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117.1 | | CSC32::M_VALENZA | Note your tootsies off. | Tue Nov 27 1990 12:31 | 122 |
| One of the interesting issues concerning the Christian canon is that
each of the major branches of Christianity (Protestant, Roman Catholic,
and Orthodox) has a slightly different Old Testament. As a result,
perhaps it would be more appropriate to talk of the Christian canons,
in plural, rather than just a single canon.
The concept of a "canon" can be useful, I believe, as a way of defining
those scriptures that can describe the normative traditions of the
faith. Where it tends to lose its usefulness, for me anyway, is when
the distinction between the canonical and the non-canonical becomes a
rigid and doctrinaire dualism. In this dualism, the "inerrant,
divinely authored" canon is distinguished from the errant and human
scriptures that are not in the canon (in fact, this dualism typically
doesn't assign the term "scripture" to the non-canonical). I prefer to
take a less dogmatic view toward both types of literature; to me, the
canonical is not perfect, and the non-canonical is not worthless.
The Anchor Bible Commentary on The Wisdom of Ben Sira (Ecclesiasticus)
discusses at length the history of the canonicity of that book, as well
as the other Apocryphal scriptures. Without repeating all of it here,
I would like to cite some interesting passages. After discussing the
traditional view that the differences in the Christian Old Testament
and the Hebrew Bible stemmed from the existence of an Alexandrian
Jewish canon that differed from the Palestinian Jewish canon, the
author then continues:
In several carefully researched publications beginning in 1958,
A.C. Sundberg has successfully challenged the commonly accepted
ideas with regard to the history of the Christian Old Testament
canon, and in particular the hypothesis of the Alexandrian or LXX
canon. He has shown that there never was a Palestinian Hebrew
canon in the days of Jesus, a canon that later in the first century
A.D. was authoritatively defined by the rabbis. Nor is it correct
to distinguish in the first century A.D. between a shorter Hebrew
canon in Palestine and a longer LXX canon in Alexandria. It is now
certain that at the turn of the era, and even before, many
Greek-speaking Jews were living in the Holy Land, and that they
used the LXX as a collection of undifferentiated religious writings
long enough even to make a Palestinian revision thereof. Thus
there never was an actual Alexandrian (LXX) canon at all or a
Palestinian (Hebrew) canon before ca. A.D. 90.
The Jews, including those who spoke and read Greek, did not have
any closed canon of sacred writings till the rabbis drew up their
authoritative list near the end of the first century A.D.
Accordingly, the Church, which separated itself from Judaism before
the First Jewish Revolt (A.D. 66-70), received from the Synagogue a
group of undifferentiated writings that were considered in some way
sacred. Only after the destruction of Jerusalem in A.D. 70 did the
Jews begin in earnest to define which of their religious scriptures
should be received as divinely inspired and which should not. By
ca. A.D. 90 the Pharisaic rabbis had defined and closed forever
their official canon.
It should be recalled that the Church "received 'scriptures' from
Judaism, but not a canon." For the final determination of the
Christian Old Testament canon was an activity of the Church that
took place in the West at the Council of Hippo (393) and two
Councils of Carthage (397 and 419). That ancient Christian canon
included, in addition to all the books of the Jewish or Hebrew
canon, all the books Roman Catholics call deuterocanonical, but it
did not include 1-2 Esdras and Prayer of Manasseh, which
Protestants also list among the Apocrypha. [footnote: the canonical
list of Old Testament and New Testament books accepted by the
Western Church was spelled out in Canon 47 of the Council of
Carthage (397)...]
Thus, Sundberg, who is himself a Protestant, concludes:
Two different communities were involved in defining canons out
of the common material of pre-70 Judaism. And since the
church did define her OT canon for herself, what historical
claim does the Jewish definition of canon about the end of the
first century have for the church? Only that it was the
assumed a priori claim of the Jewish canon, when it became
known in the church following Origen, that pressured the
church into defining its OT. But that assumed a priori claim
of the Jewish canon did not succeed in restricting the OT of
the church to the Jewish canon. This is true of the Eastern
as well as the Western Church. If Protestant Christianity is
to continue its custom of restricting its OT canon to the
Jewish canon, then an entirely new rationale and doctrine of
canon will have to be described. And any Protestant doctrine
of canonization that takes seriously the question of Christian
usage and historical and spiritual heritage will lead
ultimately to the Christian OT as defined in the Western
Church at the end of the fourth and beginning of the fifth
centuries.
From what has been said, there can be no doubt that The Wisdom of
Ben Sira has been part of the Christian Old Testament from the time
that the canon was officially and formally defined and closed by
the Church in antiquity. (pages 18-19)
The important point about this is that since Christianity claims to
have superseded Judaism, the decisions that Jewish rabbis made *after*
the Christian revelation should have no theological consequences to
Christians. Because the Jewish canonization of the Hebrew Bible and
the Christian canonization of the Old Testament both occurred as
independent processes involving a set of sacred writings, during a time
after Christianity split off from Judaism, then the later decisions of
those who rejected the Christian revelation should make no difference
to Christian theology. This is true whether we are talking of
canonization, or any other rabbinical decision after the rise of
Christianity.
I believe that the value in opening myself up to writings beyond those
of any specific canon is that I can benefit from the inspiration found
in other works of literature. I view this as a middle way between
bibliolatry and Bible-bashing. Also, having been brought up as a
Protestant, I was never exposed to the "Apocrypha". And yet, the book
of Wisdom has some wonderful passages about Sophia, the feminine
Wisdom; and Judith and Tobit are stories every bit as wonderful as the
tales of Ruth and Esther. For that reason, whenever I buy a Bible I
always make sure that it is a version that includes the Apocrypha.
Of course, the "Apocrypha" *is* canonical for Roman Catholics; moving
beyond those works, I often find value in many other religious writings
as well. But encountering the "Apocrypha" for the first time was an
enjoyable experience for me.
-- Mike
|
117.2 | we thirst for truth we can hold in our hands | XANADU::FLEISCHER | without vision the people perish (381-0899 ZKO3-2/T63) | Tue Nov 27 1990 13:29 | 69 |
| re Note 117.1 by CSC32::M_VALENZA:
Thanks, Mike, that was very interesting and informative.
A few comments:
> I prefer to
> take a less dogmatic view toward both types of literature; to me, the
> canonical is not perfect, and the non-canonical is not worthless.
Even the term "perfect" does not necessarily imply
"inerrant". The canon could be "perfect" at what God intends
it to be, and what it appears to be, without every text being
correct. The canon, as we know it, appears to be a
collections of sacred writings by humans who have encountered
God's presence in history. A perfect "earthen vessel" will
nevertheless have its defects, its limitations -- if it were
truly perfect to all levels of examination, it would cease to
be an "earthen vessel".
> Because the Jewish canonization of the Hebrew Bible and
> the Christian canonization of the Old Testament both occurred as
> independent processes involving a set of sacred writings, during a time
> after Christianity split off from Judaism, then the later decisions of
> those who rejected the Christian revelation should make no difference
> to Christian theology. This is true whether we are talking of
> canonization, or any other rabbinical decision after the rise of
> Christianity.
Well, we could take the opposite conclusion, that "the later
decisions of those who rejected the Christian revelation
should make no difference to Christian theology," if we are
willing to consider ALL their decisions, and not just their
choice of canon. Perhaps we should reconsider the value of
the extensive commentaries that the rabbis produced in the
fifth and sixth centuries.
Of course, I would object to ascribing divine authority to
the commentaries, as I believe most Christians would also.
My basis for this objection would be different from that of
most Christians, however.
Most Christians, in common with many but apparently not all
religious people, hunger and thirst for an earthly instrument
of absolutely authoritative truth. Conservative Protestants
have their inerrant Scripture, Catholics have the Pope and
the councils, and Mormons have their living prophets. It is
not considered sufficient to have a living Lord in heaven who
describes himself as "the Truth" and whom those scriptures
describe as "the Word". It is not considered sufficient that
that same Lord has sent his spirit to dwell within us.
We still want more, and we humans define a Christian
equivalent of the golden calf using our canons and councils
and vicars. Like the golden calf, as we use them they
distract us from the true object of our attention. It is no
wonder that there is no agreement about these things among
Christians, since we have no need for them as we use them.
(This is not to say that Scriptures are useless, for they are
indeed very useful. This is not to say that councils and
leaders are worthless, for they are necessary for resolving
disputes and organizing action. It is just that they are not
needed as "earthly instruments of absolutely authoritative
truth," because we have the Lord and the Holy Spirit.)
Bob
|
117.3 | | CSC32::M_VALENZA | Note your tootsies off. | Tue Nov 27 1990 16:58 | 10 |
| I think you hit the nail on the head, Bob. People often want
certainty, and fear uncertainty and mystery. That is why, as you
mentioned, conservative Protestants turn to the Bible as the ultimate
authority, and Catholics turn to the Magisterium.
Personally, I prefer mystery. I think it is much more exciting to seek
for answers out of the mystery, rather than to have them handed to me
by some designated Authority.
-- Mike
|
117.4 | Thanks | XLIB::JACKSON | Collis Jackson | Fri Nov 30 1990 10:47 | 5 |
| Re: .1
Thanks, Mike, for entering that.
Collis
|
117.5 | Some other references | ISVBOO::JACKSON | Collis Jackson | Tue Dec 11 1990 15:04 | 67 |
| From "Foundations of Evangelical Theology" by John Jefferson Davis
This is a book I have it home. It references many other books which
go into much greater detail on the canon, none of which I have (and
unfortunately I am no longer close to a theological library). I may
buy one of these books in the future to expand my knowledge on exactly
why John Jefferson Davis (who teaches at Gordon Conwell) has adopted
the position on the canon that he has
from pages 200-203
In general, the canon of the Old Testament depends, in a theological
sense, on the witness of the New Testament.
From the beginning Israel had a conception of authoritative books.
It is difficult to reconstruct in detail the various stages of the
formation of the Old Testament canon. ... Nevertheless, there is
considerable evidence for the view that the canon of the Old Testament
was recognized as substantially complete by the Jews after the work
of Ezra and Nehemiah. Josephus, writing around A.D. 95 states that
"from Artaxerxes [Persian king; reigned 465-425 b.c.] until our time
everything has been recorded, but has not been deemed worthy of like
credit with what preceded, because the exact succession of the prophets
ceased...No one has dared either to add anything to them, or to take
anything from them. ... Philo, as quoted by Eusebius, speaks in a
similar fashion. Thus Jesphus and Philo considered the Jewish canon
to have been completed during the fifth century b.c. Wenham has
concluded that there is "no reason to doubt that the Canon of the Old
Testament is substantially Ezra's canon, just as the Pentateuch was
substantially Moses' canon."
That the Jewish canon was the same as our present list of thirty-nine
books can be deduced from statements in the Talmud, Mishnah, and
apocryphal writings.
According to R.D. Wilson, "All the books of the Old Testament are
cited as scipture in one or another tractates of the Mishna.
A passage in the apocryphal book 2 Esdras, around a.d. 100, refers to
twenty-four sacred books [which corresponds to our current 39].
During the first century a.d. the use of the Old Testament by Christ
and the apostles presupposes the recognition of a definite body of
authoritative books by Jews.
A second question involves the apocryphal books such as Tobit, Judith,
Ecclesiasticus, Baruch, 1 and 2 Maccabees, and the story of Bel and
the Dragon, found in codices of the Septuagint. These were evidently
popular amoung the Jews of Alexandria, found their way into the Vulgate,
and were affirmed [my note: for the first time] in the face of
Protestant criticism by the Council of Trent in 1546. It should be noted
that the codices containing these books date from the fourth or fifth
century; what the first-century copies of the Septuagint may have
contained is not clearly known.
Jerome, the greatest Old Testament scholar in the Latin church, clearly
distinguished between the authority of the Palestinian canon and that
of the apocryphal writings. The Council of Trent had no Hebrew scholars
and bypassed his criticisms.
The apocryphal books contain teachings out of harmony with the rest of
biblical revelation. A doctrine of justification by faith plus works
can be found in Topit 12:9 and 1 Macc. 2:52. ... Creation out of
preexisting matteris found in Wisdom 11:17.
Collis
|
117.6 | | CSC32::M_VALENZA | RMH | Wed Dec 19 1990 21:59 | 37 |
| Davis's reference to the apocryphal books as coming from the
Alexandrian Jews coincides with the view that was common among scholars
prior to the findings of A.C. Sundberg. Davis's conception of
Alexandrian and Palestinian scriptures reflects this view. The works
he cites that describe a fixed canon (the Mishna, the Talmud, 2 Esdras)
were written after 90 CE, when the Palestinian Jewish canon was fixed
(which occurred after the Christian split from Judaism). Thus there
are two boundary dates that apply here--when the canon was closed, and
when the last work to be included in the canon was actually written.
Naturally, the last work to be included in the canon would have been
written prior to the decision to close the canon. Once the canon is
closed, the last included work to be written would, a priori, define
the "last" canonical work to be written. However, the date of the
"last" work to be written cannot be fixed until the decision to close
the canon is made in the first place; and this decision was not made by
Judaism until *after* the Christian split from Judaism. Once that
decision was made, of course, Judaism could retrospectively point to
the last written work among the included canon as defining the end of
revelation in scripture. However, as Sundberg's research showed, and
as the Anchor Bible Commentary points out, there was not fixed
Palestinian Jewish canon at the time of the formation of Christianity.
In other words, because the decision to close the canon had been made
by the time of those writings, even though the included works came from
much earlier, these writings necessarily refer to the fact that no
canonical writings (from the perspective of the Jewish canon) had been
written for quite some time. In addition, Davis's contention that the
canon was complete at the time of Ezra and Nehemiah is curious, in
light of the fact that the book of Daniel was written well after that
time (around 167-164 BCE).
Also, according to my calculations, the Council of Carthage in 397
would have preceded the Council of Trent in 1546 by about 1149 years.
Give or take a few months.
-- Mike
|
117.7 | Daniel | XLIB::JACKSON | Collis Jackson | Thu Dec 20 1990 09:15 | 14 |
| Since you state when the book of Daniel was written as fact (and not
conjecture) and base other conclusions upon that, I will respond.
The Bible is clear both in the Old Testament and the New Testament both
about who wrote the book of Daniel (which was Daniel) and when Daniel
lived (6th century B.C.) You, of course, are free to believe differently.
(Those who do not accept prophecy as possible are generally credited
with the "late date" theory of Daniel - which, by the way, still does not
cover all the prophecy in Daniel).
The formation of the Old Testament canon certainly is something I would
like to be better informed about. Thanks for entering that, Mike.
Collis
|
117.8 | A Short History of the New Testament Canon | CUPMK::WAJENBERG | | Tue Nov 16 1993 16:54 | 104 |
| From the Antiquity conference:
-< ANTIQUITY >-
================================================================================
Note 183.30 Bible Facts - Not an Oxymoron 30 of 35
CUPMK::WAJENBERG 97 lines 6-APR-1993 07:38
-< New Testament Canon >-
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
My father recently sent me an article entitled "How the Books of the New
Testament Canon Were Chosen," from the April 1993 issue of "Bible Review."
The books were chosen, of course, to settle what written sources should be
regarded as authoritative, but the issue was first raised as follows:
The first specific proposal for a new canon for the Christian
movement was made in the mid-second century by Marcion, the owner
of a successful shipping business and the son of a bishop of the
Church in Asia Minor. Marcion proposed that the Church reject
the Jewish Scriptures and embrace a new canon of its own. That
canon was to be composed of only one gospel, Luke, and the
letters of one apostle, Paul. Marcion argued that the Church,
for the sake of its unity and for the truth of its gospel, ought
to identify its own normative writings and cease its use of
Jewish Scriptures. He contented that references to the God
worshipped by the Jews in Luke and Paul were corruptions of what
Luke and Paul originally wrote. Marcion therefore expunged these
references from the versions of Luke and Paul that he included in
his proposed New Testament.
Marcion was, in fact, a gnostic or proto-gnostic and, like many gnostics,
regarded the God of the Old Testament as an evil being, since He was the
author of the world, the human body, and the Law, all of which gnostics
abominate.
The Church rejected Marcion as a heretic, but he had raised a question that
now had to be answered. Over the next two hundred years, Church authorities
sorted through the various documents in circulation.
When Eusebius drew up his list in 325, ... [he] asks whether
writings had been mentioned by earlier generations of Church
leaders (a historical criterion), whether a book's style comports
well with those known to have been written early in the history
of the church (a literary criterion) and whether their content is
consistent with established orthodoxy (a doctrinal or theological
criterion).
Interestingly, none of the canonical lists mentions inspiration
as a criterion for determining which writings were to be included
in the canon. The reason, apparently, is that since all Christians
were filled with the Spirit, a claim of inspiration would not have
been useful as a way of distinguishing canonical from extracanonical
Christian writings.
Eusebius's canon contained the bulk of the current New Testament. 67 years
later, Athanasius recorded a canon identical to that used by all Christendom
today (except for the Syriacs, who only add a few shoirt books to the Eusebius
canon).
The article summarizes the development of the canon in a table, reproduced
below:
Marcion Irenaeus Muratorian Eusebius Athanasius
c.140 c.180 Canon, c.200 c.325 367
Matthew [Matthew]+ Matthew Matthew
Mark [Mark]+ Mark Mark
Luke Luke Luke Luke Luke
John John John John
Acts Acts Acts Acts
Romans Romans Romans Romans Romans
1 Corinthians 1 Corinthians 1 Corinthians 1 Corinthians 1 Corinthians
2 Corinthians 2 Corinthians 2 Corinthians 2 Corinthians 2 Corinthians
Galatians Galatians Galatians Galatians Galatians
Ephesians* Ephesians Ephesians Ephesians Ephesians
Philippians Philippians Philippians Philippians Philippians
Colossians Colossians Colossians Colossians Colossians
1 Thessalonians 1 Thessalonians 1 Thessalonians 1 Thessalonians 1 Thessalonians
2 Thessalonians 2 Thessalonians 2 Thessalonians 2 Thessalonians 2 Thessalonians
1 Timothy 1 Timothy 1 Timothy 1 Timothy
2 Timothy 2 Timothy 2 Timothy 2 Timothy
Titus Titus Titus Titus
Philemon Philemon
Hebrews
James? James
1 Peter 1 Peter
2 Peter
1 John 1 John 1 John 1 John
2 John 2 John
3 John
Jude Jude
Revelation Revelation Revelation? Revelation
Shepherd of Wisdom of
Hermas Solomon
Revelation of
Peter
* Marcion called Ephesians "Laodiceans"
+ The Muratorian Canon has not survived complete. Luke is listed as
the "third gospel," so it is assumed the first two are Matthew and Mark.
? It is not clear if Irenaeus considered James canonical.
Eusebius classed Revelation as dubiously canonical.
Earl Wajenberg
|