The word canon is derived from the Greek word kanon (“kanon”), a rod, ruler, staff, or measuring rod. The Biblical canon is the list of books recognized by the leaders of the church, based on objective criteria, to be inspired by God and to authoritatively and accurately express the historical relationship between God and His people. For the Old Testament, the canon was initially implicit and
undisputed. When the Torah was written, it was immediately
recognized as inspired by God, handled with great reverence,
maintained by the priests and stored in the Ark of the Covenant.
Most other books of the Old Testament were handled in the same
manner. While the Jewish nation was flourishing under judges and
kings, and prophets were recognized as men from God, their history
and prophecies were written and protected by the priests and
scribes. After the captivities of the two Jewish kingdoms and the
scattering of the people this became problematic.
Even so, the work was still manageable as the priests in The rise of Christianity (which, in its earliest days, used only the LXX) caused Jewish leaders to recognize the need for a formal canon. Likely by the end of the first century the canon of the Hebrew Old Testament had been officially closed.[11] The completed canon of the Hebrew Bible contains the same books
and texts (in a slightly different order) as the modern Protestant
Old Testament. However, in 1546 the Roman Catholic clergy accepted
the entirety of the Septuagint as the canon for its Old Testament.
Therefore Roman Catholic Bibles contain additional books of the OT
Apocrypha (also known as deuterocanonical
– “second canon”). These
are Tobit, Judith, Wisdom of Solomon, Ecclesiasticus (also called
Sirach or Ben Sira), Baruch (including the Letter of Jeremiah),
First and Second Maccabees, and additions to the books of Esther and
Daniel. The Eastern
Orthodox Church has accepted the Septuagint as the definition of the
canon for its Old Testament, adding further the books of First
Esdras, the Prayer of Manasseh, Psalm 151, and Third Maccabees, with
Fourth Maccabees as an appendix. Read on about: (5) Exhibit #4: Authorship of the Pentateuch
[10] Norman Geisler and William Nix , A General Introduction to the Bible. (1986), page 205, and Josh McDowell , The New Evidence that Demands a Verdict (1999), page 26. [11] Some claim this happened at the Council of Jamnia around 100 AD. Most scholars now believe that there was never a council, but that the Rabbinic school at Jamnia became the substitute for the Sanhedrin after the destruction of Jerusalem in 70 AD and through the teachings of the school, the canon was fixed in the 70-135 AD period.
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