Apologetics Toolkit
DEVELOPMENT OF THE BIBLICAL CANON
adapted from materials of Professor Paul Hahn of the University of St. Thomas, Houston,
Texas
Development of the Old Testament Canon
- 1000-50 BC:
- The Old Testament (hereafter "OT") books are written.
- C. 200 BC:
- Rabbis translate the OT from Hebrew to Greek, a translation called
the "Septuagint" (abbreviation: "LXX"). The LXX ultimately includes 46
books.
- AD 30-100:
- Christians use the LXX as their scriptures. This upsets the Jews.
- C. AD 100:
- So Jewish rabbis meet at the Council of Jamniah and decide
to include in their canon only 39 books, since only these can be
found in Hebrew.
- C. AD 400:
- Jerome translates the Bible from Hebrew and Greek into
Latin (called the "Vulgate"). He knows that the Jews have only 39
books, and he wants to limit the OT to these; the 7 he would leave out
(Tobit, Judith, 1 Maccabees, 2 Maccabees, Wisdom of Solomon, Sirach
[or "Ecclesiasticus"], and Baruch--he calls "apocrypha," that is,
"hidden books." But Pope Damasus wants all 46 traditionally-used books
included in the OT, so the Vulgate has 46.
- AD 1536:
- Luther translates the Bible from Hebrew and Greek to German.
He assumes that, since Jews wrote the Old Testament, theirs is the
correct canon; he puts the extra 7 books in an appendix that he calls
the "Apocrypha."
- AD 1546:
- The Catholic Council of Trent reaffirms the canonicity of
all 46 books.
Development of the New Testament Canon
- C. AD 51-125:
- The New Testament books are written, but during this
same period other early Christian writings are produced--for example,
the Didache (c. AD 70), 1 Clement (c. 96), the Epistle of Barnabas
(c. 100), and the 7 letters of Ignatius of Antioch (c. 110).
- C. AD 140:
- Marcion, a businessman in Rome, teaches that there were two
Gods: Yahweh, the cruel God of the OT, and Abba, the kind father of
the NT. So Marcion eliminates the Old Testament as scriptures and,
since he is anti-Semitic, keeps from the NT only 10 letters of Paul
and 2/3 of Luke's gospel (he deletes references to Jesus' Jewishness).
Marcion's "New Testament"--the first to be compiled--forces the
mainstream Church to decide on a core canon: the four gospels and
letters of Paul.
- C. AD 200:
- But the periphery of the canon is not yet determined.
According to one list, compiled at Rome c. AD 200 (the Muratorian
Canon), the NT consists of the 4 gospels; Acts; 13 letters of Paul
(Hebrews is not included); 3 of the 7 General Epistles (1-2 John and
Jude); and also the Apocalypse of Peter.
- AD 367:
- The earliest extant list of the books of the NT, in exactly
the number and order in which we presently have them, is written by
Athanasius, Bishop of Alexandria, in his Easter letter of 367.
[Note: this is well after the Constantine's Edict of Toleration in 313 A.D.]
- AD 904:
- Pope Damasus, in a letter to a French bishop, lists the New
Testament books in their present number and order.
- AD 1442:
- At the Council of Florence, the entire Church recognizes the
27 books, though does not declare them unalterable.
- AD 1536:
- In his translation of the Bible from Greek into German,
Luther removes 4 NT books (Hebrews, James, Jude, and Revelations) from
their normal order and places them at the end, stating that they are
less than canonical.
- AD 1546:
- At the Council of Trent, the Catholic Church reaffirms once
and for all the full list of 27 books as traditionally accepted.
Digitized and formatted in HTML by the Augustine Club at Columbia
University, 1995