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The Canon of Scripture
by Sebastian R. Fama
There is a significant difference between Catholic and Protestant Bibles.
Catholic Bibles contain seven more books than Protestant Bibles do. The
seven books, all in the Old Testament, are Tobit, Judith, Wisdom, Sirach,
Baruch and 1 and 2 Maccabees. Catholics call the disputed books
Deuterocanonical and consider them to be inspired. Bible Christians call them
Apocryphal and consider them to be spurious.
The list of books that comprise the Bible is referred to as the canon. During
Jesus' time there were two Old Testament canons in use. There was the
Palestinian canon, which is identical to the Protestant Old Testament, and
there was the Alexandrian canon (also known as the Septuagint) which is
identical to the Catholic Old Testament. The reason why the Catholic Bible
has the longer canon is simple. The Apostles and the early Church used the
Septuagint.
Bible Christians use the shorter canon because it matches the present day
Jewish canon. They will often quote Romans 3:2, which says, "The Jews are
entrusted with the oracles of God." They reason that since God entrusted the
Old Testament to the Jews, they should be the ones who determine which
books belong in it.   This reasoning presents a couple of problems. Firstly,
both Old Testament canons were received from the Jews. Thus neither canon
is eliminated by this verse. Secondly, the Jews didn't settle on the Palestinian
canon until at least 90 AD at the Council of Jamnia. This was well after
authority had passed from the Jews to the Church (Acts 4:19). Ironically it
was at the Council of Jamnia that the Jews also rejected the New Testament.
Logically speaking, anyone who would consider Jamnia as being
authoritative would also have to reject the New Testament.
Most Church Fathers regarded the Septuagint as the standard form of the
Old Testament. When the Councils of Hippo (393 AD) and Carthage (397 AD)
set the canon of the New Testament they also confirmed the Septuagint as the
Old Testament. Further evidence of the Septuagint's acceptance by the early
Church can be found in the New Testament itself. It quotes the Old Testament
approximately 350 times. Three hundred of those quotes are from  the
Septuagint. Surely this amounts to an overwhelming endorsement by the early
Church.
Some raise objections over supposed errors. One example is in Judith 1:1-7.
Here Nebuchadnezzar is called the king of Assyria when in fact it is well
known that he was the king of Babylon. But Judith is not a historical book; it's
a religious novel. The combining  of the Babylonians and the Assyrians is a
representation of the enemies of Israel. Both had conquered Israel at one time
or another. Judith means Jewess and she represents the whole of Judaism. The  
lesson of the book is to rely on God's way of deliverance no matter what the
method. Similar objections are raised over verses in Tobit, which are likewise
symbolic and not historical.
Critics will often dismiss the role of the Church in determining the New
Testament. They contend that the Holy Spirit caused the books of the New
Testament to fall into place on their own. They would have us believe that the
Church councils that dealt with the canon were nothing more than bishops
getting together to say "Wow, look at that." Once again, history tells us
another story.
The book of 1 Clement was considered inspired by most in the early Church
(Eusebius, The History of the Church 3:16, 325 AD). We also know that the
book of Revelation was disputed by many at the time. And yet Revelation
made it into the canon and 1 Clement didn't. That's because the Church set the
canon of Scripture, and she did so under the guidance of the Holy Spirit. Just
as God worked infallibly through men in writing the Bible, He worked
infallibly through men in communicating exactly which books comprised it.
And so the canon stood. Unchanged until the Protestant Reformation when
Martin Luther threw out the seven Deuterocanonicals because they
contradicted his new doctrines. He also wanted to throw out Hebrews, James,
2 Peter, 2 and 3 John, Jude, and Revelation. Fortunately, cooler heads
prevailed.
In Revelation 22:19 the apostle John proclaims, "If any one takes away from
the words of the book of this prophecy, God will take away his share in the
tree of life and in the holy city, which are described in this book." It's true that
this verse  refers to the book of Revelation. However, common sense tells us
that the same principal should apply to all of Scripture. Certainly God would
never be pleased with us tampering with any part of His word.