VERITAS
"Do We Have the Right Books?"
By Craig Branch
November 2005
There are
two primary aspects of apologetics often referred to as
negative and positive apologetics.
The latter has to do with presenting positive arguments
for the Christian faith. Negative apologetics has to
do with answering objections brought against the Christian
faith. In this issue of Areopagus Journal, we will be
addressing
the issue of the biblical canon. The knowledge gained
from this issue will be valuable for both positive and
negative
apologetics.
What do
we mean by the canonicity of Scripture? The term “canon” originally
meant “reed,” but later came to be understood
as a measuring rod or a standard or norm. Applied to
the Christian faith, the term “canon” relates
to the collection of books known as the Bible and which
serves
as the doctrinal standard for Christian faith and practice.
The authenticity of this collection is closely related
to the question of the inspiration, inerrancy, and
authority of the Bible, topics covered in earlier issues
of the
journal. (1)
Some of
the most common questions people have about the authority
of Scripture are related to the
issue
of canonicity.
Why are there 66 books in the Bible? Who says the
39 books of the Old Testament are the right ones and on
what basis
were they declared to be Scripture? And what about
the New Testament? Who says the 27 books we have
today
are
the only ones acceptable, and on what basis, and
when did they finalize that list? And what about the Apocrypha,
those “extra” books contained in the
Roman Catholic Bible? Should the Gospel of Thomas
be treated
as an authentic record of Jesus’ sayings as
the Jesus Seminar claims?
In addition
to being a foundational part of why we
believe what we believe, the answers to these questions
have significant
importance today because of the growing number
of attacks by skeptics and heretics on the authenticity
and exclusive
claims of Christianity. In what follows, I will
briefly
survey some of these attacks on the biblical canon.
Historical
Attacks on the Canon
Challenges to the biblical canon began
very early with the rise of cults and other world religions.
Some of
the earliest manifestations of such attacks were
the
pseudonymous books by Gnostic writers in the late
first and second centuries who claimed apostolic authorship
but taught Gnostic (today popularized as “new
age”)
concepts.
Another
key example is Islam which added the Koran to the “canon” and
perverted the true teachings of God. A more modern
example would be the Mormon Church which, like
more modern Islam,
teaches continued revelation in the Book of Mormon,
adding that many plain and precious parts of the
Bible are missing
today. (2) In other words, they claim that there
are parts not included in the traditional Christian canon,
the
canon was not closed, and additional books can
be added as Scripture
(e.g. the four “standard works” of the
Mormon church).
Contemporary
Attacks on the Canon
Most contemporary attacks on the canonicity
of the 66 books of the Bible finds its inspiration in Enlightenment
of the 17th and 18th centuries which led to the rise
of
higher biblical criticism and liberal theology. This
school of thought views the Bible as a mere human
product
that reflects man’s fallible attempt to explain
the mysteries of the universe and existence. They
likewise view the formation of the canon as a purely
human process
motivated by theological and (perhaps) political
ideals.
Many of
the liberal theologians’ books
have remained in the rarified air of seminaries
and academic societies.
They still affect the laity, though, because of the
teaching and preaching of liberal pastors in many
mainline denominations.
Some examples of their writings related to canonicity
are The Battle for Scripture and the Faiths We
Never Knew and
Lost Scriptures by Bart Ehrman, Elaine Pagels The
Gnostic Gospels, the writings of Harvard feminist (and
biblical
scholar) Karen King, as well as Rudolph Bultmann,
Paul Tillich and others.
The public
sees a constant stream of indoctrinating
feature stories in popular news magazines like
Time, Newsweek,
and U.S. News & World Report. For example,
in one article we find, “centuries of scholarship
have turned up little convincing evidence that
His [Jesus’] closest
disciples did much writing either. Who, then, wrote
the 27 books that make up the traditional New Testament
Canon?
Could these books have been written by contemporaries
of Jesus? Are they close to the original form?
Or were they
revised by early church leaders to reflect the
changing views of who Jesus was, to address the
problems of
a growing church, or even advance political agendas?” The
article goes on to amplify the recurring view of
liberal biblical “scholars”: “other
scholars have concluded that the Bible is the product
of a purely human endeavor, that the identity of
the authors
is forever lost and that their work has been largely
obliterated by centuries of translation and editing.
(3)
Another
feature story in Time Magazine highlights the popular works
of the Jesus Seminar (4), The Jesus
Seminar
is comprised
of 50-74 liberal scholars who have concluded
that only a very small percentage of the gospel’s
teachings about Jesus are authentic while giving
great weight and
credibility to the so-called Gospel of Thomas.
The
Time article also highlights Pagels’ The Gnostic
Gospel, as well as Rescuing the Bible from Fundamentalism
by Bishop John Shelby Spong, and the Dan Brown’s
best seller, The Da Vinci Code (soon to be released
as movie directed by Ron Howard and starring
Tom Hanks). The
latter is a piece of propaganda against the authority
of the New Testament. Its deceptive impact will
be even stronger
when the movie is released in 2006. The novel
(claimed as historically-based fiction) accuses
a secret, controversial
Roman Catholic society (Opus Dei) of concealing
a sexual relationship between Jesus and Mary
Magdalene “by
suppressing early alternative Scriptures.”
Defending
the Canon
In this issue of Areopagus Journal, New Testament
scholar, Ben Witherington III, professor
at Asbury Theological
Seminary, addresses the skeptical claims of these
liberal scholars and the propaganda of The Da Vinci Code.
In
his article, “Why the ‘Lost’ Gospels
Lost Out,” he responds to the claims of Pagel,
King, Ehrman, and Dan Brown by demonstrating how
they engage in revisionist history. He effectively
debunks
their theory that later church leaders invented Christianity
by selecting and discarding the various books circulating
in the churches according to their own ideology.
Paul
Wegner, Old Testament professor at the Phoenix
Seminary, contributes an article detailing the evidence
for the authenticity
of the 39 books of the Old Testament (OT) titled “The
Canon of Scripture in Jesus’ Day.” He
begins with the direct authentication of Jesus to
the contents
of the Jewish OT canon, then shows how both Jewish
authorities and the earliest Church fathers affirmed
the existing
OT.
It is also
helpful to note that the New Testament writers, those Jews
who followed and were taught
by Jesus, acknowledged
the authority of the OT canon. Paul, referring
to the existing canon, wrote, “All Scripture is
inspired by God and is profitable for teaching,
for reproof, for correction,
and for training in righteousness” (2 Tim.
3:16). The New Testament writers quoted authoritatively
from
every book of the 39 books of the OT with the exception
of Esther
and Song of Solomon, while citing no apocryphal
work.
Let me
also mention that another key factor in determining the
canonicity of a book has to
do
with whether or
not the book itself claims or assumes divine
authority or
inspiration. Accordingly, we find the phrase “Thus
saith the Lord,” more
than 2000 times in the OT books. In addition, we
find expressions such as “Then the Lord [YHWH]
put out his hand and touched my mouth. And the
Lord [YHWH] said to me, ‘Behold,
I have put my words in your mouth’” (Jer.
1:9).
What about
the New Testament (NT)? How do we know that its 27 books
are the correct ones?
Though
the earliest
Christians were not concerned with canonicity
per se, they readily accepted the OT Scriptures sufficiently
ratified
by Jewish tradition, Jesus, and the apostles.
And
they accepted the teachings of Jesus and His
appointed apostles
whether received orally or by letter (1 Thes.
2:13; 4:1-2; 2 Thes. 2:15).
Moreover,
we the beginnings of canon criteria being given by Jesus,
Paul and Peter.
Jesus warned
of
the coming
of false prophets and false Christs (Matt.
7:15; 24:23-26). Paul and Peter also warn about false
Jesuses, false gospels,
false apostles, and false teachers (2 Cor.
11:3-4, 12-15; Gal. 1:6-9; 2 Tim. 4:3-4; 1 Tim. 6:3;
4:1-3; 2 Peter
2:1-3;
Jude 3-4). Finally, John also warned that the
brethren are to “test the spirits” because
of “many
false prophets” going out into the world.
Some rudimentary doctrinal criteria are introduced
as well
by which to test
false prophets (Gal. 1:6-9; 1 John 4:1-3). In
addition, Paul, anticipating or aware of spurious
counterfeit letters,
sets forth a criterion of true apostolic origin
as a mark of divine authority (1 Cor. 16:21;
Gal. 6:11; Col.
4:18;
2 Thes. 3:17; Philemon 19).
Terry Wilder,
NT professor at Midwestern Baptist Seminary presents
an article, “New Testament Canonicity.” Wilder
describes the rise of heresies which necessitated
the establishment of internal and external criteria for
formulating the NT
canon. He begins with the crucial foundation
that Jesus himself “divinely appointed and ordained” His
disciples and apostles to teach His messages
(Matt. 28:18-20a), and instructed them that “The
word that you hear is not mine but the Father’s who
sent me. These things I have spoken to you while I am still
with you. But the
Helper, the Holy Spirit, who the Father
will send in My name, He will teach you all things and
bring to your remembrance
all that I have said to you” (John
14:24b-26; see also John 15:26-27; 16:12-15).
He points out as well
that the apostles recognized their own
writings to be inspired
(2 Peter 3:16; 1 Thes. 2:13; 2 Thes. 2:15;
3:17; 2 Peter 1:16-21).
Wilder
goes on to present the criteria Christians used in
their prayerful deliberations over
the canon during
the early church councils. It is important
to understand that the church councils
that convened
were not
deciding in some arbitrary manner which
books were in and
which were out. They were seeking to
affirm what the church had
previously and always recognized as Scripture.
The
last article in this issue is “How Do We Know
They Got it right? The Epistemology
of the Canon” by
two ARC staffers, Vic Minish and
Steve Cowan. In this article, they make a philosophical
and theological case
for trusting
the deliberations of the early church
councils that finalized the canonization process.
As he does now, God placed
within the early church gifted men
who had the knowledge and expertise
to examine the books that circulated
within the church and apply objective criteria to
recognize those that
God had inspired. Most importantly,
we can be confident that
God providentially superintended
the
historical process to preserve his holy Word.
God has
always worked in history to protect and preserve
the Scriptures. We see
this even in
the Bible itself.
Jeremiah the prophet was told by
God to dictate “all the words
that I have spoken to you” to
his scribe who wrote them on a scroll
(36:1-2, 4). King Jehoiakim angrily
responded
to the reading of God’s Word
by burning the scroll. But God hid
Jeremiah and the scribe for protection
and
gave Jeremiah “all the former
words that were on the first scroll” to
be recorded again (36:27-32). God
preserved his word then and God preserved
his word
in the early church. The 66 books
of the Bible are truly the inspired,
infallible, and inerrant Word of
God—from
God to us. Craig
Branch is the Director of the Apologetics Resource
Center, Birmingham, Alabama.
NOTES
1. See Areopagus Journal 2:1 (January,
2002) and 3:3 (May-June, 2003) for articles relevant to
defending the inspiration and authority of Scripture.
2. 1 Nephi 13:26-28(Book of Mormon); and Doctrines of
Salvation Vol. 3, pp. 190-191.
3. U.S. News & World Report (Dec. 10, 1990): 61-62.
4. Time (December 22, 2003): 57.
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