Canonicity:
Determination and
Discovery of God's
Word
Inspiration
What would inspired text look like?
How do we know that ALL Scripture is inspired?
(2 Tim 3:15-17, 1 Cor 2:11-16, Jn 14:26, 1 Thess. 2:13, Rm 15:4,
Is 40:8, Matt 5:18, Ps 138:2, 2 Pet 3:16, Ps. 12:6-7)
Autographs v. Transmission
Ps. 119:27,34,125
Theories of Inspiration
Four Basic Inspiration theories:
1. The neo-orthodox view of inspiration
Transcendence of God, Bible not Word of God, but can be used by him
2. The dictation method of inspiration (Jer. 30:32)
Explains some parts, but not most of the time (Lk 1:1-4)
3. The view of limited inspiration
~Opposite of dictation,
doctrinally sound, maybe some historical/factual errors
4. The view of plenary verbal inspiration
"Plenary" = full/complete, "Verbal" = very words of Scripture
2 Tim 3:16-17 - theopneustos, Grk - "God-breathed", 2 Pet. 1:21, Matt.
5:17-18
Inspiration v. Canonicity
= authority v. acceptance
Significance " If the Scriptures are indeed inspired by
God, then a significant question arises: Which books
are inspired?“
Canon - Grk word kanon - a standard for
measurement
God determines the canon
Distinction between determination and discovery
False views
Old age trumps
(Bk of Jasher (Jsh 10:13), Wars of the Lord (Nm 21:14))
Many canon bks quickly received into canon, Pentateuch, Jer,
Paul's
Hebrew language, Agreement with the Torah (Law)
Religious Value, The Church determines
J.I. Packer "The Church no more gave us the New Testament
canon than Sir Isaac Newton gave us the force of gravity“
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They were canon immediately (author of book series
example)
Hebrew Bible (OT)
24 books (corresponds exactly to our 39 books)
The Law, The Prophets (Jsh, Jdg, Sam, Kgs, Is, Jer, Ez, 12), The Writings
Traced back to 200 BC, Jesus referenced in Lk 24:44
Growth and Formation
Book of Covenant (Ex. 20:1-23:33), Ex 24:3-8
Deut. 31:24-26 (Bk of, by Ark), 2 Kings 22:8 - (Law in Temple)
Bks of Moses cited from Jsh 1:7 to Mal 4:4
Judges (1:1; 20-21; 2:8), 1 Chron 2:12-13, Neh. 9, 1 Kings 4:32, Dan 9:2,
Ez. 14:14,20
Prophetic Continuity, Moses, Joshua, Samuel, Nathan, Ahijah, Iddo (2
Chron. 9:29), Shemaiah, Jehu(2 Chron 20:34), Isaiah, Unnamed prophets
(2 Chron 33:19), Jeremiah (prior & during exile), Daniel and Ezekiel,
Ezra (after exile Ezra 6:18, Neh 9:14, 26-30), Nehemiah
OT Canon
Factors contributing to canonicity
Tradition – From Moses and Prophets
Spiritual authority of the books
Unity, Prophecy, Power
Recognition in the Temple as sacred
Conviction of leaders and people
Jesus and the Apostles - referred to Jewish scriptures
and individual books as having the authority of God
(Beckwith, p. 100)
OT Finished
End of OT era
Malachi, written around 430 BC
OT era: 1445 BC to 430 BC
evidenced by: Josephus (no more after Artaxerxes,
Against Apion I.8.), Jewish Talmud, NT
Luke 11:51, Matt 23:35 (martyrs of OT)
Council of Jamnia, AD 90, Reaffirmed canon
New Testament Canon
Twenty Seven Books
Gospels (Matt, Mk, Lk, Jn)
History (Acts)
Epistles(21); General: Heb, Jm, 1,2 Pet, 1,2,3, Jn, Jd; Pauline(13)
Prophecy (Revelation)
Time Period - Unlike OT (~1000 yrs), entire NT written
within 50 yrs
Geographic region - much wider than OT, contributed to
length of time for full recognition
Early use of "New Testament" - Tertullian (early 200 AD),
also 190 AD – unknown author
NT Canon, Cont.
Reasons for collection
Access to inspired books, Guidelines for faith and
practice
Defense against other religions and philosophies
(authentic expression and preservation)
Persecutions (Diocletians AD 303-306)
Heretical Threats
AD 140 Marcion, heretic with his own "canon", excluded
most
Gnostic groups
Gospel of Thomas, etc.
Phases of NT Canon:
Creation and Spread (AD. 50-95),
( 1 Thess. 5:27, 2:13; 1 Cor 14:37; Rev 1:3; 1 Tim 5:18 - Deut 25:4 and Lk
10:7; 2 Pet 3:15,16 - before AD 70)
Oral Tradition, Clement of Rome (AD 95 use of NT)
Growing Recognition and collection
AD 96-150, All of Gospels, Pauls letters recognized
smaller letters took more time, usually for confirm. of author
Polycarp (disciple of John, AD 110), Ignatius (Ad 115, Epsitle of
Ignatius) - incorporated most of NT into writings
Papias(70-163), Epistle of Barnabas (130), Gospel of Truth (140),
Marcion Canon (140), Justin Martyr (140), Pseudo Barnabas (70-130)
Summary: By mid 2nd century, every NT book referred to as canonical
by at least one of the fathers (Geisler and Nix, p. 288)
NT Phases Cont.
Compiling of Canon (AD 150-190)
Iranaeus, Tatian (AD 170) - Diatessaron (Gospels)
Muratorian Canon (170), Old Latin translation (200) -
all exc. Heb, Jm, Peters
Formation continues
commentaries by Origen (185-254) on most books,
emphasizing insp.
NT Finished
Closing of canon
Eusebius (270-340), Church History (Universal, Most,
Rejected - Acts of Paul, Didache, Shepherd of Hermas)
Athanasius - "Let no one add to these; let nothhing be taken
away.", Festal Letter for Easter in 367
Council of Hippo (393) - laid down limits of canon,
Coucil of Carthage (397) - Hippo reiterated - CANON
CLOSED
Council of Nicea – N/A – Focus on deity of Christ, solidify
doctrine/unification of belief by Constantine
NT Canon Criteria
Inspiration, as with OT
Apostolic authority - apostles or close associates
writer of Hebrews unknown, but associated with
apostles ( Heb 2:3-4)
Apostolic era - writings of later date not included
(Brusce, The Canon of Scripture), Shepherd of Hermas,
etc.
Orthodoxy - could not contradict apostolic faith
Universal Church Recognition
Textual Criticism
The attempt to determine what the original text
actually said - "evaluation"
"Higher Criticism" judgements on the genuineness
(date, unity, author, etc)
often subjective and low view of Word of God
Sources:
Hebrew and Greek manuscripts
Ancient Translations into other languages
Quotations made by rabbis and church fathers
Textual Variations
Unintentional Errors: hand, eye ear - usually no problem to
pick out, esp. with so many manuscripts
Intentional errors - well-meaning "corrections", 1 Jn 5:7, Mk
16:9-20, Jn. 7:53-8:11 (likely true, but not in original)
At worst, ~98.3 % pure, with no impact on major doctrines
Sir Frederic Kenyon - "The Christian can take the whole
Bible in his hand and say without fear or hesitation that he
holds in it the true Word of God, handed down without
essential loss from generation to generation throughout the
centuries."
History of English Bible
Translation - "The process of taking something in one
language and expressing it in another language"
Precursor was Latin Bible by Jerome (383-405) "Latin
Vulgate"
Caedmon (d. 680), Aldhelm(640-709), Egbert (c. 705),
The Venerable Bede (674 - 735), Alfred the Great (849
- 901), Aldred (c. 950) - first interlinear NT/earliest
English trans., Aelfric (c. 950-1020), William of
Shoreham and Richard Rolle (1300s)
History Cont.
John Wycliffe (1320-84) - First English Bible, using Latin
Vulgate
Catholic Church burned some copies, then dug up his
remains, burned & threw them in a river
170 copies still exist
Gutenberg (1396-1468)
William Tyndale (1492-1536) - spoke 7 lang., proficient in
Heb and Grk.
NT, Pentateuch, Jonah, Joshua - 2 Chron, - All direct from
Heb to Grk
Burned at stake on Oct. 6, 1536
Translations
King James Version (1611) - 7 major trans. after Tyndale
Standard for next 350 years
Grk/Heb scholarship improved, many translations to learn from,
multiple persons
Based on Textus Receptus (Grk, 1516)- some scribal errors, based
on Byzantine texts (300 AD)
English Revised Version (1885) - changes based on new textual
evidence
Revised Standard Version (1952) - corrected "stiffness" of
reading, recent manuscript findings
New International Version (1979) - completely new,
international effort, midway between literal rendering (NASB)
and a free paraphrase (such as the Living Bible)
“Extra Books”
Apocrypha (Catholic Bible, 11 of 14)
Never in Hebrew(canon), Josephus “lacking
validity/authority”, Not Prophet written
Not quoted by Jesus or NT writers, or in use till 400 AD
Contradictions in history and doctrines/practices
Gnostic gospels (Thomas, Judas, Peter, etc.)
Written later, at least 2nd century and beyond
Gnostic philosophy, “higher truth, secret knowledge”
Not grace of Christ, and contradicts Gospels account
Take-Aways
5 consistent themes emphasized:
The character of God, judgment of sin/disobedience,
the blessing for faith and obedience, the Lord Jesus as
Savior and sacrifice for sin, and the coming kingdom
and glory
Written by Prophets and Apostles
NT 98.3 % pure text (at worst), better than any other!
Critiques out in open
Factually accurate, more so each day
www.gracethrufaith.com, www.gotquestions.org