A
conservative, bible believing perspective!
God's providence gave us the 27 book New Testament Canon, not the church.
God, not men decided the canon. This providence does not mean that church
leaders were inspired in their selecting the canon, only that God had
his eye on the scriptures the whole time and brought about His will to
form the Bible we see today!
A
conservative, bible believing perspective! 100AD:
All 27 books of the New Testament were in circulation and
all but Hebrews, 2 Peter, James, 2 Jn, 3 Jn, Revelation were
universally accepted. 100-400
AD: 6 "disputed" books accepted. A number of other
books were read in a few churches at various times: Shepherd
of Hermas, 1 Clement, Didache, Epistle of Barnabas, Wisdom
of Solomon, Apocalypse of Peter.
Introduction
and Overview:
The
Word Bible is from Greek, bilia and is
found twice in scripture:
I, Daniel,
observed in the books (or Bible) [Greek:
biblia] the number of the years which was revealed as the word
of the Lord to Jeremiah the prophet for the completion of the desolations
of Jerusalem ,
namely, seventy years. Daniel 9:2 LXX
When you
come bring the cloak which I left at Troas
with Carpus, and the books
(or Bible) [Greek: biblia], especially the parchments. 2 Timothy
4:13
Lesson
1:
Earliest
evidence for the New Testament canon
It
is our view that God oversaw the collection of the Canon of the New Testament
by providence
God's
providence gave us the 27 book New Testament Canon, not the church. God,
not men decided the canon. This providence does not mean that church leaders
were inspired in their selecting the canon, only that God had his eye
on the scriptures the whole time and brought about His will to form the
Bible we see today!
This
of course does not mean that there was direct inspiration in the many
men who were part of the process, just that God, in His providence, achieved
His goal of a 27 book canon. For example the late 4th century councils
that drafted lists of 27 books, were merely rubber stamping what had long
been the universal standard for the majority of Christians.
By
100AD, all 27 books of the New Testament were in circulation and all but
Hebrews, 2 Peter, James, 2 Jn, 3 Jn, Revelation were universally accepted.
"All
of these elements -the notation of the nomina sacra, the codex form, the
uniform arrangement and number of writings in the manuscript tradition,
the formulation of the titles, and the evidence indicating that the collection
was called "New Testament" from the very beginning- are evidence
of a careful final redaction. These editorial features did not originate
with the authors of the individual writings. They serve to combine disparate
material into a collection and to create the impression of a cohesive
literary unit for readers of the work. Furthermore, these elements are
so idiosyncratic that they cannot be credited to several independently
operating editors but must be the work of a single editorial entity."
(The first edition of the New Testament, David Trobisch, p 44, 2000)
"But
this question, like most over which Christians disagree, is not the cutting
edge of what Christianity is all about...there was division everywhere
in the church on the books that might be called the 'fringe,' but there
was very little disagreement over what was at the core of the matter...The
division of opinion...was not over the core, but over the 'fringe.'"
(The Formation of the Christian Biblical Canon, Lee M. MacDonald, 1995,
p 132)
Basilides
was a Gnostic heretic who lived about 117-138 AD. Basilides, however,
quoted from 1 Corinthians prefacing the quote with: "the scripture
says".
Here
are the most important pieces of evidence to support the early canon:
A.
The use of " Nomina
Sacra ": Although non-inspired books
also contained these abbreviations for special words, it does prove the
existence of a special collection of books.
B.
The Codex
Form rather than scrolls . It is quite
amazing, but the New Testament breaks with the Old Testament tradition
of using scrolls and used book form (codex) right from the very beginning.
C.
That books were distributed within four sets of collections: Gospels,
Paul's letters, Catholic epistles, Revelation. So consistent are the sets
of collections, that there are standard symbols used in the study of Bible
manuscripts to designate each collection.
D.
Uniform Arrangement within each category: Generally
there was a similar order of books like Matthew, Mark Luke and John within
the gospel collection. Although there were exceptions to the ordering
of the books, they were often very similar.
E.
Number Of Writings within each category: 4
gospels, Paul's letters etc., Catholic epistles, Revelation.
F.
Formulation Of The Titles: The titles
(ie. Gospel according to Matthew, etc.) were added at a later date by
those who compiled the letters into one volume. Although the titles are
not inspired, the fact that all the manuscripts employ the same titles
for each book, strongly argues for an early and unified canon of scripture.
"In
view of the unanimity on this point of the tradition of the Church which
can be traced back to the beginning of the second century, we
are justified in assuming that the Epistle [Ephesians] had this title
[in Ephesus 1:1] when it was incorporated into the collection of Pauline
letters which afterwards came into general circulation in the
Church." (Introduction To The New Testament, Theodor Zahn, 1909 p
481)
The Earliest Christians described their
writings as "the New Testament". Since the expression "the
New Testament" is used many times within the Bible itself, this
proves that the apostolic writings were clearly intended to be organized
into a single collection.
Marcion's
concern was to exclude books that he disapproved of from his "canon."
He was not assembling a collection of Christian books, but making a
(very restricted) selection from the corpus of texts which already existed
and which must already have been recognized as sacred by many
in the church-otherwise he would not have needed to insist on abolishing
them. (Lee Martin McDonald, James A. Sanders, Editors: The Canon Debate;
John Barton, Marcion Revisited, p 342, 2002)
The
New Testament books, or at any rate the central "core" of
the Gospels and the Pauline and Catholic Epistles, were already used
very widely in the time before Marcion ,
and continued to be so used after him. (Lee Martin McDonald, James A.
Sanders, Editors: The Canon Debate; John Barton, Marcion Revisited,
p 343, 2002)
What
Scholars have said:
Thus it is
entirely possible to possess scriptures without having a canon ,
and this was in fact the situation in the first few centuries of the
Christian church. (Lee Martin McDonald, James A. Sanders, Editors: The
Canon Debate; Geoffrey Mark Hahneman, The Muratorian Fragment and the
Origins of the New Testament Canon, 2002, p 380)
The authority, of specific writings
was questioned as early as the second half of the second century. Many
older studies of the history of the canon, in my opinion, have
drawn the wrong conclusion from this observation . The traditional
interpretation asserts that these discussions reflect a debate about
which writings should be included in the Christian Bible. But with the
uniform manuscript evidence in mind, the critical remarks of the church
fathers can be better interpreted as a historical critical reaction
to an existing publication . Their debate
as to the authorship and authority of the individual writings continues
among biblical scholars to this very day, and then, as now, the publication
to which they referred was the Canonical Edition of the Christian Bible.
(The first edition of the New Testament, David Trobisch, 2000, p 35)
There is no need to use such a document
to reconstruct the New Testament when we have manuscripts from the same
time period, the close of the second century, that nicely document each
collection unit. There is no need to speculate about whether the Letter
to the Hebrews was part of a collection of the Letters of Paul in the
second century , because a second-century exemplar of the Pauline
letter collection, P46, containing the letter at issue, actually exists.
Are we not forced by the evidence to interpret the discussion in the
early church about the authenticity of certain biblical writings as
a reaction to an already published book ? From this perspective,
the same documented debates that are usually evaluated to demonstrate
a gradual growth process of the canon serve instead as proof that the
Canonical Edition of the Christian Bible was
finished, published, and widely used . (The first edition of
the New Testament, David Trobisch, 2000, p 37)
"During most of the history of
the early church the letters of Paul were transmitted, not in isolation
from each other, but within a collection. The
earliest textual witnesses of his letters already reflect the form of
a corpus (cf. Zuntz). (The New Testament as canon, Brevard S.
Childs, 1984, p 422)
"The
modern debate over the development of the Pauline corpus emerged in
the long controversy between T. Zahn and A. Harnack. Zahn
developed his position, which was supported with formidable scholarship,
by an exhaustive study of the early canonical lists, Marcion, and the
Apostolic Fathers, especially Clement, Polycarp, and Ignatius .
He argued that the references to the Pauline letters in widely separated
areas of the church (Rome, Corinth, Smyrna, Antioch) as well as the
high level of uniformity among the epistles mentioned, could only be
explained by assuming a process of conscious collection, the motivation
for which Zahn attributed to the liturgical function of public worship.
He assigned the process of the formation of
the corpus of thirteen Pauline epistles, which he thought comprised
the collection, to the period between AD 80 and 85, after the writing
of the book of Acts. He located this canonical activity geographically
in Corinth .
Harnack agreed with Zahn regarding the early age of the Pauline collection
and set AD 100 as the terminus ad quem for the corpus, which had by
then grown from ten to thirteen letters by the addition of the Pastorals
. He also envisioned a growth which was
motivated by the public reading of the Pauline letters in worship. However,
Harnack differed at a decisive point from Zahn by sharply distinguishing
between the public reading from a Pauline collection and the formal
recognition of the corpus' canonicity." (The New Testament as canon,
Brevard S. Childs, 1984, p 422)
I.
Roman Catholic and Orthodox confuse the issue:
"The
second big surprise came when I realized that the
first complete listing of New Testament books as we have them today did
not appear until over 300 years after the death and resurrection of Christ
. (The first complete listing was given by St. Athanasius in his
Paschal Letter in A.D. 367.)" (Which Came First: The Church or the
New Testament?, Fr. James Bernstein, Orthodox churchman, 1994, p 6)
Refutation
of James Bernstein (Orthodox):
Bernstein, being an Orthodox apologist,
has a direct vested interest in promoting the superiority of "man
made church tradition" over what the Bible says. If he can make
you think the Bible did not exist until 367 AD, then he can deceive
you into thinking that perhaps the Orthodox position on "church
tradition" is correct.
The way Orthodox and Catholic leaders
portray is, they give you the wrong impression. Just because we have
the first complete list in the 4th century, doesn't change the fact
that all the 27 books of the New Testament were in full circulation
since 100 AD, the majority by 70 AD.
A more accurate and responsible way
of depicting the historical data is that the entire New Testament was
in full use and only about 5 books, were questioned. Even so, these
5 books were still being used in churches throughout the world from
100 AD.