When was the apocrypha canonized?

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Post by _Evangelion » Thu Jul 20, 2006 1:57 pm

Ely wrote:Hi Evangelion, thanks for the input. Josephus' testimony is indeed important. However, just a couple of points

- Why is Josephus' list more authoratative than the countless Ante-Nicene Early Church Fathers who together accepted the deuero-canonical books a sscirpture?
Because it proves that the Old Testament canon was already complete and closed. It had been put together by the people best qualified for the job - the Jews themselves.

Now, tell me why I should accept the subsequent (multiple) canons of Gentile Christians hundreds of years later, instead of the canon already produced by God's chosen people?
- Also, as correct me if I'm wrong, but Josephus was an unbelieving pharisee. As the Messianic movement grew, the unbelieving pharisees were getting more and more exasperated with the use of the LXX to show Jesus' messiahship (e.g. the "parthenos" of Isaiah 7:14). As a result, once they had become the dominant group in the unbelieving majority of Jews, they completely rejected the LXX in AD90. Could Josephus not simply have been reflecting this pharisaical bias against the LXX?

in Christ
Ely
Josephus was a Pharisee, but he was not an unbeliever. He was a very devout Jew.

The question of bias against the LXX does not arise, since (a) Josephus did not reject the LXX, (b) Josephus wrote before the Jews began to reject the LXX, and (c) although many did Jews rejected the LXX, others simply produced their own versions, in which the Messianic passages were simply translated in another way.

Josephus was familiar with the Jewish Scriptures in their oldest form (Aramaic) but also in their Greek form (the LXX.) He lists the canon which was known and accepted by the Jews of his day - a canon for which their is ample evidence from history. That canon was found in both the Aramaic and LXX versions of the Old Testament.

There is no evidence that the LXX originally contained the Apocrypha. Indeed, this would have been quite impossible, since some of the books within the Apocrypha were written after the translation of the LXX.

We have no record of any alternative Jewish canon in Josephus' day, nor do we have any record of an alternative Jewish canon before or after Josephus' day.

We do, however, have a record of an authoritative canon matching Josephus' description and a Jewish religious tradition to support it.
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Post by _Evangelion » Thu Jul 20, 2006 1:59 pm

Paidion wrote:The Septuagint in its original form was translated during the reign of Ptolemy II (285-246 B.C.). At first it contained only the first five books of Moses. Over the next two centuries the rest of the books were added, including the Apocrypha.
These additions were indeed made. However, they were made by Christians - not Jews.

We have no extant LXX from the time of Josephus or earlier, and no evidence that the Apocrypha were included in the LXX of his day.

However, we do have a very clear statement from Josephus which provides us with the accepted canon of his day - and it does not include the Apocrypha.

See also my previous post.
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Post by _Ely » Thu Jul 20, 2006 3:12 pm

Evangelion wrote:it proves that the Old Testament canon was already complete and closed.

The only thing Josephus' words "prove" is what his own opinion was concerning the 'canon'. He presents an dea, a theory which we need to evaluate using all avaliable historical information to see if it is likely correct or not.
Evangelion wrote:Now, tell me why I should accept the subsequent (multiple) canons of Gentile Christians hundreds of years later, instead of the canon already produced by God's chosen people?
1. Because these Gentile Christians, like myself were confessed believers in Jesus. Josephus knew of the claims of Jesus and as far as I'm aware, he rejected them. This being the case, he was thus an unbeliever, a carnal man with limited spiritual understanding (1 Corinthians 2:14)

2. I asume you haven't really looked into this issue hat much. Nor have I really. But from what I've read, all commentators I have consulted thus far agree with the following facts. Parts or all of the apocypha are aceepted as scripture by the following Christian writings/ writers:

- The Didache (1st Century - i.e. contemporaneous with Josephus)
- The Epistle of Barnabas (Late 1st Century - i.e. contemporary of Josephus)
- Clement of Rome (Late 1st Century - i.e. contemporary of Josephus)
- Polycarp (c. 69-155, a disciple of John)
- Irenaeus (c. 120-202 a disciple of Polycarp)

If in the face of such historical evidence you prefer to defer to the view of one unbeliever, against the views of several believers, all of whom were either contemporaries or one generation removed from the apostles, then that;s your prerogative.

Evangelion wrote:The question of bias against the LXX does not arise, since (a) Josephus did not reject the LXX, (b) Josephus wrote before the Jews began to reject the LXX.

The unbelieving Jews apparently formally rejected the LXX in AD90. But this was no a bolt from the blue. It was no doubt the the product came but was likely the product of years of interaction with LXX-wielding Christian apologists. Josephus was a pharisaical Jew who wrote within this very same context.
Evangelion wrote:There is no evidence that the LXX originally contained the Apocrypha. Indeed, this would have been quite impossible, since some of the books within the Apocrypha were written after the translation of the LXX.
No evidence indeed, apart from:

1. All of the earliest extant copies of the LXX contain the apocypha.
2. Most Christians in the the first and second century were Greek-speaking and used the LXX almost exclusively.
3. Their writings contain references to apocryphal books.
4. These same writings show that these books were accepted (with some variations) as Scripture.
Evangelion wrote:We have no record of any alternative Jewish canon in Josephus' day, nor do we have any record of an alternative Jewish canon before or after Josephus' day.

No record? What about:

1. The Saducees were known to only accept the Torah as scripture.
2. The Dead Sea Scroll collection which dates from "as early as the third century B.C. to the first century A.D" (see: http://www.probe.org/content/view/1318/91/ ) contains apocryphal books, some of which are in Hebrew and Aramaic (see: http://www.jewishvirtuallibrary.org/jso ... rypha.html ).

Ely
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Post by _Evangelion » Thu Jul 20, 2006 4:22 pm

Ely wrote:
Evangelion wrote:it proves that the Old Testament canon was already complete and closed.


The only thing Josephus' words "prove" is what his own opinion was concerning the 'canon'. He presents an dea, a theory which we need to evaluate using all avaliable historical information to see if it is likely correct or not.
This is not merely his opinion. There is a wealth of historical evidence to support his claim.

Not least of which is the fact that some books of the Apocrypha had not even been written by the time the LXX was translated.

How on Earth do you intend to get around that problem? How can a book which isn't even written yet, appear in the LXX?
Evangelion wrote:Now, tell me why I should accept the subsequent (multiple) canons of Gentile Christians hundreds of years later, instead of the canon already produced by God's chosen people?
1. Because these Gentile Christians, like myself were confessed believers in Jesus. Josephus knew of the claims of Jesus and as far as I'm aware, he rejected them. This being the case, he was thus an unbeliever, a carnal man with limited spiritual understanding (1 Corinthians 2:14)
What on Earth does this have to do with anything? How in the world does it prove that the Apocrypha belongs in the Bible?

The OT was written by men inspired by God! The Apocrypha was not. But you're telling me that it's OK for a bunch of uninspired men to come along (centuries later) and decide that a bunch of uninspired works, which God did not guide people to include in His Book, should be shoved into it just because they thought this was a good idea?
2. I asume you haven't really looked into this issue hat much.
LOL! You assume wrong, mate! You assume very wrong.
Nor have I really. But from what I've read, all commentators I have consulted thus far agree with the following facts. Parts or all of the apocypha are aceepted as scripture by the following Christian writings/ writers:

- The Didache (1st Century - i.e. contemporaneous with Josephus)
- The Epistle of Barnabas (Late 1st Century - i.e. contemporary of Josephus)
- Clement of Rome (Late 1st Century - i.e. contemporary of Josephus)
- Polycarp (c. 69-155, a disciple of John)
- Irenaeus (c. 120-202 a disciple of Polycarp)
I'm not interested in Epistle of Barnabas, since this is an apocryphal work itself.

But please feel free to post those parts of the other works which you believe to be taken from the Apocrhypha. And having done that, please explain to me how this proves that the Apocrypha appeared in the original LXX.

Thankyou.
If in the face of such historical evidence you prefer to defer to the view of one unbeliever, against the views of several believers, all of whom were either contemporaries or one generation removed from the apostles, then that;s your prerogative.
I am not deferring to "the view of one unbeliever"; I am deferring to the clear and solid historical evidence.

Let's also remember that the Christians who moved the Apocrypha into the canon were even later than Josephus himself, and therefore hopelessly removed from the apostles!

By contrast, Josephus was a contemporary of the apostles.

And here's that quote from the Jewish Encyclopaedia again:
  • It is evident that Josephus, instead of counting Ruth and Lamentations as separate books, combined them with Judges and Jeremiah, respectively.

    As historical books he considered all that narrated anything historical, and thus included Job. He considered Psalms, Proverbs, Song of Solomon, and Ecclesiastes non-historical.

    No other arrangement would have been possible for Josephus; for it is known from Talmudic and Midrashic literature that in his time, when the Tannaites flourished most, all the now familiar books were considered canonical.

    For various interpretations of Josephus' narrative, see Strack, l.c. p. 752.
Did you see that? "it is known from Talmudic and Midrashic literature that in his time... all the now familiar books were considered canonical."

Talmudic and Midrashic literature. Literature which proves that the canon had been closed for a long time, and that Josephus is merely reciting a list which had been known and accepted by the Jews for centuries.

Remember, the Jews wrote their own Bible under the inspiration of God. They also determined the canon of the Old Testament, which was established by the translators of the LXX.

By the time Josephus came along, the canon had been closed for generations - as he tells us himself. He is not giving us his own opinion; he is simply stating historical fact, and telling us what he has learned from his forefathers.
Evangelion wrote:The question of bias against the LXX does not arise, since (a) Josephus did not reject the LXX, (b) Josephus wrote before the Jews began to reject the LXX.


The unbelieving Jews apparently formally rejected the LXX in AD90. But this was no a bolt from the blue. It was no doubt the the product came but was likely the product of years of interaction with LXX-wielding Christian apologists. Josephus was a pharisaical Jew who wrote within this very same context.
Where is your evidence that the Jews "formally rejected the LXX in AD90"? And where is your evidence that the catalyst for this rejection was "LXX-wielding Christian apologists"?
Evangelion wrote:There is no evidence that the LXX originally contained the Apocrypha. Indeed, this would have been quite impossible, since some of the books within the Apocrypha were written after the translation of the LXX.
No evidence indeed, apart from:

1. All of the earliest extant copies of the LXX contain the apocypha.
This proves nothing.

As I have mentioned in a previous post, none of the surviving copies of the LXX are old enough to prove that the Apocrypha was included in the original LXX. All of them date from after the period when Christian versions of the LXX began to include the Apocrypha.

And here's some more historical evidence for you to chew on:
  • The books of the Hebrew Bible are divided up into three sections. That of (i) the Law - Penteteuch; (ii) The Prophets; (iii) The Hagiographa - writings.

    This arrangement is often mentioned in the Talmud, but it goes back to an earlier period. There is evidence from long before the Christian era that the books were grouped into these three sections.

    Jesus ben Sira, who translated his grandfather's book, Ecclesiasticus, from Hebrew into Greek, added a prologue of his own in which he makes mention of three parts of the Jewish canon three times.

    "This passage can hardly have been written later than about 130 BCE". [Beckwith, p.110.]

    He not only states that there is a threefold canon - that is closed and distinguished from all other writings - but he goes as far as to imply that this was also the case in his grandfather's time, this would give a date as early as the third century BCE for the canon.

    The words of Jesus also suggest a tripartite canon when he spoke in Luke 24:44 of words written in the Law, Prophets and the Psalms.

    There is some discussion as to whether or not 'the Psalms' refers just to the Psalms or whether it implies the whole Hagiographa: the latter seems to be the most likely. It would be surprising to think of Jesus meaning that the third section of Scripture was the Psalms alone since he regularly used the book of Daniel in the Gospels.

    The De Vita Contemplatina mentions the threefold structure of the Bible. Authorship of the De Vita Contemplatina has been ascribed to Philo, an older contemporary of Jesus.

    "Philo of Alexandria seems to have been the first to use the term, canon, to indicate the collection of books normative for faith". [Soggin, p.13.]

    Also Josephus, Jerome and the Talmud all speak of the three divisions in Hebrew Scripture.

    "It is thus a well-attested fact that, by the first century CE, the division of the canon into three groups of books was widespread in the Jewish world and that it was familiar to Jesus". [Beckwith, p.118.]

    Reed, Peter (2000), The Old Testament Canon
2. Most Christians in the the first and second century were Greek-speaking and used the LXX almost exclusively.
This also proves nothing.
3. Their writings contain references to apocryphal books.
This, too, proves nothing.
4. These same writings show that these books were accepted (with some variations) as Scripture.
Evangelion wrote:We have no record of any alternative Jewish canon in Josephus' day, nor do we have any record of an alternative Jewish canon before or after Josephus' day.


No record? What about:

1. The Saducees were known to only accept the Torah as scripture.
There is no reliable evidence that they only accepted the Torah. However, there is evidence that they rejected any religious observance which was not found in the Torah.

The two issues must not be conflated.

In any case, most of what we know about them was written by their enemies, in polemical treatises designed to paint them in the worst possible light.
2. The Dead Sea Scroll collection which dates from "as early as the third century B.C. to the first century A.D" (see: http://www.probe.org/content/view/1318/91/ ) contains apocryphal books, some of which are in Hebrew and Aramaic (see: http://www.jewishvirtuallibrary.org/jso ... rypha.html ).
The DSS collection is simply that - a collection of scrolls! There is no evidence that it was either used or considered as a proper canon.

Quite apart from the Biblical books (from which Esther is omitted) the collection also includes a set of commentaries and sectarian tracts on prophecy and community life.

The DSS were not collated as a complete Bible, or used in this way by the people who collated them.
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Post by _Paidion » Thu Jul 20, 2006 5:11 pm

The Septuagint in its original form was translated during the reign of Ptolemy II (285-246 B.C.). At first it contained only the first five books of Moses. Over the next two centuries the rest of the books were added, including the Apocrypha.
These additions were indeed made. However, they were made by Christians - not Jews.
That is impossible, since no Christians existed over the next two centuries.
But please feel free to post those parts of the other works which you believe to be taken from the Apocrhypha. And having done that, please explain to me how this proves that the Apocrypha appeared in the original LXX.
I am not Ely, but before quoting from Clement, Paul's fellow helper, who was born in 30 A.D. and died in 100 A.D. I would like to point out that the Christians of the first two centuries knew no "canon of Scripture". This was a later concept developed by Athanasius to combat the forgeries that the gnostics passed off as apostolic writings. Indeed, Clement's letter to the Corinthians, written shortly after the deaths of Paul and Peter was widely read in the churches of the second century along with "other scripture". Clement, as well as Paul, Peter, James, and the other apostles knew no OT scripture other than the Septuagint.

Clement in Chap 55 recounted the heroism of Judith in killing Holofernes (Book of Judith) lumping it together with Esther's delivering Israel from destruction. Both the books of Judith and Esther were in Clement's Bible, that is, the Septuagint.

Of course, Judith, as well as all the other OT books were not in the "original LXX", but they were in the LXX as it was further developed before the time of Christ. Of course, none of what I have said proves that. But it certainly does provide a strong indicator.
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Post by _Ely » Thu Jul 20, 2006 6:36 pm

Evanglion,

Can I just be clear. Do you agree that the LXX did indeed contain apocryphal books by the first century? If so, are you saying that despite this, these books were never (or should never have been) considered to be scriptures by anyone (believer in Jesus or not) because they were not in the original LXX?

Ely
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Post by _Evangelion » Fri Jul 21, 2006 2:51 pm

Ely wrote:Evanglion,

Can I just be clear. Do you agree that the LXX did indeed contain apocryphal books by the first century?
No! Not at all!
If so, are you saying that despite this, these books were never (or should never have been) considered to be scriptures by anyone (believer in Jesus or not) because they were not in the original LXX?

Ely
See above.
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Post by _Evangelion » Fri Jul 21, 2006 2:58 pm

Paidion wrote:
The Septuagint in its original form was translated during the reign of Ptolemy II (285-246 B.C.). At first it contained only the first five books of Moses. Over the next two centuries the rest of the books were added, including the Apocrypha.
These additions were indeed made. However, they were made by Christians - not Jews.
That is impossible, since no Christians existed over the next two centuries.
Sorry, I meant over the next two centuries after the 1st Century AD. :oops:
But please feel free to post those parts of the other works which you believe to be taken from the Apocrhypha. And having done that, please explain to me how this proves that the Apocrypha appeared in the original LXX.
I am not Ely, but before quoting from Clement, Paul's fellow helper, who was born in 30 A.D. and died in 100 A.D. I would like to point out that the Christians of the first two centuries knew no "canon of Scripture". This was a later concept developed by Athanasius to combat the forgeries that the gnostics passed off as apostolic writings.
They knew no canon of the New Testament, that is true. But they certainly knew a canon of the Old Testament, which they had inherited from the Jews.

You are correct when you say that Athanasius began to develop a canon in order to counter Gnosticism, but the concept of a canon itself did not begin with him.

As we have already seen, the Jews themselves had their own canon of Scripture (the OT.) But the first to propose a New Testament canon was not a Christian - it was Marcion, a famous 2nd Century heretic.

Having been excommunicated for his radical views in AD 140, Marcion was quickly revealed as a Gnostic, whose aggressive preaching forced the early Christians to start thinking seriously about the formation of a New Testament canon.

Indeed, he had already decided which books he accepted:
  • Luke
  • Galatians
  • Ephesians
  • Romans
  • Corinthians
  • Thessalonians
  • Philippians
  • Philemon.
Without a similar list of their own, the Christians had no basis for claiming that he had rejected a large portion of the inspired writings – and very little in the way of Scriptural authority for their own arguments.

Thus the catalyst for the formation of a canon was provided, and the move towards a formal list of "official" books began.
Indeed, Clement's letter to the Corinthians, written shortly after the deaths of Paul and Peter was widely read in the churches of the second century along with "other scripture".
Widely read? Undoubtedly! But was Clement's letter ever considered or referred to as "Scripture"? No.
Clement, as well as Paul, Peter, James, and the other apostles knew no OT scripture other than the Septuagint.
Agreed! And we know from Josephus (along with the Talmudic and Midrashic literature of his day) that the canon of the Septuagint did not contain the Apocrypha.
Clement in Chap 55 recounted the heroism of Judith in killing Holofernes (Book of Judith) lumping it together with Esther's delivering Israel from destruction. Both the books of Judith and Esther were in Clement's Bible, that is, the Septuagint.

Of course, Judith, as well as all the other OT books were not in the "original LXX", but they were in the LXX as it was further developed before the time of Christ. Of course, none of what I have said proves that. But it certainly does provide a strong indicator.
It proves that Clement accepted the acocunt of Judith as historical fact (which it quite possibly was.) Much of the Maccabees is historical fact, along with some material from other apocryphal works such as Judith.

But Clement's comments tell us nothing about the inclusion of these books in a canon.
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Post by _Ely » Fri Jul 21, 2006 3:07 pm

So, Evangelion, is it your opinion that the only true and valid LXX is the original one which only contains the Torah?
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Post by _Evangelion » Fri Jul 21, 2006 3:14 pm

Ely wrote:So, Evangelion, is it your opinion that the only true and valid LXX is the original one which only contains the Torah?
No, because the original LXX did not contain only the Torah! :roll:

It contained all of the books listed by Josephus and confirmed by the records found in the Talmudic and Midrashic literature of his day.

There is just so much historical evidence to prove this. I am simply flabbergasted that you don't seem to be aware of it. :?
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