Coke Bear said:
BusyTarpDuster2017 said:
You're just repeating your assertion. The evidence points to there only being one recognized Jewish canon. Cite your evidence to the contrary. As I already explained, even if the Sadducees did not recognize anything outside of the 5 books of Moses (Torah) as canon as some church fathers argued, their view of canon was proven wrong by Jesus himself, especially in verses like Luke 24:44 and others.
This is incorrect. Jesus only quoted the Torah to the Sadducees because that's all they accepted. He was proving them incorrect using only the scripture they accepted.
Jesus was speaking to the Apostles in Luke 24:44. He was not proving the Sadducees wrong.
According to Marc Zvi Brettler, is an American biblical scholar, and the Bernice and Professor in Judaic Studies at Duke University, the Jewish scriptures outside the Torah and the Prophets were fluid, with different groups seeing authority in different books.
Here is a modern Jewish scholar that argues that mulitple canons existed
BusyTarpDuster2017 said:
And again, the Septuagint was a collection of both Jewish canon AND non-canon. Therefore, Jesus and his apostles quoting the canonical parts of the Septuagint can not be taken as an endorsement by them of the Septuagint as a whole as being canonical. This is a faulty "canon by association" argument.
No, YOU are claiming that they were non-canonical. The Septuagint was whole.
Jesus positively affirms that the Law, Prophets, and the Psalms (Hagiographa, aka Writings) are God's Word. If it were true that the Sadducees held only to the Torah as canon, as some Church fathers argued (incorrectly) then Jesus' affirmation of the other divisions of the Tanakh in the Gospels proves that the Sadducees' view of canon is wrong. This isn't incorrect, this is basic logic. You don't seem to understand the point being made here.
What is Brettler's evidence for his claim that the Hebrew canon was "fluid"? It is already known that within Judaism during the Second Temple period (about 500 BC - 70 AD) there was debate about the inspiration of certain books, such as Ezekiel, Proverbs, Ecclesiastes, Song of Songs and Esther. The evidence shows that the Jews had a definitive, agreed upon canon; there was debate whether certain books in that canon should be
removed due to them not being truly inspired, but there was no debate about whether books should be added. This isn't evidence of an "open" or "fluid" canon during this time, but rather that there was debate whether the canon should be even more exclusive, i.e. more "closed". Also keep in mind that "debate" about the canon did not necessarily mean there wasn't agreement about what the canon contained or that there were "different canons". The Council of Jamnia (around 75-117 AD) is alleged to have addressed such issues, and the resulting decision was pretty much to leave the canon the same as it was. And keep in mind through all this, that none of the debate ever involved the addition of the Apocrypha - the Jews simply never considered it canon, it just wasn't an issue.
Even the apocryphal books themselves support the the idea that a completed canon existed: Ecclesiasticus alludes to a 3-fold division Jewish canon that was complete and closed, and I Maccabees cites that there was "no prophet in Israel" after Micah, the last prophet in the Jewish canon.
The Septuagint was a project over a century in the making, with translations done by different groups of people, at various times, and at various locations. So the Septuagint likely didn't exist as a "whole" single bound source in Palestine during the time of Jesus. We don't really know what form it took place in this time and place. In fact, whatever parts of the Septuagint the Jews had during this time was probably on scrolls. And again - the Septuagint was not the Jewish canon. It included both Jewish canon as well as non-canon that the Jews still considered very important for edification and teaching.
The earliest existing manuscripts of "whole" Septuagints containing apocryphal books are from the 5th and 6th centuries AD, which are of Christian origin, not Jewish. It's interesting to note that these manuscripts all differed with respect to which apocryphal books were included. That brings up a lot of interesting questions itself.
I'm not the one claiming the apocrypha to be non-canonical. History shows that this was the unified view of the Jews themselves. And a very inconvenient fact for the Roman Catholic Church is that many of their own early church fathers, even a bishop of Rome (Gregory the Great), agreed!