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Much of what I’ve spent time seeking to learn wasn’t because I wrote a list of questions that I just had to have the answer to and started knocking them out one by one - although that wouldn’t be a bad idea.
Instead, I was driven to find the answers when I was challenged by another person who had a differing view.
For example, it wasn’t until I talked with some Jehovah’s Witnesses who said Jesus wasn’t God and the Trinity wasn’t true, that I began to seek WHY I BELIEVED that Jesus WAS God and the Trinity WAS true…but I couldn't explain WHY.
What if my parents, pastor, & church were WRONG?
What if the Jehovah’s Witnesses were RIGHT?
That QUESTION sparked my hunger to learn WHY I believe WHAT I believe.
I was open to being corrected, but it was going to have to be convinced through the Scriptures.
So I began to spend some serious time reading through the Gospel of John & other Scriptures.
I think that will happen in your life too.
A family member says he/she doesn’t believe in a place of eternal punishment for those who reject Jesus.
You do…but you don’t know WHY…the spark is lit and you dig in to learn WHY you believe WHAT you believe.
A friend tells you that God is fine with sex outside of marriage - heterosexual & homosexual…you disagree, but other than agreeing with your parents, your pastor, or other influences in your life…YOU DON’T KNOW WHY.
A hunger begins to develop in you - to learn WHY you believe WHAT you believe.
And here's why that is SO IMPORTANT.
You see, the greatest critic you will ever face…IS YOU.
As Josh McDowell often says, “The heart cannot rejoice in what the mind rejects.”
THAT’S why we are taking the time to tackle these issues.
Week 1 we asked and answered “Why should we trust the Word of God?”
Answer: We are disciples of Jesus and...
Jesus taught His disciples to trust the WORD of GOD…which are KNOWN through the Scriptures.
Last week we asked Is what we have now, what they wrote then?
We demonstrated that We have GOOD EVIDENCE that the WORD of GOD has been PRESERVED
Today we ask the next question:
What are the Recognized Writings & Trustworthy Translations?
How did we get the 66 recognized writings in the Bible today and what about the other writings that got left out?
How are English Bible translations developed, what are the differences between them, and which translations are trustworthy?
RECOGNIZED WRITINGS Canon
These Recognized Writings are also known as the Canon.
We aren’t talking about a long steel tube we fire cannon balls from.
Definition of CANON: Canon is the term for the collection of writings we recognize as the Old & New Testament.
Canon is derived from the Greek kanon, which originally referred to a reed that was used to test for straightness or length.
By the 4th century, canon evolved to mean “standard”, “rule”, or “norm”, the common word to describe the collection of writings we recognize as the Old and New Testament.
Old Testament Canon
The Old Testament canon was recognized by the people of Jesus’ day.
There were 24 recognized writings combining all the 1st and 2nd - e.g. 1 & 2 Kings & Ezra-Nehemiah) referred to as the Law, Prophets, & the Writings
Hebrew: TaNaKh =
Torah (Hebrew for Teaching),
Nevi’im (Prophets), &
Ketuvim (Writings).
As mentioned in a previous teaching, Jesus quotes almost all of these writings as authoritative.
On the other hand, there were other writings known to the Jewish people that you might have heard called the Apocrypha (Deuterocanonical ‘second cannon’ - Catholics).
These writings contain some strange stories and good Jewish history,
yet Jewish people didn’t consider these writings to be Scriptural.
Although Jesus & his disciples quoted from the Old Testament extensively, they never quoted these writings as authoritative words from God.
New Testament Canon
Now what about the New Testament?
How did those 27 separate writings get compiled and what about the other writings that didn’t make the cut - you know - the “lost books of the Bible” mentioned by the Discovery Channel and other critics.
As we have discussed the NT hand-written 1st century manuscripts were being copied & distributed around the known world as separate writings.
We have no evidence that the 27 separate New Testament writings put together in book form by the end of the 1st century.
Without an approved canonical list, different churches valued certain Gospels and Epistles over others.
Marcion’s Canon
Then along came a heretic named Marcion who by A.D. 140 had
listed 11 of our 27 NT writings as trustworthy - kind of.
You see, Marcion believed the God of the Old Testament & the God of the New Testament were not the same.
The Jewish God - from his perspective - was manipulative, angry, fickle, & cruel while the God of the New Testament was the God of love.
Because of this presupposition, Marcion rejected the Old Testament writings that he claimed had been corrupted by Jewish scribes.
He recognized 11 of the New Testament writings including the Gospel of Luke & 10 of Paul’s writings (total of 11).
Marcion excluded Matthew, Mark, & John because of their Jewish flavor & affirmations.
And although he kept Luke since it was written for Gentiles, but he mutilated much of it.
Luke: Marcion didn’t believe Jesus was human and certainly wasn’t born as a human Jewish child so he removed all references to Jesus’ birth, genealogy, or Jewishness, which he attributed to manipulating editors (i.e.
Jewish scribes).
Paul: He clipped out much of the Jewish flavor of Paul’s writings as well, contending that Jews had corrupted some of what Paul had written.
Need for a New Testament Canon
Marcion’s canon sounded an alarm for the young Church.
Without a clear canon of recognized writings, future heretical claims to go unchecked.
Marcion’s list required a response.
The writings were officially Collected because false teaching needed to be officially Corrected.
Further, as the Roman Empire began to persecute Christians, they had to know which teachings they were willing to die for.
A gradual consensus began to develop among orthodox Christians, and by the end of the second century the core of the New Testament canon was established with the recognition of the four Gospels, Acts, and the thirteen letters from Paul (not including Hebrews that some think was written by Paul).
For example, the Muratorian Fragment (A.D. 170-180) comes from this time period, containing 22 of the 27 NT writings we recognize today.
The list includes the 4 Gospels, Acts, the 13 writings of Paul, 1&2 John, Jude, & Revelation.
These believers were aware of other writings as well.
Listen to this quote from the fragment.
There are also in circulation one to the Laodiceans, and another to the Alexandrians, forged under the name of Paul, and addressed against the heresy of Marcion; and there are also several others which cannot be received into the Catholic Church, for it is not suitable for gall to be mingled with honey.
How could one tell the difference?
Criteria for Canonized Writings
Authors - Apostles & Associates?
Who wrote it?
It must have been an apostle (i.e.
Matthew, John, Peter, & Paul) or someone closely connected with an apostle (e.g.
Luke, John Mark, James, Jude).
Eyewitness testimony is essential to authenticate the incredible claims made by Jesus and his followers in the New Testament.
Content - Orthodox Teaching?
The church was to trust the Gospel as taught by the apostles of Jesus, and oppose the teachers & teachings trying to worm they way into the church and teaching something different.
Galatians 1:6–9 (NET)
I am astonished that you are so quickly deserting the one who called you by the grace of Christ and are following a different gospel—not that there really is another gospel, but there are some who are disturbing you and wanting to distort the gospel of Christ.
But even if we (or an angel from heaven) should preach a gospel contrary to the one we preached to you, let him be condemned to hell!
As we have said before, and now I say again, if any one is preaching to you a gospel contrary to what you received, let him be condemned to hell!
That’s a HEAVY HANDED response, isn’t it?
Church Response - Universal Acceptance?
The writing had to be “accepted by a broad geographic segment of the church.”
Considering the cultural diversities within the churches, their agreement of which books belonged in the New Testament canon demonstrates that the Holy Spirit led people from different cultures to recognize the same writings as Scripture.
What about “the Lost Books of the Bible”?
Here’s one example:
Gospel of Thomas
MANY WRITINGS FAILED this test, including the Gospel of Thomas.
Eusebius (A.D. 260-340) called this a heretical writing.
Why?
It didn’t meet ANY of the 3 criteria for canonical Scriptures.
Apostles or Associates?
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