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Deuterocanonicals

Deuterocanonicals. an exploration of the 7 Deuterocanonical books Holy Spirit Catholic Church January 2011. Almighty eternal God, I acknowledge you as my first beginning and my last end. My Creator and my Redeemer, my sanctification and my consummation. My God and my all.

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Deuterocanonicals

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  1. Deuterocanonicals an exploration of the 7 Deuterocanonical books Holy Spirit Catholic Church January 2011

  2. Almighty eternal God, I acknowledge you as my first beginning and my last end. My Creator and my Redeemer, my sanctification and my consummation. My God and my all. I thank you for your lavish gifts to me, to the whole human race and to all creation. Lord, teach me not to hold on to life too tightly. Teach me to take it as a gift. To enjoy it, to cherish it while I have it, but to let go gracefully and thankfully when the time comes. The gift is great, but the Giver is greater still. You are the Giver and in you is the life that never ends. Amen.

  3. Deuterocanonical Books meaning of deuterocanonical? which books? when written? what language?

  4. Deuterocanonical Books meaning of deuterocanonical? “second canon”

  5. Deuterocanonical Books which books? • Tobit, Judith, I & II Maccabees • Baruch, Wisdom, Sirach

  6. Deuterocanonical Books when written? Between early 2nd & late 1st Century BC (2oo) (100-90)

  7. Deuterocanonical Books what language? most in Hebrew, then Greek some originally in Greek

  8. Baruch 6 chapters Tobit 14 Chapters II Maccabees 15 Chapters I Maccabees 16 Chapters Judith 16 Chapters Sirach 51 Chapters Wisdom 19 Chapters Deuterocanonicals: Book Lengths

  9. Deuterocanonicals: Genre Categories • Jewish Categories of TaNaK • Torah – the law • Neviim – the prophets • Kethuvim – the writings

  10. Deuterocanonicals: Genre Categories • Christian Categories of OT • Torah/Pentateuch • Historical Books • Wisdom Books • Prophetic Books

  11. Deuterocanonicals: Genre Categories • Christian Categories of OT • Torah/Pentateuch • Historical Books • Wisdom Books • Prophetic Books I & II Maccabees Judith Tobit Wisdom Sirach Baruch

  12. Deuterocanonicals: Dating the Texts 150 100 200 BC Judith Sirach 1 Maccabees Tobit 2 Maccabees Baruch Wisdom

  13. Notions of Canon & 7 Books as Canon Jewish Scriptures Christian Scriptures

  14. The 7 Books as Canon • How did Jews at time of Christ view their sacred scriptures? • Was there a Jewish canon? When? • How did Christians at the time of Christ, and shortly thereafter, view their sacred scriptures? • Was there a Christian OT canon? • Why do Catholics embrace the 7 books, while Protestants reject them?

  15. How did Jews at time of Christ view their sacred scriptures? Was there a Jewish canon? When?

  16. How did Jews at time of Christ view their sacred scriptures?Was there a Jewish canon? • Jews had a very fluid view of canon in the centuries before and after Jesus • Torah had a “pride of place” and seen as sacred scripture by 400 BC • Prophets garnered same status by 200 BC • Wisdom literature same status by 90 AD or later • II Maccabees 15:9 – “law and the prophets” • Luke 24:44 – “law of Moses, prophets and Psalms” • Septuagint was critical translation and important to understanding the Deuterocanonical books

  17. Septuagint: Important for understanding the Deuterocanonicals • Septuagint (LXX)– critical in understanding history of canon & place of Deuterocanonical books • Greek translation of sacred scriptures for Jews in Alexandria and in the Diaspora • Translated between 3rd Century and 130 BC • “LXX” meaning denotes a sacred translation • Jews initially accepted the value of the Septuagint and later rejected it as Christians accepted as their text • SUMMARY: Jews view of canon was fluid until as late as 3rd Century AD. Rejected Septuagint due to Christian acceptance.

  18. How did Christians at the time of Christ, and shortly thereafter, view their sacred scriptures? • Was there a Christian OT canon?

  19. How did Christians at the time of Christ, and shortly thereafter, view their sacred scriptures? • Early Christians’ OT was the Septuagint, the Greek OT • LXX had all texts, including the 7 Deuterocanonical books • The NT writers use LXX most of the time in citing the OT (>80% of time) • SUMMARY: Jewish rejection of LXX was two-fold: • more conservative view of canon, eliminating books written in • Greek (or ones they thought were written in Greek) to solidify Jewish identity • the rabbis eliminated any books that Christians were using --(LXX) included the 7 books

  20. Septuagint vs later Jewish Canon Christian OT 46 Books (Septuagint) Used from time of Jesus and throughout the NT

  21. Septuagint vs later Jewish Canon Christian OT 46 Books (Septuagint) 7 Books Used from time of Jesus and throughout the NT

  22. Septuagint vs later Jewish Canon Christian OT 46 Books (Septuagint) Jewish TaNaK 39 Books (Palestinian Canon) 7 Books Used from time of Jesus and throughout the NT Not decided earlier than 90 AD or 3rd Century AD

  23. Deuterocanonicals in the NT • New Testament use of the Deuterocanonicals • Over 70 references in NT to Deuterocanonicals • > 30 in Gospels/Acts • > 20 in Paul • > 20 in remaining NT (~13 in Revelation) • Gospels’ use: • “sheep without a shepherd” (Judith 11:19) • “seed on rocky ground, no root” (Sirach 40:15) • Jesus calling God his Father (Wisdom 2:16) • “takes away branches not bearing fruit” (Wisdom 4:5) • Paul’s use: • “sin and death entering the world” (Wisdom 2:4) • pagan sacrifices are to demons, not God (Baruch 4:7) • “suit of armor” language (Wisdom 5:17-20)

  24. Why do Catholics embrace the 7 books, while Protestants reject them? (did Catholics “add” them to the Bible?)

  25. Why do Catholics embrace the 7 books, while Protestants reject them? (did Catholics “add” them to the Bible?) NO

  26. Why do Catholics embrace the 7 books, while Protestants reject them? • Catholics accept the 7 books because they were part of the Septuagint, the first OT text of early Christianity (Church Fathers) • Protestants reject them on 2 grounds: • Jews didn’t accept the books • Certain doctrine taught are “Catholic” doctrines • • Prayers for the dead (Tobit 12:12; 2 Maccabees 12:39-45)• Purgatory (Wisdom 3:1-7)• Intercession of those in heaven (2 Maccabees 15:14)• Intercession of angels (Tobit 12:12-15) • Protestants accepted the 27 NT books authorized by the Catholic Church, but reject part of the OT (for faulty reasons)

  27. Deuterocanonicals: Use in Lectionary

  28. Book of Tobit • Dating: early 2nd Century BC • Setting: 8th Century BC (fall of North 721 BC) • Text: Hebrew (original), Greek (surviving) • Length: 14 Chapters • Themes: • God answers prayers and rewards the faithful • Angels/Demons are active in affairs • Emphasis on prayer, fasting and almsgiving • Maintenance of Jewish identity in Exile is critical • Strong sapiential/wisdom themes

  29. Book of Judith • Dating: mid 2nd – early 1st Century BC • Setting: 6th Century BC (assault on Judah) • Text: Hebrew (original), Greek (surviving) • Length: 16 Chapters • Themes: • Overt fiction is the literary medium • Tale of unlikely hero delivering her people • Strong belief in one God & fidelity to the God & law • God is in control of history, saving his people • God delivers in unusual ways

  30. Book of I Maccabees • Dating: mid-late 2nd Century BC (130s?) • Setting: ~175 to ~134 BC • Text: Hebrew (original), Greek (surviving) • Length: 16 Chapters • Themes: • Allegiance to the law of God • Preservation of Jewish cult and identity • Foundational story for Hanukkah • Connection to Jewish history • God saved Jews thru the Maccabees

  31. Book of II Maccabees • Dating: late 2nd Century BC (shortly after 1 Maccabees) • Setting: overlaps with 1 Maccabees – only covering 20-25 yrs • Text: Greek (original) • Length: 15 Chapters • Themes: • Theological reflection on 1 Maccabees • Stresses martyrdom as a witness to faith • Introduces “new” themes/concepts • Creation out of nothing (ex nihilo) (7:28) • Resurrection/Afterlife (7:9,14) • Prayers/sacrifices for the dead (12:38-46) • Prayers from the dead (15:14)

  32. Sirach ~200-180 BCE religious, realistic Wisdom ~100-90 BCE religious/Greek, realistic Development of Wisdom Literature Proverbs 10-31 ~700-400 BCE secular, optimistic Proverbs 1-9 ~400 BCE religious, optimistic Job ~400 BCE religious, pessimistic Ecclesiastes ~300-250 BCE secular, pessimistic

  33. Book of Baruch • Dating: early – middle 2nd Century BC (180-150) • Setting: post-Exile Babylon (6th Century BC) • Text: Hebrew (original), Greek (surviving) • Length: 6 Chapters • Themes: • Explores finding God outside of Promised Land • Theologically conservative: sin/guilt, contrition, deliverance – lacking sense of afterlife • Strong monotheistic emphasis • Prophet plays a strong role in reminding the exiles to hope • Strong connectedness to Jerusalem, even from afar

  34. Book of Sirach • Dating: 2nd Century BC (200-175) (translation 132) • Text: Hebrew (original), Greek (surviving) • Length: 51 Chapters • Themes: • A collection of moral instructions, proverbs & ethical essays • Offers a more conservative response to Hellenization –true wisdom found in Jewish history (heavy integration of history) • Heavy connection of wisdom with Jewish cult/priesthood • Jewish wisdom trumps wisdom of others • “this life” orientation (body/soul dichotomy, afterlife absent)

  35. Book of Wisdom • Dating: early 1st Century BC (probably last written) • Text: likely Greek (original) • Length: 19 Chapters • Themes: • Written in Greek, saturated with Jewish themes • Critique of the traditional notion of retribution • Sacred history (haggadah) is important to identity • Developed notions of soul/spirit and afterlife • Personified Wisdom (picked up in NT, applied to Jesus)

  36. In Summary • Forms/Literary Genres • Tobit & Judith – highly fictionalized narratives with overarching themes & messages • I Maccabees – historical narrative written closely to events • II Maccabees – polished theological interpretation of I Maccabees • Baruch – prose (opening/close) with poetry (middle) • Sirach & Wisdom – saturated in proverbs and ethical sayings (typical of wisdom literature)

  37. In Summary • SHARED Themes • God is One: Rigid Monotheism • Fidelity to the Law of God • Extolling the great story of Israel/Jewish past • Prayer, preceded by a contrite heart, is key • History is God’s stage

  38. In Summary • UNIQUE Themes • God saves thru the lowly (Judith) • Angels and demons are amongst us (Tobit) • Concrete notions of resurrection and afterlife emerged later in time (II Maccabees, Wisdom) • Preservation of cult/law/way of life should be achieved at all costs (Judith, I Maccabees) • Wisdom (personified in Wisdom), found in creation & law (Baruch) found in history (Sirach)

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