. Persecutions Adapted from McDowells New
Evidence That Demands a Verdict, pg. 23.
The Edit of Diocletian (A.D. 303) called for
the destruction of the sacred books of the
Christians. Who would die for a books that was
perhaps religious, but not sacred?
19II. Canonicity of the Old Testament
- The Masoretic (Hebrew) text of the O.T. divided
into three categories - 1. Law (Pentateuch)
- 2. Prophets (Joshua, Judges, 1 2 Samuel, 1 2
Kings, major minor prophets) - 3. Writings (sometimes called The Psalms,
including poetry and wisdom books-Psalms,
Proverbs and Job the Rolls- Song of Solomon,
Ruth, Lamentations, Ecclesiastes, and Esther
the Historical Books-Daniel, Ezra, Nehemiah, and
1 and 2 Chronicles). - Originally these 39 books were counted as 24 by
combining 1 2 Samuel, 1 2 Kings, and 1 2
Chronicles, the minor prophets, and
Ezra-Nehemiah. - By the N.T. this threefold division was
recognized (Luke 2422).
20II. Canonicity of the Old Testament
- D. Internally
- 1. The Scripture (John 1035)
- 2. The Sacred Writings (2 Tim. 315-17)
- suggests a generally accepted O.T. Canon.
- E. Externally
- 1. Josephus (A.D. 37-95),
- 2. Bishop Melito of Sardis (A.D. 170)
- 3. Tertullian (A.D.160-250), and others
recognized the threefold division.
21II. Canonicity of the Old Testament
- F. The Council of Jamnia in A.D. 90 is considered
by many the occasion whereby the O.T. Canon was
publicly recognized (while debating the
canonicity of several books). - Jamnia, a city 13 miles south of Joppa, was the
location wherby after the fall of Jerusalem in
A.D. 70, an assembly of religious Jewish teachers
were established. This body was regarded as to
some extent replacing the Sanhedrin, though it
did not possess the same representative character
or national authority.
22II. Canonicity of the Old Testament
- G. There is evidence of the manner whereby the
O.T. were recognized as canonical - 1. Moses was recognized as writing under the
authority of God Ex. 1714 3427 cf. Josh.
831 236. - a The criterion for acknowledging the
Pentateuch was whether it was from Gods servant,
Moses. - 2. Following Moses, God raised up the
institution of prophecy to continue revealing
Himself to His people (cf. Deut. 1815-19 Jer.
268-15). - a The prophets to whom God spoke recorded
their revelation (cf. Josh. 2426 1 Sam. 1025
Isa. 81) Exek. 4311)
23II. Canonicity of the Old Testament
- H. Additional Information
- 1. Faith of Israel existed independently of a
book for hundreds of years between the time of
Abraham and Moses. - 2. None of the patriarchs before Moses is
recorded as having written sacred literature
(Ex. 244, 7). - 3. Old surviving list of the canonical
scriptures of the OT comes from about 170, the
product of Christian scholar, Melito, who made
a trip to Israel to determine both the order
and umber of books in the Hebrew Bible.
Neither his order not his contents agree
exactly with our modern English Bibles.
24II. Canonicity of the Old Testament
- H. Additional Information
- 4. During the entire period of biblical
history, the Jews lived their faith without a
closed canon of Scripture. - 5. The books were collected into a canon as an
act of Gods providence, historically prompted
by the emergence of apocryphal writings and
pseudepigraphical literature in the
intertestamental period. - - Pseudepigrapha (are writings ascribed to
someone other than the real author, generally
with a view to giving them an enhanced authority
e.g., Book of Enoch). - 6.
25II. Canonicity of the Old Testament
- The law was accorded the respect of the author,
and he was known as Gods messenger. Similarly,
succeeding prophets were received upon due
authentication, and their written works were
received with the same respect, being received
therefore as the Word of God. As far as the
witness contained in the books themselves is
concerned, this reception was immediate. - Laird Harris.
26How was Canonicity discovered in the O.T.?
- Evidence is obviously not complete for all the
OT books. But evidence is clear for the
principles of their acceptance. Those written by
prophets were accepted, and kings and priests
were also sometimes prophets. Any man to whom
God revealed His Word was a prophet. Thus David
and Solomon were prophets as truly as Joshua and
Daniel. There are, of course, some books whose
authorship is now not known. These were,
however, classified by the Jews and by Christ as
among the Prophets, and in the absence of the
slightest evidence to the contrary, they may be
thus accepted. God gave the Jews no test of an
inspired book or list of canonical books. But He
did not give them very obvious and practical
tests of a prophets, and it is clear that they
accepted the writings of these prophets equally
with their spoken words. - Laird Harris, Canon of Scripture-O.T.
Wycliffe Bible Encyclopedia (Chicago Moody
Press, 1975), 303.
27III. Canonicity of the Old Testament
- 1. Test of Divine Authority. This is a
question of divine inspiration. Books which
were held to be inspired were revered and
received, and were collected into a canon.
When the question of inspiration
was answered, so was the question of canonicity.
The test of inspiration was wrapped up in
the other tests. - 2. Test of Human Authorship Is the book
written, edited, or endorsed by a
prophet or spokesman from God? Prophetic
authorship was the key criterion of canonicity. -
28II. Canonicity of the Old Testament
- 3. Whether the book could be traced back to the
time and writer from which it professed to
come. Was it genuine? - 4. Is it a record of actual facts? Is it
authentic? This question relates
to the contents of the book and its own claims as
being from God. - 5. Testimony of the Jews and the later church
councils and the ancient versions
of the Bible. How was the book received?
29II. Canonicity of the New Testament
- A. 27 books, written by 8-10 human authors over
a period of about 2 generations, make up O.T. - B. The books existed at the end of 1st Century
A.D. throughout the territory. - C. The N.T. indicates that canonical writings
were gathered. Paul encouraged it (Col. 416
1 Thess. 527). N.T. ascribes to its books an
authority equal to that of the O.T. Peter
placed Pauls writings on the same level as
the O.T. (2 Pet. 315-16). Paul classified
passages from Deut. And Luke as Scripture (1
Tim. 518). -
-
30II. Canonicity of the New Testament
- D. Three periods in the history of N.T. Canon
- 1. Period of separate circulation (A.D.
70- 170). - The writings of Scripture were circulated and
read in church gatherings. In principle, the
N.T. and O.T. canon was fixed during this
time. The extent of the canon took a bit
longer, but event his was substantially
complete by the end of this period. -
-
31II. Canonicity of the New Testament
- D. Three periods in the history of N.T. Canon
- 2. Period of Complete Separation between
Canonical and non-canonical writings (AD
170-303). This ended with a civil edict to
burn the books of the Bible, which gave
Christians added incentive to collect the
canonical writings. - 3.During the last period councils formally
declared (not formulate) the canon - a. Council of Laodicea (367AD) requested that
only canonical books be read in the churches. - b. Council of Carthage (397) agreed on a list
of canonical books identical to those in our
Bible, a decision confirmed by the Council of
Hippo (419 AD).
32II. How was the Canonicity of the New
Testament Discovered
- 1. Looked to the Contents and, esp. at its
references to the person and work of Jesus
Christ - 2. Considered the books claim to inspiration
and its concurrence with books already
accepted. - 3. They evaluated the books moral and
spiritual aspects, its ability to influence
and transform peoples lives. - 4. They asked those closest to the writings of
the book believed about and how it was
received by those to whom it was written. - 5. Was the book written by an apostle or
someone closely associated with an apostle? -
33II. Summary of Discovery regarding Canonicity of
the New Testament
- 1. Test of Apostolicity. Was the author an
apostle or did he have a connection with an
apostle? Mark wrote under Peters authority, and
Luke under Pauls authority. - 2. Acceptance. Was the book accepted by the
church at large? The recognition given a
particular book by the church was important. By
this canon false books were rejected. - 3. Content. Did the book reflect consistency
with what had been accepted as orthodox teaching.
For example, the spurious gospel of Peter was
rejected as a result of this principle. - 4. Inspiration. Did the book reflect the
quality of inspiration?
34III. Debate about the N.T. Canon in view of N.T.
Apocrypha
- Consider
- 1. Unlike the O.T., additional books have
never been accepted into the N.T. Canon
long after they were written. - 2. There has never been any serious long- term
debates over the books that were accepted
into the N.T. Canon. - 3. Nevertheless, there were some questions
about some books for some time these books
will be called the N.T. Apocrypha.
35III. Debate about the N.T. Canon in view of N.T.
Apocrypha
- List of N.T. Apocrypha (hidden books)
- a. Epistle of Pseudo-Barnabas (A.D. 70-79)
- b. Epistle to the Corinthians (c. 96)
- c. Epistle of Polycarp to the Philippians (c.
108) - d. The Teaching of the Twelve Didache (c.
100-120) - e. Seven Epistles of Ignatius (c. 110)
- f. The Ancient Homily
- g. Second Epistle of Clement (c. 120-140)
- h. The Shepherd of Hermas (c. 115-140)
- i. The Apocalypse of Peter (c. 150)
- j. Epistle to the Laodiceans (4th Century?)
36III. Debate about the N.T. Canon in view of N.T.
Apocrypha
- List of N.T. Pseudepigrapha (lit. false
writings) which are sometimes also called
apocryphalthese books have been and are
universally rejected by the Christian church.
They include the following - 1. Gospel of Thomas (a Gnostic work),
- 2. Gospel of Peter (contains Docetic
heresiesdeny the real humanity of Christ) - 3. Protevangelium of James (contains early
devotion to Mary) - 4. Gospel of the Hebrews
- 5. Gospel of the Egyptians.
37III. Reasons for Rejecting the N.T. Apocrypha
- 1. Not one N.T. apocrypha experienced more
than a local or temporary acceptance - 2. At best some of them had a quasi-canonical
status, meaning that they were merely added to
various manuscripts (as an appendix) or listed
in table of contents. - 3. No major canon or church council accepted
them as part of the inspired Word of God. - 4. Their limited and temporal acceptance on
grounds that they were believed wrongly (1) to
have been written by an apostle, or (2) to have
been referred to in an inspired book (e.g.,
Col. 416). Once this was known to be false they
were completely and permanently rejected by the
Christian church.
38IV. The Completeness of the Biblical Canon
- There is no evidence that any inspired book has
been lost. This is confirmed by the following - 1. The providence of God
- 2. The immediate and careful preservation
of the church - 3. The absence of any evidence of any other
prophetic or apostolic book. - Alleged contrary examples are easily explained
as either - 4. Uninspired works to which the biblical
author made reference, or - 5. Inspired works contained in the
sixty-six inspired books but with another name.
39V. The Confirmation of the Canon
- Unlike other holy books such as the Quran
the Book of Mormon, the Bible alone has been
supernaturally confirmed by signs wonders.
Consider the following - 1. Only the Scripture were written by prophets
who were supernaturally confirmed by signs and
wonders. - 2. When Moses questioned how his message would
be accepted, God performed miracles through him
that they may believe that the Lord, the God
of their Fathers-the God of Abraham, the God of
Isaac and the God of Jacob- has appeared to you
(Ex. 45). - 3. When Korah rose up to challenge Moses, God
again miraculously intervened to vindicate his
prophet (Num. 16). - 4. Elijah was verified to be a prophet of God by
supernatural intervention on Mt. Carmel (1
Kings 18).
40V. The Confirmation of the Canon
- 6. In the Gospels even the Jewish teacher
Nicodemus said to Jesus, Rabbi, we know that
you are a teacher who has come from God. For
no one could perform the miraculous signs you
are doing if God were not with him (John 32
cf. Luke 722). - 7. Luke recorded, Jesus of Nazareth was a man
accredited by God to you by miracles, wonders
and signs, which God did among you through him
(Acts 222). - 8. Hebrews affirms that God also testified to
it by signs, wonders and various miracles, and
gifts of the Holy Spirit through him (Acts
222). - 9. The apostle Paul proved his apostleship by
affirming that the things that mark an
apostle-signs, wonders and miracles-were done
among you with great perseverance (2 Cor.
1212).
41The Preservation of the Canon
- The preservation of these books by the church
confirms the Canon - 1. A collection of these books were made from
the earliest times even within the N.T. itself
this preservation process was put into action - a. Luke refers to other written records of the
life of Christ (Luke 11-4), possibly
Matthew Mark - b. In 1 Timothy 518 the Gospel of Luke is
quoted - c. Peter refers to Pauls collection in 2
Peter 315-16 - d. Jude had access to 2 Peter (2 Peter 24-6).
42The Preservation of the Church
- The preservation of these books by the church
confirms the Canon - 2. The contemporaries of the apostles show a
concerned awareness of their mentors writings,
quoted from them prolifically. Following them
the Fathers of the 2nd to 4th centuries made
some 36, 289 citations from the N.T., including
all verses except eleven. This includes the
following - a. 19, 368 citations from the Gospels
- b. 1, 352 from Acts
- c. 664 from Revelation
- d. The Fathers of the second century alone
cited from every book of the New Testament
except for one (3 John) (this may have been
because they had no occasion to cite from 3
John). -
43The Preservation of the Canon
- The preservation of these books by the church
confirms the Canon - 3. When challenged by heretical teachings, such
as that of Marcion the Gnostic (c. 85-c. 160),
who rejected all but part of Luke and 10 of
Pauls epistles (all but the Pastoral Epistles) 1
2 Timothy and Titus), the church responded by
officially defining the extent of the Canon.
Lists of apostolic books collection of their
writings were made from early times, beginning
with 2nd century, which includes the following - a. The Muratorian canon (A.D. 170)
- b. Apostolic Canon (c. 300)
- c. Cheltenham Canon (c. 360)
- d. Athanasian Canon (c. 367)
- e. The Old Latin translation (c. 200).
44The Preservation of the Canon
- The preservation of these books by the church
confirms the Canon - f. This process culminated in the late fourth
and early fifth centuries of the Councils of
Hippo (393) and Carthage (410), which listed
the 27 books of the New Testament as the
complete Canon. - g. There has been no significant debate since
A.D. 410 regarding the 27 books of N.T. - h. The only addition occurred at Catholic
Council of Trent in 1546 whereby they added
the O.T. Apocrypha as infallible (seven
books and four parts of books) 29 years later
after Martin Luthers demanded for proof-texts
for the selling of indulgences to free souls
from purgatory).
45The Preservation of the Church
- The Council of Trent stated
- If anyone, however, should not accept the said
books as sacred and canonical, enter with all
their partsand if both knowingly and
deliberately he should condemn the aforesaid
tradition let him be anathema forever cursed. - Vatican II repeats the same language affirming
the Apocrypha to be part of the inspired Word of
God.
46CONCLUSION
- The Bible is the only infallible written
revelation of God to man. It is complete, since
both Old and New Testaments contain all the books
God inspired for the faith and practice of future
generations. This is confirmed by the following - 1. The promise of Christ
- 2. The providence of God
- 3. The preservation by the people of God
- 4. The proclamation of the early church.
-