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Some Christians are unnerved by the fact that nowhere does God
itemize the sixty-six books that are to be included in the Bible.
Many believers have at best a vague notion of how the church
arrived at what we call the Canon of Scripture. Even after becoming
more aware, some believers are uncomfortable with the process by
which the New Testament Canon was determined. For many, it was what
appears to be a haphazard process that took far too long.
Furthermore, whether talking with a Jehovah's Witness, a liberal
theologian, or a New Ager, Christians are very likely to run into
questions concerning the extent, adequacy, and accuracy of the
Bible as God's revealed Word.
In this essay, therefore, we will consider the development of the
doctrine of the Scriptures in the Church Age. Just how did the
church decide on the books for inclusion in the New Testament? This
discussion will include both how the Canon was established and the
various ways theologians have viewed the Bible since the Canon was
established.
The period immediately following the passing of the Apostles is
known as the period of the Church Fathers. Many of these men walked
with the Apostles and were taught directly by them. Polycarp and
Papias, for instance, are considered to have been disciples of the
Apostle John. Doctrinal authority during this period rested on two
sources, the Old Testament (O.T.) and the notion of Apostolic
succession, being able to trace a direct association to one of the
Apostles and thus to Christ. Although the New Testament (N.T.)
Canon was written, it was not yet seen as a separate body of books
equivalent to the O.T. Six church leaders are commonly referred to:
Barnabas, Hermas, Clement of Rome, Polycarp, Papias, and Ignatius
(Berkhof, The History of Christian Doctrines, 37). Although
these men lacked the technical sophistication of today's
theologians, their correspondence confirmed the teachings of the
Apostles and provides a doctrinal link to the N.T. Canon itself.
Christianity was as yet a fairly small movement. These Church
Fathers, often elders and bishops in the early Church, were
consumed by the practical aspects of Christian life among the new
converts. Therefore, when Jehovah's Witnesses argue that the early
church did not have a technical theology of the Trinity, they are
basically right. There had been neither time nor necessity to focus
on the issue. On the other hand these men clearly believed that
Jesus was God as was the Holy Spirit, but they had yet to clarify
in writing the problems that might occur when attempting to explain
this truth.
The early Church Fathers had no doubt about the authority of the
O.T., often prefacing their quotes with "For thus saith God" and
other notations. As a result they tended to be rather moralistic
and even legalistic on some issues. Because the N.T. Canon was not
yet settled, they respected and quoted from works that have
generally passed out of the Christian tradition. The books of
Hermas, Barnabas, Didache, and 1 and 2 Clement were all regarded
highly (Hannah, Lecture Notes for the History of Doctrine,
2.2). As Berkhof writes concerning these early Church leaders, "For
them Christianity was not in the first place a knowledge to be
acquired, but the principle of a new obedience to God" (Berkhof,
History of the Christian Church, 39).
Although these early Church Fathers may seem rather ill-prepared to
hand down all the subtle implications of the Christian faith to the
coming generations, they form a doctrinal link to the Apostles (and
thus to our Lord Jesus Christ), as well as a witness to the growing
commitment to the Canon of Scripture that would become the N.T. As
Clement of Rome said in first century, "Look carefully into the
Scriptures, which are the true utterances of the Holy Spirit"
(Geisler, Decide For Yourself, 11).
After the early Church Fathers comes the era of the Apologists and
Theologians, roughly including the second, third, and fourth
centuries. It is during this period that the Church takes the
initial steps toward establishing a "rule of faith" or Canon.
During this period both internal and external forces caused the
church to begin to systematize both its doctrines and its view of
revelation. Much of the systemization came about as a defense
against the heresies that challenged the faith of the Apostles.
Ebionitism humanized Jesus and rejected the writings of Paul,
resulting in a more Jewish than Christian faith. Gnosticism
attempted to blend oriental theosophy, Hellenistic philosophy, and
Christianity into a new religion that saw the physical creation as
evil and Christ as a celestial being with secret knowledge to teach
us. It often portrayed the God of the O.T. as inferior to the God
of the N.T. Marcion and his movement also separated the God of the
Old and New Testaments, accepting Paul and Luke as the only writers
who really understood the Gospel of Christ (Berkhof, History of
Christian Doctrine, 54). Montanus, responding to the gnostics,
ended up claiming that he and two others were new prophets offering
the highest and most accurate revelation from God. Although they
were basically orthodox, they exalted martyrdom and a legalistic
asceticism that led to their rejection by the Church.
Although the term canon was not used in reference to the
N.T. texts until the fourth century by Athanasius, there were
earlier attempts to list the acceptable books. The Muratorian Canon
listed all the books of the Bible except for 1 John, 1 and 2 Peter,
Hebrews, and James around A.D. 180 (Hannah, Notes, 2.5). Irenaeus,
as bishop of Lyon, mentions all of the books except Jude, 2 Peter,
James, Philemon, 2 and 3 John, and Revelation. The Syriac Version
of the Canon, from the third century, leaves out Revelation.
It should be noted that although these early Church leaders
differed on which books should be included in the Canon, they were
quite sure that the books were inspired by God. Irenaeus, in his
work Against Heresies, argues that, "The Scriptures are indeed
perfect, since they were spoken by the Word of God [Christ] and His
Spirit" (Geisler, Decide For Yourself, 12). By the fourth
century many books previously held in high regard began to
disappear from use and the apocryphal writings were seen as less
than inspired.
It was during the fourth century that concentrated attempts were
made both in the East and the West to establish the authoritative
collection of the Canon. In 365, Athanasius of Alexandria listed
the complete twenty-seven books of the New Testament which he
regarded as the "only source of salvation and of the authentic
teaching of the religion of the Gospel" (Hannah, Notes,
2.6). While Athanasius stands out in the Eastern Church, Jerome is
his counterpart in the West. Jerome wrote a letter to Paulinus,
bishop of Nola in 394 listing just 39 O.T. books and our current 27
N.T. ones. It was in 382 that Bishop Damasus had Jerome work on a
Latin text to standardize the Scripture. The resulting Vulgate was
used throughout the Christian world. The Synods of Carthage in 397
and 418 both confirmed our current twenty-seven books of the NT.
The criteria used for determining the canonicity of the books
included the internal witness of the Holy Spirit in general, and
specifically Apostolic origin or sanction, usage by the Church,
intrinsic content, spiritual and moral effect, and the attitude of
the early church.
In the fourth century Augustine voiced his belief in the verbal,
plenary inspiration of the N.T. text, as did Justin Martyr in the
second. This meant that every part of the Scriptures, down to the
individual word, was chosen by God to be written by the human
writers. But still, the issue of what should be included in the
Canon was not entirely settled. Augustine included the Book of
Wisdom as part of the Canon and held that the Septuagint or Greek
text of the O.T. was inspired, not the Hebrew original. The Church
Fathers were sure that the Scriptures were inspired, but they were
still not in agreement as to which texts should be included.
As late as the seventh and eighth centuries there were church
leaders who added to or subtracted from the list of texts. Gregory
the Great added Tobias and Wisdom and mentioned 15 Pauline
epistles, not 14. John of Damascus, the first Christian theologian
who attempted a complete systematic theology, rejected the O.T.
apocrypha, but added the Apostolic Constitution and 1 and 2 Clement
to the N.T. One historian notes that "things were no further
advanced at the end of the fourteenth century than they had been at
the end of the fourth" (Hannah, Notes, 3.3). This same
historian notes that although we would be horrified at such a state
today, the Catholicism of the day rested far more on ecclesiastical
authority and tradition than on an authoritative Canon. Thus Roman
Catholicism did not find the issue to be a critical one.
The issue of canonical authority finally is addressed within the
bigger battle between Roman Catholicism and the Protestant
Reformation. In 1545 the Council of Trent was called as a response
to the Protestant heresy by the Catholic Church. As usual, the
Catholic position rested upon the authority of the Church hierarchy
itself. It proposed that all the books found in Jerome's Vulgate
were of equal canonical value (even though Jerome himself separated
the Apocrypha from the rest) and that the Vulgate would become the
official text of the Church. The council then established the
Scriptures as equivalent to the authority of tradition.
The reformers were also forced to face the Canon issue. Instead of
the authority of the Church, Luther and the reformers focused on
the internal witness of the Holy Spirit. Luther was troubled by
four books, Jude, James, Hebrews, and Revelation, and though he
placed them in a secondary position relative to the rest, he did
not exclude them. John Calvin also argued for the witness of the
Spirit (Hannah, Notes, 3.7). In other words, it is God
Himself, via the Holy Spirit who assures the transmission of the
text down through the ages, not the human efforts of the Catholic
Church or any other group. Calvin rests the authority of the
Scripture on the witness of the Spirit and the conscience of the
godly. He wrote in his Institutes,
Let it therefore be held as fixed, that those who are
inwardly taught by the Holy Spirit acquiesce implicitly in
Scripture; that Scripture, carrying its own evidence along with it,
deigns not to submit to proofs and arguments, but owes the full
conviction with which we ought to receive it to the testimony of
the Spirit. Enlightened by him, we no longer believe, either on our
own judgment or that of others, that the Scriptures are from God;
but, in a way superior to human judgment, feel perfectly assured
as much so as if we beheld the divine image visibly impressed on it
that it came to us, by the instrumentality of men, from the very
mouth of God.
He goes on the say, "We ask not for proofs or probabilities on
which to rest our judgment, but we subject our intellect and
judgment to it as too transcendent for us to estimate."
Although the early church, up until the Reformation, was not yet
united as to which books belonged in the Canon, they were certain
that the books were inspired by God and contained the Gospel
message that He desired to communicate to a fallen world. After the
Reformation, the books of the Canon were widely agreed upon, but
now the question was, Were they inspired? Were they God breathed
as Paul declared in 2 Timothy 3:16?
What led to this new controversy? A great change began to occur in
the way that learned men and women thought about the nature of the
universe, God, and man's relationship to both. Thinking in the
post-Reformation world began to shift from a Christian theistic
worldview to a pantheistic or naturalistic one. As men like
Galileo and Francis Bacon began to lay the foundation for modern
science, their successes led others to apply their empirical
methodology to answering philosophical and theological questions.
Rene Descartes (1596-1650), although a believer, began his search
for knowledge from a position of doubt, assuming only that he
exists because he is able to ask the question. Although he ends up
affirming God, he is able to do this only by assuming God's
existence, not via rational discovery (Hannah, Notes, 4.2).
Others that followed built upon his system and came to different
conclusions. Spinoza (1633-77) arrived at pantheism, a belief that
all is god, and Liebnitz (1646-1716) concluded that it is
impossible to acquire religious knowledge from a study of history.
Thomas Hobbes (1588-1679) took another step away from the notion of
revealed truth. He attempted to build a philosophy using only
reason and sense perception; he rejected the idea that God might
have imprinted the human mind with knowledge of Himself. Another
big step was taken by Immanuel Kant (1724-1804). Attempting to
protect Christian thinking from the attacks of science and reason,
he separated knowledge of God or spirit and knowledge of the
phenomenal world. The first was unknowable, the second was
knowable. Christianity was reduced to a set of morals, the source
of which was unknowable by humanity.
The 1800s brought with it the fruit of Kant's separation of truth
from theology. German theologians built upon Kant's foundation
resulting in man becoming the source of meaning and God fading into
obscurity. Frederick Schleiermacher (1768-1834) replaced revelation
with religious feeling, and salvation by grace with self-analysis.
The Scriptures have authority over us only if we have a religious
feeling about them first. The faith that leads to this religious
feeling may come from a source completely independent of the
Scriptures.
David Strauss (1808-74) completely breaks from the earlier high
view of Scripture. He affirms a naturalistic worldview by denying
the reality of a supernatural dimension. In his book, Leben
Jesu ("The Life of Jesus"), he completely denies any
supernatural events traditionally associated with Jesus and His
apostles, and calls the Resurrection of Christ "nothing other than
a myth" (Hannah, Notes, 4.5). Strauss goes on to claim that
if Jesus had really spoken of Himself as the N.T. records, He must
have been out of His mind. In the end, Strauss argues that the
story we have of Christ is a fabrication constructed by the
disciples who added to the life of Christ what they needed to in
order for Him to become the Messiah. Strauss's work would be the
foundation for numerous attacks on the accuracy and authenticity of
the N.T. writers, and of the ongoing attempt, even today, to
demythologize the text and find the so-called "real Jesus of
history."
As one reviews the unfolding story of how the Canon of Christian
Scriptures has been formed and then interpreted, we can get a
fairly accurate picture of the changes that have taken place in the
thinking of Western civilization. Two thousand years ago men walked
with Christ and experienced His deity first hand. God, through the
Holy Spirit, led many of these men to compose an inspired account
of their experiences which revealed to the following generations
what God had done to save a fallen world. This text along with the
notion of Apostolic succession was accepted as authoritative by the
emerging Christian population, and would eventually come to
dominate much of Western thought. In the sixteenth century, the
Reformation rejected the role of tradition, mainly the Roman
Catholic Church, when it had begun to supersede the authority of
Scripture. Later, the Enlightenment began the process of removing
the possibility of revelation by elevating man's reason and
limiting our knowledge to what science could acquire. This was the
birth of Modernism, attempting to answer all the questions of life
without God.
The wars and horrors of the twentieth century have crushed many
thinkers' trust in mankind's ability to implement a neutral,
detached scientific mind to our problems and its ability to
determine truth. As a result, many have rejected modernism and the
scientific mind and have embraced a postmodernist position which
denies anyone's ability to be a neutral collector of truth, which
might be true for everyone, everywhere. This has left us with
individual experience and personal truth. Which really means that
truth no longer exists. What does this mean for the theologian who
has accepted the conclusions of postmodern thinking? One theologian
writes, "At the present, however, there is no general agreement
even as to what theology is, much less how to get on with the task
of systematics. . . . We are, for the most part, uncertain even as
to what the options are" (Robert H. King, Christian Theology: An
Introduction to Its Traditions and Tasks, 1-2).
This same theologian argues that Christian theology can no longer
rest upon metaphysics or history. In other words, neither man's
attempt to explain the causes or nature of reality nor the
historical record of any texts, including the Bible can give us a
sure foundation for doing theology. We have the remarkable
situation of modern theologians attempting to do theology without
any knowledge of God and His dealings with His creation. It is not
surprising that modern theologians are seeing Hare Krishna and Zen
Buddhism, along with other Eastern traditions, as possibilities for
integration with Christian thought or at least Christian ethics.
These traditions are not rooted in historical events and often deny
any basis in rational thinking, even to the point of questioning
the reality of the self (King, Christian Theology, 27).
Once individuals refuse to accept the claim of inspiration that the
Bible makes for itself, they are left with a set of ethics without
a foundation. History has shown us that it rarely takes more than
a generation for this kind of religion to lose its significance
within a culture. How then do we know that Christianity is true?
William Lane Craig, in his book Reasonable Faith, makes an
important point. As believers, we know that the Scriptures are
inspired, and that the Gospel message is true, by the internal
witness of the Holy Spirit. We show that it is true to unbelievers
by demonstrating that it is systematically consistent. We make
belief possible by using both historical evidence and philosophical
tools. However, it is ultimately the Holy Spirit that softens
hearts and calls men and women to believe in the God of the Bible.
© 1996 Probe Ministries International
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About the Author Don Closson received the B.S. in education from Southern Illinois University, the M.S. in educational administration from Illinois State University, and the M.A. in Biblical Studies from Dallas Theological Seminary. He served as a public school teacher and administrator before joining Probe Ministries as a research associate in the field of education. He is the general editor of Kids, Classrooms, and Contemporary Education.
What is Probe? Probe Ministries is a non-profit ministry whose mission is to assist the church in renewing the minds of believers with a Christian worldview and to equip the church to engage the world for Christ. Probe fulfills this mission through our Mind Games conferences for youth and adults, our 3-minute daily radio program, and our extensive Web site at www.probe.org. Further information about Probe's materials and ministry may be obtained by contacting us at: Probe Ministries 1900 Firman Drive, Suite 100 Richardson, TX 75081 (972) 480-0240 FAX (972) 644-9664
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