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The History of the Biblical Canon

The History of the Biblical Canon. Matt Dillahunty The Atheist Community of Austin. March 19 th 2006. Timeline. Earliest structures France and Japan Earliest Homo sapiens Traced by geneticists Natufian Culture Domestic dogs Domestic grains. 200,000 BCE. 60,000 BCE. 10,000 BCE.

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The History of the Biblical Canon

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  1. The History of the Biblical Canon Matt Dillahunty The Atheist Community of Austin March19th 2006

  2. Timeline • Earliest structures • France and Japan • Earliest Homo sapiens • Traced by geneticists • Natufian Culture • Domestic dogs • Domestic grains 200,000 BCE 60,000 BCE 10,000 BCE

  3. Timeline • Creation • 3761 BCE • Earliest known writing • Indus or Harrapan • Sumerian Cuneiform • First alphabetic script • Moses reportedly writes the Torah 4,000 BCE 3,300 BCE 3,200 BCE 2,000 BCE 1,500 BCE

  4. Timeline • Phoenician • Cyrillic • Aramaic • Greek • Latin • Hilkiah discovers Torah • Coptic • Hebrew • Dead Sea Scrolls 1,100 BCE 1,000 BCE 900 BCE 800 BCE 700 BCE 622 BCE 400 BCE 300 BCE 200 BCE

  5. Timeline • Jesus’ death • Pilate 26-36 CE • Paul converts • 1 to 3 years later • Early Christian writings • 48 – 120 CE • Oldest existing copies • 130 CE (fragments) • 350 CE (books) • No autographs

  6. Old Testament Canon • Torah ‘discovered’ around 622 BCE • Implied/traditional canonization (4th Century BCE) • Torah and Prophets (Nevi’im) • Septuagint c. 200 BCE • “Official” Greek translation by Jewish scholars • Synod at Jabneh 90-100 CE • Canonized Writings (Ketuvim) • Closed the canon (Tanakh) • Talmud Canonized c. 200 CE

  7. Christian acceptance of OT • Melitio (Bishop of Sardis) 160-180 CE • Went to Palestine and asked the Hebrews • Some still contain apocryphal books • 1 & 2 Macabees • Book of Wisdom • Ecclesiasticus

  8. Early Christian Writings • Lost Passion Narrative (30-60 CE ?) • ‘Q’ (40-80 CE) • Paul’s Epistles (48-58 CE) • ‘Signs’ Gospel (50-90 CE) • Hypothetical source for 4th Gospel • Gospel of Thomas (50-140) • Gospels (65-120) • Allusions to the destruction of Jerusalem

  9. Early Christian Writings • Clement of Rome (95 CE) • Popular in early churches • Never quotes a Gospel, including Mark • If Mark wrote to a Roman audience Clement should have known • Considered scripture by many in the early church • Referred to Pauline Epistles as wise council • Only OT writings are referred to as scripture • His quotations of Jesus are from no known soruce

  10. Early Christian Writings • Didache (50-120 CE ) • Most likely 110 CE • Manual on Christianity and Church Hierarchy • Quotes the Gospel of Matthew, verbatim, calling it ‘The Gospel’ • Regarded as canonical scripture by Clement of Alexandria, Origen an others • Source attributed to itinerant evangelists

  11. Early Christian Writings • Shepherd of Hermas (95-150 CE ) • Universally popular (along with the Epistle of Barnabas) • Was included (with Barnabas) as the final books of the NT in the oldest codex (Codex Sinaiticus) • Never quotes or names any NT text • Relies on Jewish texts now considered apocryphal (Eldad and Modat)

  12. Oral Tradition • Papias (~130 CE) • Interested in texts, but demonstrates that oral tradition is still “king” at this time • “I did not think that information from books would help me so much as a living and surviving voice.” • No surviving works. Fragments recorded by Eusebius. • “Expositions of the Sayings of the Lord” • Collection of sayings he had heard from ‘students of elders who claimed to have known the first disciples’

  13. Oral Tradition • Polycarp (~130 CE) • A single letter of quotes attributed to Jesus • Roughly 100 quotes • Some match gospel quotes • Some match non-Jesus statements from epistles • Cites no sources

  14. Written tradition begins • Basilides (~135 CE) • Gnostic • Composed the ‘Exegetica’ • Commentary on Gospel story • Unknown whether he used oral or written sources • Considered heretical • Until this point, the only authority cited was “Jesus” or “Christ” • Basilides ‘Exegetica’ started the doctrinal battles • Essentially drawing a line in the sand, implying that you either agreed with him or you’re a heretic • The need to establish Church authority to dictate or preserve doctrine was beginning

  15. Written tradition begins • Paul vs. the Jewish Christians • We see some of this in the varying doctrines expressed in the NT • Some of the disagreements are catalogued in the Bible (Acts) • Romans vs. Jews • Pressure on Christians (echoing this Pauline conflict) • Began the “us and them” claims • Pro-Roman, Anti-Jew doctrines become popular

  16. Written Tradition Begins • Marcion (~144 CE) • Proposes a reform of Christianity • OT is contradictory and barbaric • Only Paul’s writings are true • The true writings weren’t Jewish • Expelled from the church and formed his own • Gnostic beliefs • Jesus wasn’t human • No Hell

  17. Written Tradition Begins • Marcion (cont.) • Established the first Canon • 10 Epistles and one Gospel • Gospel later identified by Tertullian as that of Luke, but with the nativity and all OT references removed • Commentary retained • Written prefaces used for the Latin Vulgate

  18. Written Tradition • Montanism (~156CE) • Similar to Protestant (Pentecostal) movement • Speaking in tongues • Individual interpretation • Non-clerical authority • Made the common man as good as a Priest • Apocalyptic movement • Eventually leads to the conflict over canonizing the Revelation of John

  19. Doctrinal Politics • Church authority • Can’t have the average Joe reading and interpreting things on his own • Travel issues • People stayed close to home • Occasional travelers would discover differences in doctrine and write back to the ‘mother’ church • Church dispatches • Priests would travel and ‘review’ churches to determine if their doctrin was sound

  20. Doctrinal Politics • Build a base • The older, more powerful, richer or stronger-willed churches would dictate doctrine to outlying churches • Those who went along were rewarded • Despite Marcion’s canon, the Montanism heresy and the doctrinal issues, there is still no attempt to create an orthodox canon at this time (~175 CE)

  21. Early Church Fathers • Tatian • Converted around 150 CE by Justin Martyr • After training with Justin, heads to Syria in 172 CE to found a church • Bans wine, meat and marriage • Selects 4 gospels and writes the Diatessaron • “That which is through the four” • Harmonized account of the current 4 gospels • This establishes the Syrian canon as: • Diatessaron • Paul’s Epistles (no idea which ones) • Acts • Nothing else

  22. A Busy Century • A century of writing, fighting and forgery • 170 CE – “Acts of Paul” • Written to honor Paul • Priest author is charged with falsification and removed from office • Despite this, his work remained very popular in churches and exists in the Armenian Bible today

  23. A Busy Century • 177 CE – Athenagoras invents the trinity • 200 CE – Serapion tours churches in Asia • Encounters a dispute over the Gospel of Peter – can it be read in church? • Gives tentative approval and then declares it heretical after reading it • Book implied that Jesus only “seemed” to be a man • Doctrine drives the decision. Not scholarship.

  24. A Busy Century • 200 CE – Dionysus claims that his letters and ‘scriptures of the Lord’ are being edited and redacted • Calling into question the veracity of all of these texts • Even Paul hints at the rampancy of forgeries [insert verse]

  25. A Busy Century • 200 CE – Iraneus writes extensively • Quotes nearly every book which will eventually be the NT • May be indicative of an implied/traditional canon and a transition to written authority • His take on the 4 Gospels: • “It is not possible that the Gospels can be either more or fewer in number than they are, since there are four directions of the world in which we are, and four principal winds…the four living creatures (rev 4:9) symbolize the four gospels…and there were four principal covenants made with humanity, through Noah, Abraham, Moses and Christ.”

  26. A Busy Century • How do we determine the veracity of a given text? • If it agrees with your doctrine, it’s inspired • If it disagrees, it’s heresy • If you have the power, you make the call • Surely God worked hard to make sure the “right” people had the power • Literary history and scholarship were irrelevant • Not unusual for people who have been relying on oral traditions. If someone says this book is right, and you trust them, then the book is now as good as their word.

  27. The NT Canon takes shape • Clement of Alexandria • Secret Mark • A letter by Clement references 3 versions of the Gospel of Mark • A short one written in Rome based on Peter’s teachings • A longer “more spiritual” (possibly more Johanine) gospel written in Alexandria after Peter’s death • A “secret” version • Secret writings are easily modified, lost or hidden • How many first century writings exist that are modified, lost or hidden to preserve doctrine?

  28. The NT Canon takes shape • Clement of Alexandria (190 CE) • First serious scholar among Christian church fathers • Citing other written sources around 8000 times, over 2500 of them outside the Christian and Jewish traditions • Agreed with Tatian’s gospel choices but also added the Gospel of the Egyptians (generally considered gnostic), Gospel of the Hebrews, Traditions of Matthias, Shepherd of Hermas, Epistle of Barnabas, Apocalypse of Peter, and the Didache • Included oral traditions as well

  29. The NT Canon takes shape • Origen (203 CE) becomes the head of the Christian Seminary in Alexandria at the age of 18 • Origenes Adamantius • First seriously scholarly investigation of Christianity • Fled Alexandria in 231 after a dispute with Demetrius (Bishop of Alexandria) • Founded a new school in Caesarea which eventually outshone Alexandria

  30. The NT Canon takes shape • Origen (Cont) • Converts Ambrose from Valentianism (Gnostic) to orthodoxy. • Ambrose becomes his financier • Self-castration (a capital crime in Rome) • Agreed with Diatessaron • Claiming it’s the only inspired, trustworthy gospel because it’s the only one that no one disputes • By no one, he’s only counting non-heretics • Which clearly identifies that even among non-heretics the inspiration of early Gospels was disputed • Includes Gospel of Peter, Shepherd of Hermas, Didache and Epistle of Barnabas as scriputre • Doubts 2 & 3 John, 2 Peter and Hebrews

  31. The NT Canon takes shape • Tertullian (~195 CE) • Highly educated lawyer • Converts in 195 CE • Accepts the traditional, unofficial Canon including Shepherd of Hermas until…. • ‘distressed by the envy and laxity of the clergy in Rome’ he converts to Montanism

  32. The NT Canon takes shape • Muratorian Fragment • Late 2nd to 4th Century • Fragment of a Latin list of writings with comments • Includes Hermas as ‘highly regarded’ but not scripture • Excludes Hebrews, James, 1 Peter, 2 Peter and 3 John • Includes current Revelation as well as the Apocalypse of Peter and the Book of Wisdom • List attacks Marcionism, Montanism, Valentianism (basically all gnostics) • Establishes claims of an implied canon as early as the 2nd Century, but not consistent with the current canon

  33. The NT Canon takes shape • Eusebius (~ 275 CE) • Follows Origen’s beliefs (as a product of his school) • Endorses a trinity concept, but with Jesus as subordinate to God (never refers to him as theos) – anything else was polytheism • Advocated the use of fictions as “medicine” • Essentially, it’s ok to promote forgeries and lies if it furthers the cause of fighting heresy • Most of what we know of early Church history comes from his work on the History of the Church. For many things, he is the only source.

  34. The NT Canon takes shape • Cyril (350 CE) • Announced his list as part of a series of lectures along the lines of an “introduction to Christianity” • First official pronouncement from a high-ranking church official regarding a canon • This one man pronounced that his list of books were the only books which could be read – even privately • Identical to today’s Canon, with the exception of Revelation.

  35. An Official NT Canon • Synod of Laodicea (363 CE) • Around 20-30 bishops gathered together to decide on an official canon • Their pronouncement upheld Cyril’s Canon, saying: • “Let no private psalms nor any uncanonical books be read in the church, but only canonical ones of the New and Old Testament “

  36. Another Official NT Canon • Athanasius (Bishop of Alexandria) • 367 CE – Declares, in his Festal Epistle, that the canon now contains Revelation and adds: • “Let no one add to these, let nothing be taken away from them.” • This unofficially closes the canon, as it stands now • Western Catholic Canon • Another edict by one man

  37. A Few Centuries later • Trullan Synod (692 CE) • Emperor Justinian calls the synod to clarify the disputes about the canon. • Synod held that both the Synod of Laodicea and Epistle of Athanasius were authoritative, despite their contradictory position on Revelation • Codified the “85th Apostolic Canon” • Considers the 2 letters of Clement of Rome as sacred and part of the Bible • Also includes 8 other books “which it is not appropriate to make public before all, because of the mysteries contained in them”

  38. Much Much later • Council of Florence (1443 CE) • Affirms the list of Athanasius, sealing the 27 book NT canon. • Officially only carried weight in the west • Why, after so many years, was this needed? • Questions about authenticity were starting to arise (particularly about authorship of Hebrews) • Renaissance

  39. Another Council • Council of Trent (1546 CE) • Affirmed the Council of Florence • The End?

  40. Erasmus • 1466-1536 • Chastised by the church for doubting the authorship of Hebrews and other books • Renounced his former questions and said • “the opinion formulated by the Church has more value in my eyes than human reasons, whatever they may be” • Went on to create the Textus Receptus

  41. Debate continues • KJV, NIV, NASB, ALT, ASV, BBE, CEV, Darby, MKJV, RSV…. • The Canon is closed - the debate isn’t

  42. Why should we care? • Knowing more about the Bible than a Christian.. • Gives you an answer • Gives you an edge • Gives you an opportunity

  43. End

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