BusyTarpDuster2017 said:
"Removed by the Pharisees - the Pharisees didn't have to remove anything. It was never considered part of canon. And just because the Pharisees didn't understand the canon, or applied it poorly, it doesn't mean they didn't have their canon right. Jesus never told the Pharisees their canon was incorrect. And think about the argument you're making - if the Jews couldn't correctly determine what was supposed to be in their canon and what wasn't, then how we can trust the Tanakh at all? Wouldn't it mean it is fallible?
There was no ONE Hebrew canon. There were several Jewish canons. The Church chose the Septuagint because it is what Jesus and the apostles used and is it what is quoted from the most. The Septuagint contained the 7 deuterocanonical books.
When Jesus was speaking to the Sadducees, he only quoted scripture from the Torah. It would make sense that he would use the Tanakh when speaking to the Pharisees.
BusyTarpDuster2017 said:
- Your point about Josephus is inconsequential; the fact remains that he reported what was considered canon by the Jews, and it did not include the deuterocanonicals. Please note that the original Septuagint did NOT contain the deuterocanon, and that the Septuagint gradually include books that were considered "useful" and didn't pay attention to what was necessarily "canonical" by the Jews. Thus, being in the Septuagint didn't necessarily make it part of canon.
Please site a Jewish source that stated that the deuterocanon was NOT part of the original deuterocanon. I would like to learn when that was. IF, (big IF here, they were added, when? Would that have been during the time of Jesus or 100+ years before his birth.
BusyTarpDuster2017 said:
- Even though those books weren't quoted, they were still validated as God's word by Jesus when he referred to the whole of the "Law and Prophets" (the Tanakh) in the New Testament.
I can easily argue that because the NT quotes the Septuagint 300+ times by Jesus and the apostles that He accepted the whole of the Septuagint.
BusyTarpDuster2017 said:
- Similarity with certain verses in the Gospels doesn't really make your point. I'm not sure what you're even arguing here. Something isn't God's word just because it has similar phrases to the bible.
The parallel structure demonstrates that Jesus and the apostles pulled from the 7 deuterocanonical books. 1 John speaks of the Feast of Dedication of the new Temple. This is Hanukkah which is described in 1 Maccabees 4.
BusyTarpDuster2017 said:
- arguing that the Roman Catholic Church is correct to include the apocrypha, because the Roman Catholic Church said so in its councils, is quite a circular argument.
Your phrasing in that manner makes it a circular argument. This, again, is similar to an atheist stating that we Christians believe the bible is inspired by God because the bible says it's inspired.
I am not making this argument.
I am simply saying that the Church is the organization that complied the bible. It was lead by the Holy Spirit to choose the books. It followed a set of criteria to choose those books. The full canon of 73 books was affirmed in councils from 382 onward. It ONLY changed in the 16th century when Martin Luther moved them to the back of the bible.
BusyTarpDuster2017 said:
- "smallest of all the seeds" could be referring to it being the smallest of all seeds available to a Jewish farmer that he might sow, or that is commonly sowed. Jesus does not necessarily mean that it's the smallest in the world. It's an expression, not a statement of fact. On the other hand, the apocrypha contain many historical errors in its statements of fact, such as Nebuchadnezzar being the king of the Assyrians. He was king of Babylon, not Assyria.
Do you believe that the Book of Job literally and historically happened? No, most don't is a wisdom book that teaches us about pain and suffering.
Just like Judith (which means "Lady Jew" - that should clue there to the reader alone) - that this is a story with a moralizing purpose, emphasizing faithfulness to God. The fact that the author states that "Nebuchadnezzar being the king of the Assyrians" is a BIG clue to EVERY Jewish reader (listener) that this is not an historical book. It is teaching us a lesson.
Same with Tobit, which is one of my most favorite non-Jesus stories.
The Didache (70 AD), Letter of Barnabas (74 AD), Clement of Rome (80 AD), Polycarp of Smyrna (135 AD), who was a disciple of John, Irenaeus (189 AD) all quoted from the deuterocanon. This doesn't conclude that it was scripture, but it does show that they did treat them and the protocanon as the same.
Even noted Protestant scholar JND Kelly writes, "It should be observed that the Old Testament thus admitted as authoritative in the Church was somewhat bulkier and more comprehensive [than the Protestant Bible]. . . . It always included, though with varying degrees of recognition, the so-called apocrypha or deuterocanonical books"
Please make me understand how the Church for 16 centuries got the bible "wrong". The books were always in the bible.
They were removed by Protestants. Heck Luther wanted to remove Hebrews, James, Jude, and Revelation. Why should we trust him or any other Protestant that came along millennia later?
History is not on your side.