WilliamPenn said:
I am not saying that these books are anymore right than the present canon but What does the Church fear of this other books?Blue Sapphire replies:
"I don't think they do fear. I think you think they fear though. If you think they fear, then you tell me why".And I have a question for you BlueSapphire
Why DON'T you think they feared it?
I'm not picking on you, but you already asked WP to show you WHY and I want to compare your feelings with his.
I shouldn't have said I didn't think they feared. What I meant was that, from the Catholic standpoint, Jesus entrusted Peter with the responsibility for His Church.
So from the beginning, the Church was concerned with passing on the truths that were taught by Jesus. They were NOT entrusted with passing on things that were not true.
So, in establishing the canon, of course they were only going to include books which contained truth in them.
The Church had a responsibility to pass on ONLY truths. They would have been negligent if they hadn't "feared" (if that's the word we want to use) passing on things that were not true.
quote: WPI believe the Bible is true (not "factual" but true) In believing this, I must acknowledge where we got the Bible from. There is no escaping what organization is responsible for passing it on to us. Whether or not there was a literal global flood, a literal Adam and Eve, etc. etc. is irrelevant to me.
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Who was the God that decided these books are in and those books are out?
----------------------------------------------------------------------Is it your contention then that "God" decided which books were in or out? It is my contention that God did this through an organization.
I would like to see WHAT made each of you believe the way you do.
God wanted to communicate to us. He had to communicate in the world view of the people to whom he was communicating. So I can believe in evolution and the Bible. Catholics are not "literalists" like the fundies. Anyways, got off on another tangent didn't I....
quote:WPActually, they WERE THERE. That's my point. That from the beginning there was the truth and there were untruths. The whole reason for establishing a canon was to preserve the truth and to distinguish it from the untruths.The only reason why they were not excepted is because they did not support their doctrines.
Bluesapphire quote:
BINGO. Which is exactly why they also make the claim that it is their responsibility to interpret those books in light of orthodoxy.
So Bluesapphire, you are saying there were OTHER doctrines out there but the catholic church was intrusted by God to decide that for all of us .
Why were their OTHER DOCTRINES?
How would the Catholics KNOW which was heresy and which was real? They weren't there! Did God guide them?
If you do research on the early heresies you will see the "other doctrines" and you can judge for yourself whether you believe what they taught was truth.
The Catholic Church's goal was to preserve what Jesus taught to his Apostles. He spent three years with them and not everything he said to them went down in print. They taught others and so on and so on. Anything that was to be included in the canon might not be exhaustive but it at least couldn't be contradictive.
I'm so tired and i'ts 11:20. I hope I made at least a little bit of sense. Sometimes I don't know how I sound. If I sound illiterate, please excuse me. I'm just really sleepy.
Where does this Holy spirit that is supposed to "guide us in all things".. come in? Is he also in co-hoots with the Catholic church and they work together? We get the Bible from the Catholics, read it, believe in it, and the Holy Spirit does his job?Jesus promised to send the Holy Spirit who would "lead and guide" into all truth. Do you think Jesus kept his promise? I do. I think the Holy Spirit lead and guided the Church and helped the Church to preserve the original teachings of Jesus. If I didn't believe this, I would not only not be Catholic, but I wouldn't be Christian either.
Bluesapphire Quote:Maccabbees 1 and 2 are both included in the Catholic canon and were included in the Greek Septuagint - the bible that Jesus used. It wasn't until Luther that the Christians first began to exclude them.
The Church has many manuscripts of non-canonical writings which you are talking about in its possession. And there are others in the Brittish Museum. Just because the Church didn't hand deliver them to you doesn't mean it tried to suppress them.Why do they keep stories of heresies? Or are these OTHER books heresies? Thomas, the maccabee's etc.?
To be honest with you I haven't read all of the Gospel of Thomas so I don't know all of its contents. But I know that FOR SURE if it wasn't included in the canon, it was because it didn't fit the criteria. Maybe it's author wasn't proven to be a disciple. Maybe it was written later. Maybe it contained teachings which were NEW and not the original ones of Jesus.
Maybe none of these things are true about the Gospel of Thomas. The thing I do know is that from the beginning, there were books which were accepted and read in the meetings of the Christians. Thomas wasn't one of them. It was NEVER on anyone's list as far as I know.
The Church has always been very careful. It wouldn't introduce some new book. The books that were included were books accepted by most as inspired. Various ones took longer to be accepted but they were fully accepted by the time the canon was established.
I'm really tired. Good night.
If they are not heresies....why aren't they part of the bible?
Not all books that were true (not heretical) made it into the bible because one of the criteria was that it had to be written by a disciple of Jesus. The writings of the post-Apostilic period are considered beneficial but not inspired. They are what we call the "Tradition." They are part of the revelation of God because they help us understand the canonical books.