Canon of the Holy Scriptures.
—The word canon as applied to the Scriptures has long
had a special and consecrated meaning. In its fullest
comprehension it signifies the authoritative list or closed number
of the writings composed under Divine inspiration, and destined
for the well-being of the Church, using the latter word in the
wide sense of the theocratic society which began with God's
revelation of Himself to the people of Israel, and which finds its
ripe development and completion in the Catholic organism. The
whole Biblical Canon therefore consists of the canons of the Old
and New Testaments. The Greek kanon means primarily a reed,
or measuring-rod; by a natural figure it was employed by ancient
writers both profane and religious to denote a rule or standard.
We find the substantive first applied to the Sacred Scriptures in
the fourth century, by St. Athanasius; for its derivatives, the
Council of Laodicea of the same period speaks of the kanonika
biblia and Athanasius of the biblia kanonizomena. The
latter phrase proves that the passive sense of canon, viz.,
that of a regulated and defined collection, was already in use,
and this has remained the prevailing connotation of the word in
ecclesiastical literature.
The terms protocanonical
and deuterocanonical, of frequent usage among Catholic
theologians and exegetes, require a word of caution. They are not
felicitous, and it would be wrong to infer from them that the
Church successively possessed two distinct Biblical Canons. Only
in a partial and restricted way may we speak of a first and second
Canon. Protocanonical (protos, "first") is a
conventional word denoting those sacred writings which have been
always received by Christendom without dispute. The protocanonical
books of the Old Testament correspond with those of the Bible of
the Hebrews and the O. T. as received by Protestants. The
deuterocanonical (deuteros, "second") are those
whose Scriptural character was contested in some quarters, but
which long ago gained a secure footing in the Bible of the
Catholic Church, though those of the O. T. are classed by
Protestants as the "Apocrypha". These consist of seven
books: Tobias, Judith, Baruch, Ecclesiasticus, Wisdom, First and
Second Machabees; also certain additions to Esther and Daniel.
Some portions of the New Testament whose canonicity was formerly
contested are sometimes styled the deuterocanonicals of the N. T.
These are the. Epistle to the Hebrews, those of St. James and
Jude, the Second of St. Peter, the Second and Third of John, that
of St. Jude, and the Apocalypse; also a few portions of books. The
origin and history of the doubts concerning these writings will be
considered in their place. Protocanonical and
deuterocanonical are modern terms, not having been used
before the sixteenth century. As they are of cumbersome length,
the latter (being frequently used in this article) will be often
found in the abbreviated form deutero.
The scope of an article on the
sacred Canon may now be seen to be properly limited to an
examination of (1) what may be ascertained regarding the process
of the collection of the sacred writings into bodies or groups
which from their very inception were the objects of a greater or
less degree of veneration; (2) the circumstances and manner in
which these collections were definitely canonized, or
adjudged to have a uniquely Divine and authoritative quality; (3)
the vicissitudes which certain compositions underwent in the
opinions of individuals and localities before their Scriptural
character was universally established. It is thus seen that
canonicity is a correlative of inspiration, being the
extrinsic dignity belonging to writings which have been officially
declared as of sacred origin and authority. It is antecedently
very probable that according as a book was written early or late
it entered into a sacred collection and attained a canonical
standing. Hence the views of traditionalist and critic (not
implying that the tradionalist may not also be critical) on the
Canon parallel, and are largely influenced by, their respective
hypotheses on the origin of its component members.
I. THE CANON OF THE OLD TESTAMENT
AMONG THE JEWS
It has already been intimated
that there is a smaller, or incomplete, and a larger, or complete,
Old Testament. Both of these were handed down by the Jews; the
former by the Palestinian, the latter by the Alexandrian, or
Hellenist, Jews; in consequence, this large topic must be
subdivided:
(1) The Canon among the
Palestinian Jews (Protocanonical Books)
The Jewish Bible of today is
composed of three divisions, whose titles combined form the
current Hebrew name for the complete Scriptures of Judaism:
Hat-Torah, Nebiim, wa-Krthubim, i. e. The Law, the
Prophets, and the Writings. This triplication is ancient; it is
supposed as long-established in the Mishnah, the Jewish code of
unwritten sacred laws, reduced to writing c. A.D. 200. A grouping
closely akin to it occurs in the N. T. in Christ's own words,
Luke, xxiv, 44: "All things must needs be fulfilled, which
are written in the law of Moses, and in the prophets, and in the
psalms concerning me." Going back to the prologue of
Ecclesiasticus, prefixed to it about 132 B.C., we find mentioned
"the Law, and the Prophets, and others that have followed
them". The Torah, or Law, consists of the five Mosaic books,
Genesis, Exodus, Leviticus, Numbers, Deuteronomy. The Prophets
were subdivided by the Jews into the Former Prophets U. e. the
prophetico-historical books: Josue, Judges, Samuel (I and II
Kings), and Kings (III and IV Kings)] and the Latter Prophets
(Isaias, Jeremias, Ezechiel, and the twelve minor Prophets,
counted by the He-brews as one book). The Writings, more generally
known by a title borrowed from the Greek Fathers, Hagiographa
(holy writings), embrace all the remaining books of the Hebrew
Bible. Named in the order in which they stand in the current
Hebrew text, these are: Psalms, Proverbs, Job, Canticle of
Canticles, Ruth, Lamentations, Ecclesiastes, Esther, Daniel,
Esdras, Nehemias, or II Esdras, Paralipomenon.
(a) Traditional view of the Canon
of the Palestinian Jews, or Proto-Canon.—In opposition to
scholars of more recent views, conservatives do not admit that the
Prophets and the Hagiographa represent two successive stages in
the formation of the Palestinian Canon. According to this older
school, the principle which dictated the separation between the
Prophets and the Hagiographa was not of a chronological kind, but
one found in the very nature of the respective sacred
compositions. That literature was grouped under the Kethubim, or
Hagiographa, which neither was the direct product of the
prophetical order, namely, that comprised in the Latter Prophets,
nor contained the history of Israel as interpreted by the same
prophetic teachers—narratives classed as the Former
Prophets. The Book of Daniel was relegated to the Hagiographa as a
work of the prophetic gift indeed, but not of the permanent
prophetic office. These same conservative students of the
Canon—now scarcely represented outside the Church—maintain,
for the reception of the documents composing these groups into the
sacred literature of the Israelites, dates which are in general
much earlier than those admitted by critics. They place the
practical, if not formal, completion of the Palestinian Canon in
the era of Esdras (Ezra) and Nehemias, about the middle of the
fifth century B.C., while, true to their adhesion to a Mosaic
authorship of the Pentateuch, they insist that the canonization of
the five books followed soon after their composition.
Since the traditionalists infer
the Mosaic authorship of the Pentateuch from other sources, they
can rely for proof of an early collection of these books chiefly
on Deuteronomy, xxxi, 9-13, 24-26, where there is question of a
book of the law, delivered by Moses to the priests with the
command to keep it in the ark and read it to the people on the
feast of Tabernacles. But the effort to identify this book with
the entire Pentateuch is not convincing to the opponents of Mosaic
authorship.
The Remaining Books.—The
Completion of the Palestinian-Jewish Canon.—Without being
positive on the subject, the advocates of the older views regard
it as highly probable that several additions were made to the
sacred repertory between the canonization of the Mosaic Torah
above described and the Exile (598 B.C.). They cite especially
Isaias, xxxiv, 16; II Paralipomenon, xxix, 30; Proverbs, xxv, 1;
Daniel, ix, 2. For the period following the Babylonian Exile the
conservative argument takes a more confident tone. This was an era
of construction, a turning-point in the history of Israel. The
completion of the Jewish Canon, by the addition of the Prophets
and Hagiographa as bodies to the Law, is attributed by
conservatives to Esdras, the priest-scribe and religious leader of
the period, abetted by Nehemias, the civil governor; or at least
to a school of scribes founded by the former. (Cf. II Esdras,
viii—x; II Machabees, ii, 13, in the Greek original.) Far
more arresting in favor of an Esdrine formulation of the Hebrew
Bible is the much-discussed passage from Josephus, "Contra
Apionem", I, viii, in which the Jewish historian, writing
about A.D. 100, registers his conviction and that of his
coreligionists—a conviction presumably based on
tradition—that the Scriptures of the Palestinian Hebrews
formed a closed and sacred collection from the days of the Persian
king, Artaxerxes Longimanus (465-25 B.C.), a contemporary of
Esdras. Josephus is the earliest writer who numbers the books of
the Jewish Bible. In its present arrangement this contains 40;
Josephus arrived at 22 artificially, in order to match the number
of letters in the Hebrew alphabet, by means of collocations and
combinations borrowed in part from the Septuagint. The
conservative exegetes find a confirmatory argument in a statement
of the apocryphal Fourth Book of Esdras (xiv, 18-47), under whose
legendary envelope they see an historical truth, and a further one
in a reference in the Baba Bathra tract of the Babylonian Talmud
to hagiographic activity on the part of "the men of the Great
Synagogue", and Esdras and Nehemias.
But the Catholic Scripturists who
admit an Esdrine Canon are far from allowing that Esdras and his
colleagues intended to so close up the sacred library as to bar
any possible future accessions. The Spirit of God might and did
breathe into later writings, and the presence of the
deuterocanonical books in the Church's Canon at once forestalls
and answers those Protestant theologians of a preceding generation
who claimed that Esdras was a Divine agent for an inviolable
fixing and sealing of the O. T. To this extent at least, Catholic
writers on the subject dissent from the drift of the Josephus
testimony. And while there is what may be called a consensus of
Catholic exegetes of the conservative type on an Esdrine or
quasi-Esdrine formulation of the canon so far as the existing
material permitted it, this agreement is not absolute; Kaulen and
Danko, favoring a later completion, are the notable exceptions
among the above-mentioned scholars.
(b) Critical views of the
formation of the Palestinian Canon.—Its three constituent
bodies, the Law, Prophets, and Hagiographa, represent a growth and
correspond to three periods more or less extended. The reason for
the isolation of the Hagiographa from the Prophets was therefore
mainly chronological. The only division marked off clearly by
intrinsic features is the legal element of the O. T., viz., the
Pentateuch.
The Torah, or Law.—Until
the reign of King Josias, and the epoch-making discovery of "the
book of the law" in the Temple (621 B.C.), say the critical
exegetes, there was in Israel no written code of laws, or other
work, universally acknowledged as of supreme and Divine authority.
This "book of the law" was practically identical with
Deuteronomy, and its recognition or canonization consisted in the
solemn pact entered into by Josias and the people of Juda,
described in IV Kings, xxiii. That a written sacred Torah was
previously unknown among the Israelites, is demonstrated by the
negative evidence of the earlier prophets, by the absence of any
such factor from the religious reform undertaken by Ezechias
(Hezekiah), while it was the mainspring of that carried out by
Josias, and lastly by the plain surprise and consternation of the
latter ruler at the finding of such a work. This argument, in
fact, is the pivot of the current system of Pentateuchal
criticism, and will be developed more at length in the article on
the Pentateuch, as also the thesis attacking the Mosaic authorship
and promulgation of the latter as a whole. The actual publication
of the entire Mosaic code, according to the dominant hypothesis,
did not occur until the days of Esdras, and is narrated in
chapters viii—x of the second book bearing that name. In
this connection must be mentioned the argument from the Samaritan
Pentateuch to establish that the Esdrine Canon took in nothing
beyond the Hexateuch, i.e. the Pentateuch plus Josue. (See
Pentateuch; Samaritans.)
The Nebiim, or
Prophets.—There is no direct light upon the time or manner
in which the second stratum of the Hebrew Canon was finished. The
creation of the above-mentioned Samaritan Canon (c. 432 B.C.) may
furnish a terminus a quo; perhaps a better one is the date
of the expiration of prophecy about the close of the fifth century
before Christ. For the other terminus the lowest possible
date is that of the prologue to Ecclesiasticus (c. 132 B.C.),
which speaks of "the Law, and the Prophets, and the others
that have followed them". But compare Ecclesiasticus itself,
chapters xlvi—xlix, for an earlier one.
The Kethubim, or
Hagiographa Completion of the Jewish Canon.—Critical
opinion as to date ranges from c. 165 B.C. to the middle of the
second century of our era (Wildeboer). The Catholic scholars Jahn,
Movers, Nickes, Danko, Haneberg, Aicher, without sharing all the
views of the advanced exegetes, regard the Hebrew Hagiographa as
not definitely settled till after Christ. It is an incontestable
fact that the sacredness of certain parts of the Palestinian Bible
(Esther, Ecclesiastes, Canticle of Canticles) was disputed by some
rabbis as late as the second century of the Christian Era (Mishna,
Yadaim, III, 5; Babylonian Talmud, Megilla, fol. 7). However
differing as to dates, the critics are assured that the
distinction between the Hagiographa and the Prophetic Canon was
one essentially chronological. It was because the Prophets already
formed a sealed collection that Ruth, Lamentations, and Daniel,
though naturally belonging to it, could not gain entrance, but had
to take their place with the last-formed division, the Kethubim.
The Protocanonical Books and the
New Testament.—The absence of any citations from Esther,
Ecclesiastes, and Canticles may be reasonably explained by their
unsuitability for N. T. purposes, and is further discounted by the
non-citation of the two books of Esdras. Abdias, Nahum, and
Sophonias, while not directly honored, are included in the
quotations from the other minor Prophets by virtue of the
traditional unity of that collection. On the one hand, such
frequent terms as "the Scripture", the "Scriptures",
"the holy Scriptures", applied in the N. T. to the older
sacred writings, would lead us to believe that the latter already
formed a definite fixed collection; but, on the other, the
reference in St. Luke to "the Law and the Prophets and the
Psalms", while demonstrating the fixity of the Torah and the
Prophets as sacred groups, does not warrant us in ascribing the
same fixity to the third division, the Palestinian-Jewish
Hagiographa. If, as seems certain, the exact content of the
broader catalogue of the O. T. Scriptures (that comprising the
deutero books) cannot be established from the N. T., a fortiori
there is no reason to expect that it should reflect the precise
extension of the narrower and Judaistic Canon. We are sure, of
course, that all the Hagiographa were eventually, before the death
of the last Apostle, divinely committed to the Church as Holy
Scriptures, but we know this as a truth of faith, and by
theological deduction, not from documentary evidence in the N. T.
The latter fact has a bearing against the Protestant claim that
Jesus approved and transmitted en bloc an already defined
Bible of the Palestinian Synagogue.
Authors and Standards of
Canonicity among the Jews: Though the O. T. reveals no formal
notion of inspiration, the later Jews at least must have possessed
the idea (cf. II Timothy, iii, 16; II Peter, i, 21). There is an
instance of a Talmudic doctor distinguishing between a composition
"given by the wisdom of the Holy Spirit" and one
supposed to be the product of merely human wisdom. But as to our
distinct concept of canonicity, it is a modern idea, and even the
Talmud gives no evidence of it. To characterize a book which held
an acknowledged place in the divine library, the rabbis spoke of
it as "defiling the hands", a curious technical
expression due probably to the desire to prevent any profane
touching of the sacred roll. But though the formal idea of
canonicity was wanting among the Jews the fact existed.
Regarding the sources of canonicity among the Hebrew ancients, we
are left to surmise an analogy. There are both psychological and
historical reasons against the supposition that the O. T. Canon
grew spontaneously by a kind of instinctive public recognition of
inspired books. True, it is quite reasonable to assume that the
prophetic office in Israel carried its own credentials, which in a
large measure extended to its written compositions. But there were
many pseudo-prophets in the nation, and so some authority was
necessary to draw the line between the true and the false
prophetical writings. And an ultimate tribunal was also needed to
set its seal upon the miscellaneous and in some cases mystifying
literature embraced in the Hagiographa. Jewish tradition, as
illustrated by the already cited Josephus, Baba Bathra, and
pseudo-Esdras data, points to authority as the final arbiter of
what was Scriptural and what not. The so-called Council of Jamnia
(c. A.D. 90) has reasonably been taken as having terminated the
disputes between rival rabbinic schools concerning the canonicity
of Canticles. So while the intuitive sense and increasingly
reverent consciousness of the faithful element of Israel could,
and presumably did, give a general impulse and direction to
authority, we must conclude that it was the word of official
authority which actually fixed the limits of the Hebrew Canon, and
here, broadly speaking, the advanced and conservative exegetes
meet on common ground. However the case may have been for the
Prophets, the preponderance of evidence favors a late period as
that in which the Hagiographa were closed, a period when the
general body of Scribes dominated Judaism, sitting "in the
chair of Moses", and alone having the authority and prestige
for such action. The term general body of Scribes has been
used advisedly; contemporary scholars gravely suspect, when they
do not entirely reject, the "Great Synagogue" of
rabbinic tradition, and the matter lay outside the jurisdiction of
the Sanhedrin. As a touchstone by which uncanonical and canonical
works were discriminated, an important influence was that of the
Pentateuchal Law. This was always the Canon par excellence
of the Israelites. To the Jews of the Middle Ages the Torah was
the inner sanctuary, or Holy of Holies, while the Prophets were
the Holy Place, and the Kethubim only the outer court of
the Biblical temple, and this medieval conception finds ample
basis in the preeminence allowed to the Law by the rabbis of the
Talmudic age. Indeed, from Esdras downwards the Law, as the oldest
portion of the Canon, and the formal expression of God's commands,
received the highest reverence. The Cabbalists of the second
century after Christ, and later schools, regarded the other
section of the O. T. as merely the expansion and interpretation of
the Pentateuch. We may be sure, then, that the chief test of
canonicity, at least for the Hagiographa, was conformity with the
Canon par excellence, the Pentateuch. It is evident, in
addition, that no book was admitted which had not been composed in
Hebrew, and did not possess the antiquity and prestige of a
classic age, or name at least. These criteria are negative and
exclusive rather than directive. The impulse of religious feeling
or liturgical usage must have been the prevailing positive factors
in the decision. But the negative tests were in part arbitrary,
and an intuitive sense cannot give the assurance of Divine
certification. Only later was the infallible Voice to come, and
then it was to declare that the Canon of the Synagogue, though
unadulterated indeed, was incomplete.
(2) The Canon among the
Alexandrian Jews (Deutero-canonical Books)
The most striking difference
between the Catholic and Protestant Bibles is the presence in the
former of a number of writings which are wanting in the latter and
also in the Hebrew Bible, which became the O. T. of Protestantism.
These number seven books: Tobias (Tobit), Judith, Wisdom,
Ecclesiasticus, Baruch, I and II Machabees, and three documents
added to protocanonical books, viz., the supplement to Esther,
from x, 4, to the end, the Canticle of the Three Youths (Song of
the Three Children) in Daniel, iii, and the stories of Susanna and
the Elders and Bel and the Dragon, forming the closing chapters of
the Catholic version of that book. Of these works, Tobias and
Judith were written originally in Aramaic, perhaps in Hebrew;
Baruch and I Machabees in Hebrew, while Wisdom and II Machabees
were certainly composed in Greek. The probabilities favor Hebrew
as the original language of the addition to Esther, and Greek for
the enlargements of Daniel.
The ancient Greek Old Testament
known as the Septuagint was the vehicle which conveyed these
additional Scriptures into the Catholic Church. The Septuagint
version was the Bible of the Greek-speaking, or Hellenist, Jews,
whose intellectual and literary center was Alexandria (see
Septuagint Version). The oldest extant copies date from the fourth
and fifth centuries of our era, and were therefore made by
Christian hands; nevertheless scholars generally admit that these
faithfully represent the O. T. as it was current among the
Hellenist or Alexandrian Jews in the age immediately preceding
Christ. These venerable MSS. of the Septuagint vary somewhat in
their content outside the Palestinian Canon, showing that in
Alexandrian-Jewish circles the number of admissible extra books
was not sharply determined either by tradition or by authority.
However, aside from the absence of Machabees from the Codex
Vaticanus (the very oldest copy of the Greek O. T.), all the
entire MSS. contain all the deutero writings; where the manuscript
Septuagints differ from one another, with the exception noted, it
is in a certain excess above the deuterocanonical books. It is a
significant fact that in all these Alexandrian Bibles the
traditional Hebrew order is broken up by the interspersion of the
additional literature among the other books, outside the Law, thus
asserting for the extra writings a substantial equality of rank
and privilege.
It is pertinent to ask the
motives which impelled the Hellenist Jews to thus, virtually at
least, canonize this considerable section of literature, some of
it very recent, and depart so radically from the Palestinian
tradition. Some would have it that not the Alexandrian, but the
Palestinian, Jews departed from the Biblical tradition. The
Catholic writers Nickes, Movers, Danko, and more recently Kaulen
and Mullen, have advocated the view that originally the
Palestinian Canon must have included all the deuterocanonicals,
and so stood down to the time of the Apostles (Kaulen, c. 100
B.C.), when, moved by the fact that the Septuagint had become the
O. T. of the Church, it was put under ban by the Jerusalem
Scribes, who were actuated moreover (thus especially Kaulen) by
hostility to the Hellenistic largeness of spirit and Greek
composition of our deuterocanonical books.. These exegetes place
much reliance on St. Justin Martyr's statement that the Jews had
mutilated Holy Writ, a statement that rests on no positive
evidence. They adduce' the fact that certain deutero books were
quoted with veneration, and even in a few cases as Scripture, by
Palestinian or Babylonian doctors; but the private utterances of a
few rabbis cannot outweigh the consistent Hebrew tradition of the
canon, attested by Josephus—although he himself was inclined
to Hellenism—and even by the Alexandrian-Jewish author of IV
Esdras. We are therefore forced to admit that the leaders of
Alexandrian Judaism showed a notable independence of Jerusalem
tradition and authority in permitting the sacred boundaries of the
Canon, which certainly had been fixed for the Prophets, to be
broken by the insertion of an enlarged Daniel and the Epistle of
Baruch. On the assumption that the limits of the Palestinian
Hagiographa remained undefined until a relatively late date, there
was less bold innovation in the addition of the other books, but
the wiping out of the lines of the triple division reveals that
the Hellenists were ready to extend the Hebrew Canon, if not
establish a new official one of their own.
On their human side these
innovations are to be accounted for by the free spirit of the
Hellenist Jews. Under the influence of Greek thought they had
conceived a broader view of Divine inspiration than that of their
Palestinian brethren, and refused to restrict the literary
manifestations of the Holy Ghost to a certain terminus of time and
the Hebrew form of language. The Book of Wisdom, emphatically
Hellenist in character, presents to us Divine wisdom as flowing on
from generation to generation and making holy souls and prophets
(vii, 27, in the Greek). Philo, a typical Alexandrian-Jewish
thinker, has even an exaggerated notion of the diffusion of
inspiration (Quis rerum divinarum hmres, 52; ed. Lips., iii, 57;
De migratione Abrahae, 11,299; ed. Lips. ii, 334). But even Philo,
while indicating acquaintance with the deutero literature, nowhere
cites it in his voluminous writings. True; he does not employ
several books of the Hebrew Canon; but there is a natural
presumption that if he had regarded the additional works as being
quite on the same plane as the others, he would not have failed to
quote so stimulating and congenial a production as the Book of
Wisdom. Moreover, as has been pointed out Loy several authorities,
the independent spirit of the Hellenists could not have gone so
far as to setup a different official Canon from that of Jerusalem,
without having left historical traces of such a rupture. So, from
the available data we may justly infer that, while the
deuterocanonicals were admitted as sacred by the Alexandrian Jews,
they possessed a lower degree of sanctity and authority than the
longer accepted books, i.e. the Palestinian Hagiographa and the
Prophets, themselves inferior to the Law.
II. THE CANON OF THE OLD
TESTAMENT IN THE CATHOLIC CHURCH
The most explicit definition of
the Catholic Canon is that given by the Council of Trent, Session
IV, 1546. For the O. T. its catalogue reads as follows: "The
five books of Moses (Genesis, Exodus, Leviticus, Numbers,
Deuteronomy), Josue, Judges, Ruth, the four books of Kings, two of
Paralipomenon, the first and second of Esdras (which latter is
called Nehemias), Tobias, Judith, Esther, Job, the Davidic Psalter
(in number one hundred and fifty Psalms), Proverbs, Ecclesiastes,
the Canticle of Canticles, Wisdom, Ecclesiasticus, Isaias,
Jeremias, with Baruch, Ezechiel, Daniel, the twelve minor Prophets
(Osee, Joel, Amos, Abdias, Jonas, Micheas, Nahum, Habacuc,
Sophonias, Aggeus, Zacharias, Malachias), two books of Machabees,
the first and second". The order of books copies that of the
Council of Florence, 1442, and in its general plan is that of the
Septuagint. The divergence of titles from those found in the
Protestant versions is due to the fact that the official Latin
Vulgate retained the forms of the Septuagint.
(1) The O. T. Canon (including
the deuteros) in the N. T.
The Tridentine decree from which
the above list is extracted was the first infallible and
effectually promulgated pronouncement on the Canon, addressed to
the Church Universal. Being dogmatic in its purport, it implies
that the Apostles bequeathed the same Canon to the Church, as a
part of the depositum fidei. But this was not done by way
of any formal decision; we should search the pages of the N. T. in
vain for any trace of such action. The larger Canon of the O. T.
passed through the Apostles' hands to the Church tacitly, by way
of their usage and whole attitude toward its components; an
attitude which, for most of the sacred writings of the Old
Testament, reveals itself in the New, and for the rest, must have
exhibited itself in oral utterances, or at least in tacit approval
of the special reverence of the faithful. Reasoning backward from
the status in which we find the deutero books in the earliest ages
of post-Apostolic Christianity, we rightly affirm that such a
status points to Apostolic sanction, which in turn must have
rested on revelation either by Christ or the Holy Spirit. For the
deuterocanonicals at least, we needs must have recourse to this
legitimate prescriptive argument, owing to the complexity and
inadequacy of the N. T. data.
All the books of the Hebrew Old
Testament are cited in the New except those which have been aptly
called the Antilegomena of the O. T., viz., Esther
Ecclesiastes, and Canticles; moreover Esdras and Nehemias are not
employed. The admitted absence of any explicit citation of the
deutero writings does not therefore prove that they were regarded
as inferior to the above-mentioned works in the eyes of N. T.
personages and authors. The deutero literature was in general
unsuited to their purposes, and some consideration should be given
to the fact that even at its Alexandrian home it was not quoted by
Jewish writers, as we saw in the case of Philo. The negative
argument drawn from the non-citation of the deuterocanonicals in
the N. T. is especially minimized by the indirect use made of them
by the same Testament. This takes the form of allusions and
reminiscences, and shows unquestionably that the Apostles and
Evangelists were acquainted with the Alexandrian increment,
regarded its books as at least respectable sources, and wrote more
or less under its influence. A comparison of Hebrews, xi and II
Machabees, vi and vii reveals unmistakable references in the
former to the heroism of the martyrs glorified in the latter.
There are close affinities of thought, and in some cases also of
language, between I Peter, i, 6, 7, and Wisdom, iii, 5, 6;
Hebrews, i, 3, and Wisdom, vii, 26, 27; I Corinthians, x, 9, 10,
and Judith, viii, 24-25; I Corinthians, vi, 13, and
Ecclesiasticus, xxxvi, 20.
Yet the force of the direct and
indirect employment of O. T. writings by the New is slightly
impaired by the disconcerting truth that at least one of the N. T.
authors, St. Jude, quotes explicitly from the "Book of
Henoch", long universally recognized as apocryphal, see verse
14, while in verse 9 he borrows from another apocryphal narrative,
the "Assumption of Moses". Concerning the use of
apocrypha in the N. T. cf. Wildeboer, "Origin of the Canon of
the O. T., Par. 5." The N. T. quotations from the Old are in
general characterized by a freedom and elasticity regarding manner
and source which further tend to diminish their weight as proofs
of canonicity. But so far as concerns the great majority of the
Palestinian Hagiographa—a fortiori, the Pentateuch and
Prophets—whatever want of conclusiveness there may be in the
N. T., evidence of their canonical standing is abundantly
supplemented from Jewish sources alone, in the series of witnesses
beginning with the Mishnah and running back through Josephus and
Philo to the translation of the above books for the Hellenist
Greeks. But for the deuterocanonical literature, only the last
testimony speaks as a Jewish confirmation. However, there are
signs that the Greek version was not deemed by its readers as a
closed Bible of definite sacredness in all its parts, but that its
somewhat variable contents shaded off in the eyes of the
Hellenists from the eminently sacred Law down to works of
questionable divinity, such as III Machabees.
This factor should be considered
in weighing a certain argument. A large number of Catholic
authorities see a canonization of the deuteros in a supposed
wholesale adoption and approval, by the Apostles, of the Greek,
and therefore larger, O. T. The argument is not without a certain
force; the N. T. undoubtedly shows a preference for' the
Septuagint; out of about 350 texts from the O. T., 300 favor the
language of the Greek version rather than that of the Hebrew. But
there are considerations which bid us hesitate to admit an
Apostolic adoption of the Septuagint en bloc. As remarked
above, there are cogent reasons for believing that it was not a
fixed quantity at the time. The existing oldest representative
MSS. are not entirely identical in the books they contain.
Moreover, it should be remembered that at the beginning of our
era, and for some time later, complete sets of any such voluminous
collection as the Septuagint in manuscript would be extremely
rare; the version must have been current in separate books or
groups of books, a condition favorable to a certain variability of
compass. So neither a fluctuating Septuagint nor an inexplicit N.
T. conveys to us the exact extension of the pre-Christian Bible
transmitted by the Apostles to the Primitive Church. It is more
tenable to conclude to a selective process under the guidance of
the Holy Ghost, and a process completed so late in Apostolic times
that the N. T. fails to reflect its mature result regarding either
the number or note of sanctity of the extra-Palestinian books
admitted. To historically learn the Apostolic Canon of the O. T.
we must interrogate less sacred but later documents, expressing
more explicitly the belief of the first ages of Christianity.
(2) The Canon of the O. T. in
the Church of the first three centuries
The sub-Apostolic writings of
Clement, Polycarp, the author of the Epistle of Barnabas, of the
pseudo-Clementine homilies, and the "Shepherd" of
Hermas, contain implicit quotations from, or allusions to, all the
deuterocanonicals except Baruch (which anciently was often united
with Jeremias) and I Machabees and the additions to Daniel. No
unfavorable argument can be drawn from the loose, implicit
character of these citations, since these Apostolic Fathers quote
the protocanonical Scriptures in precisely the same manner. For
details of these testimonies see Loisy, "Canon de l'Ancien
Testament", pp. 71-72.
Coming down to the next age, that
of the apologists, we find Baruch cited by Athenagoras as a
prophet. St. Justin Martyr is the first to note that the Church
has a set of O. T. Scriptures different from the Jews, and also
the earliest to intimate the principle proclaimed by later
writers, namely, the self-sufficiency of the Church in
establishing the Canon; its independence of the Synagogue in this
respect. The full realization of this truth came slowly, at least
in the Orient, where there are indications that in certain
quarters the spell of Palestinian-Jewish tradition was not fully
cast off for some time. St. Melito, Bishop of Sardis (c. 170),
first drew up a list of the canonical books of the O. T. While
maintaining the familiar arrangement of the Septuagint, he says
that he verified his catalogue by inquiry among Jews; Jewry by
that time had everywhere discarded the Alexandrian books, and
Melito's Canon consists exclusively of the protocanonicals minus
Esther. It should be noticed, however, that the document to which
this catalogue was prefixed is capable of being understood as
having an anti-Jewish polemical purpose, in which case Melito's
restricted canon is explicable on another ground (see Comely,
Introductio, I, 75 sqq.). St. Irenaeus, always a witness of the
first rank, on account of his broad acquaintance with
ecclesiastical tradition, vouches that Baruch was deemed on the
same footing as Jeremias, and that the narratives of Susanna and
Bel and the Dragon were ascribed to Daniel. The Alexandrian
tradition is represented by the weighty authority of Origen.
Influenced, doubtless, by the Alexandrian-Jewish usage of
acknowledging in practice the extra writings as sacred while
theoretically holding to the narrower Canon of Palestine, his
catalogue of the O. T. Scriptures contains only the protocanonical
books, though it follows the order of the Septuagint. Nevertheless
Origen employs all the deuterocanonicals as Divine Scriptures, and
in his letter to Julius Africanus defends the sacredness of
Tobias, Judith, and the fragments of Daniel; at the same time
implicitly asserting the autonomy of the Church in fixing the
Canon (see references in Comely): In his Hexapiar edition of the
O. T. all the deuteros find a place. The sixth-century Biblical
MS. known as the "Codex Claromontanus" contains a
catalogue to which both Harnack and Zahn assign an Alexandrian
origin, about contemporary with Origen. At any rate it dates from
the period under examination and comprises all the
deuterocanonical books, with IV Machabees besides. St. Hippolytus
(d. 236) may fairly be considered as representing the primitive
Roman tradition. He comments on the Susanna chapter, often quotes
Wisdom as the work of Solomon, and employs as Sacred Scripture
Baruch and the Machabees. For the West African Church the larger
canon has two strong witnesses in Tertullian and St. Cyprian. All
the deuteros except Tobias, Judith, and the addition to Esther,
are Biblically used in the works of these Fathers. (With regard to
the employment of apocryphal writings in this age see under
Apocrypha.)
(3) The Canon of the O. T.
during the fourth, and first half of the fifth, century
In this period the position of
the deuterocanonical literature is no longer as secure as in the
primitive age. The doubts which arose should be attributed largely
to a reaction against the apocryphal or pseudo-Biblical writings
with which the East especially had been flooded by heretical and
other writers. Negatively, the situation became possible through
the absence of any Apostolic or ecclesiastical definition of the
Canon. The definite and inalterable determination of the sacred
sources, like that of all Catholic doctrines, was in the Divine
economy left to gradually work itself out under the, stimulus of
questionings and opposition. Alexandria, with its elastic
Scriptures, had from the beginning been a congenial field for
apocryphal literature, and St. Athanasius, the vigilant pastor of
that flock, to protect it against the pernicious influence, drew
up a catalogue of books with the values to be attached to each.
First, the strict canon and authoritative source of truth is the
Jewish O. T., Esther excepted. Besides, there are certain books
which the Fathers had appointed to be read to catechumens for
edification and instruction; these are the Wisdom of Solomon, the
Wisdom of Sirach (Ecclesiasticus), Esther, Judith, Tobias, the
Didache, or Doctrine of the Apostles, the Shepherd of Herman. All
others are apocrypha and the inventions of heretics (Festal
Epistle for 367). Following the precedent of Origen and the
Alexandrian tradition, the saintly doctor recognized no other
formal canon of the O. T. than the Hebrew one; but also, faithful
to the same tradition, he practically admitted the deutero books
to a Scriptural dignity, as is evident from his general usage. At
Jerusalem there was a renascence, perhaps a survival, of Jewish
ideas, the tendency there being distinctly unfavorable to the
deuteros. St. Cyril of that see, while vindicating for the Church
the right to fix the Canon, places them among the apocrypha and
forbids all books to be read privately which are not read in the
churches. In Antioch and Syria the attitude was more favorable.
St. Epiphanius shows hesitation about the rank of the deuteros; he
esteemed them, but they had not the same place as the Hebrew books
in his regard. The historian Eusebius attests the widespread
doubts in his time; he classes them as antilegomena, or
disputed writings, and, like Athanasius, places them in a class
intermediate between the books received by all and the apocrypha.
The 59th (or 60th) canon of the provincial Council of Laodicea
(the authenticity of which however is contested) gives a catalogue
of the Scriptures entirely in accord with the ideas of St. Cyril
of Jerusalem. On the other hand, the Oriental versions and Greek
MSS. of the period are more liberal; the extant ones have all the
deuterocanonicals and, in some cases certain apocrypha.
The influence of Origen's and
Athanasius's restricted canon naturally spread to the West. St.
Hilary of Poitiers and Rufinus followed their footsteps, excluding
the deuteros from canonical rank in theory, but admitting them in
practice. The latter styles them "ecclesiastical" books,
but in authority unequal to the other Scriptures. St. Jerome cast
his weighty suffrage on the side unfavorable to the disputed
books. In appreciating his attitude we must remember that Jerome
lived long in Palestine, in an environment where everything
outside the Jewish Canon was suspect, and that, moreover, he had
an excessive veneration for the Hebrew text, the Hebraica
veritas as he called it. In his famous "Prologus
Galeatus", or Preface to his translation of Samuel and Kings,
he declares that everything not Hebrew should be classed with the
apocrypha, and explicitly says that Wisdom, Ecclesiasticus,
Tobias, and Judith are not on the Canon. These books, he adds, are
read in the churches for the edification of the people, and not
for the confirmation of revealed doctrine. An analysis of Jerome's
expressions on the deuterocanonicals, in various letters and
prefaces, yields the following results: first, he strongly doubted
their inspiration; secondly, the fact that he occasionally quotes
them, and translated some of them as a concession to
ecclesiastical tradition, is an involuntary testimony on his part
to the high standing these writings enjoyed in the Church at
large, and to the strength of the practical tradition which
prescribed their reading in public worship. Obviously, the
inferior rank to which the deuteros were relegated by authorities
like Origen, Athanasius, and Jerome, was due to too rigid a
conception of canonicity, one demanding that a book, to be
entitled to this supreme dignity, must be received by all, must
have the sanction of Jewish antiquity, and must moreover be
adapted not only to edification, but also to the "confirmation
of the doctrine of the Church", to borrow Jerome's phrase.
But while eminent scholars and
theorists were thus depreciating the additional writings, the
official attitude of the Latin Church, always favorable to them,
kept the majestic tenor of its way. Two documents of capital
importance in the history of the canon constitute the first formal
utterance of papal authority on the subject. The first is the
so-called "Decretal of Gelasius", de recipiendis et
non recipiendis libris, the essential part of which is now
generally attributed to a synod convoked by Pope Damasus in the
year 382. The other is the Canon of Innocent I, sent in 405 to a
Gallican bishop in answer to an inquiry. Both contain all the
deuterocanonicals, without any distinction, and are identical with
the catalogue of Trent. The African Church, always a stanch
supporter of the contested books, found itself in entire accord
with Rome on this question. Its ancient version, the Vetus
Latina (less correctly the Itala), had admitted all the
O. T. Scriptures. St. Augustine seems to theoretically recognize
'degrees of inspiration; in practice he employs protos and
deuteros without any discrimination whatsoever. Moreover in his
"De Doctrina Christiana" he enumerates the components of
the complete O. T. The Synod of Hippo (393) and the three of
Carthage (393, 397, and 419), in which, doubtless, Augustine was
the leading spirit, found it necessary to deal explicitly with the
question of the Canon, and drew up identical lists from which no
sacred books are excluded. These councils base their canon on
tradition and liturgical usage. For the Spanish Church valuable
testimony is found in the work of the heretic Priscillian, "Liber
de Fide et Apocryphis"; it supposes a sharp line existing
between canonical and uncanonical works, and that the Canon takes
in all the deuteron:
(4) The Canon of the O. T.
from the middle of the fifth to the close of the seventh century
This period exhibits a curious
exchange of opinions between the West and the East, while
ecclesiastical usage remained unchanged, at least in the Latin
Church. During this intermediate age the use of St. Jerome's new
version of the O. T. (the Vulgate) became widespread in the
Occident. With its text went Jerome's prefaces disparaging the
deuterocanonicals, and under the influence of his authority the
West began to distrust these and to show the first symptoms of a
current hostile to their canonicity. On the other hand, the
Oriental Church imported a Western authority which had canonized
the disputed books, viz., the decree of Carthage, and from this
time there is an increasing tendency among the Greeks to place the
deuteros on the same level with the others—a tendency,
however, due more to forgetfulness of the old distinctions than to
deference to the Council of Carthage.
(5) The Canon of the O. T.
during the Middle Ages
(a) In the Greek Church
The result of this tendency among
the Greeks was that about the beginning of the twelfth century
they possessed a canon identical with that of the Latins, except
that it took in the apocryphal III Machabees. That all the
deuteros were liturgically recognized in the Greek Church at the
era of the schism in the ninth century, is indicated by the
"Syntagma Canonum" of Photius.
(b) In the Latin Church
All through the Middle Ages we
find evidence of hesitation about the character of the
deuterocanonicals. There is a current friendly to them, another
one distinctly unfavorable to their authority and sacredness,
while wavering between the two are a number of writers whose
veneration for these books is tempered by some perplexity as to
their exact standing, and among these we note St. Thomas Aquinas.
Few are found to unequivocally acknowledge their canonicity. The
prevailing attitude of Western medieval authors is substantially
that of the Greek Fathers. The chief cause of this phenomenon in
the West is to be sought in the influence, direct and indirect, of
St. Jerome's depreciating Prologue. The compilatory "Glossa
Ordinaria" was widely read and highly esteemed as a treasury
of sacred Iearning during the Middle Ages; it embodied the
prefaces in which the Doctor of Bethlehem had written in terms
derogatory to the deuteros, and thus perpetuated and diffused his
unfriendly opinion. And yet these doubts must be regarded as more
or less academic. The countless MS. copies of the Vulgate produced
by these ages, with a slight, probably accidental, exception,
uniformly embrace the complete O. T. Ecclesiastical usage and
Roman tradition held firmly to the canonical equality of all parts
of the O. T. There is no lack of evidence that during this long
period the deuteros were read in the churches of Western
Christendom. As to Roman authority, the catalogue of Innocent I
appears in the collection of ecclesiastical canons sent by Pope
Adrian I to Charlemagne, and adopted in 802 as the law of the
Church in the Frankish Empire; Nicholas I, writing in 865 to the
bishops of France, appeals to the same decree of Innocent as the
ground on which all the sacred books are to be received.
(6) The Canon of the O. T. and
the general councils
(a) In the Council of Florence
In 1442, during the life, and
with the approval, of this Council, Eugenius IV issued several
Bulls, or decrees, with a view to restore the Oriental schismatic
bodies to communion with Rome, and according to the common
teaching of theologians these documents are infallible statements
of doctrine. The "Decretum pro Jacobitis" contains a
complete list of the books received by the Church as inspired, but
omits, perhaps advisedly, the terms canon and canonical.
The Council of Florence therefore taught the inspiration of all
the Scriptures, but did not formally pass on their eanonicity.
(b) In the Council of Trent;
Definition of the Canon, 1546
It was the exigencies of
controversy that first led Luther to draw a sharp line between the
books of the Hebrew Canon and the Alexandrian writings. In his
disputation with Eck at Leipzig, in 1519, when his opponent urged
the well-known text from II Machabees in proof of the doctrine of
purgatory, Luther replied that the passage had no binding
authority since the book was outside the Canon. In the first
edition of Luther's Bible, 1534, the deuteros were relegated, as
apocrypha, to a separate place between the two Testaments. To meet
this radical departure of the Protestants, and as well define
clearly the inspired sources from which the Catholic Faith draws
its defense, the Council of Trent among its first acts solemnly
declared as "sacred and canonical" all the books of the
Old and New Testaments "with all their parts, as they have
been used to be read in the churches, and as found in the ancient
vulgate edition". During the deliberations of the Council
there never was any real question as to the reception of all the
traditional Scriptures. Neither—and this is remarkable—in
the proceedings is there manifest any serious doubt of the
canonicity of the disputed writings. In the mind of the Tridentine
Fathers they had been virtually canonized, by the decree of
Florence, and the same Fathers felt especially bound by the action
of the preceding ecumenical synod. The Council of Trent did not
enter into an examination of the fluctuations in the history of
the Canon. Neither did it trouble itself about questions of
authorship or character of contents. True to the practical genius
of the Latin Church, it based its decision on immemorial tradition
as manifested in the decrees of previous councils and popes, and
liturgical reading, relying on traditional teaching and usage to
determine a question of tradition. The Tridentine catalogue has
been given above.—(c) In the Vatican Council, 1870.—The
great constructive Synod of Trent had put the sacredness and
canonicity of the whole traditional Bible forever beyond the
permissibility of doubt on the part of Catholics. By implication
it had defined that Bible's plenary inspiration also. The Vatican
Council took occasion of a recent error on inspiration to remove
any lingering shadow of uncertainty on this head; it formally
ratified the action of Trent and explicitly defined the Divine
inspiration of all the books with their parts.
III. THE CANON OF THE OLD
TESTAMENT OUTSIDE THE CHURCH
(1) Among Oriental Schismatics
The Greek Orthodox Church
preserved its ancient Canon in practice as well as theory until
recent times, when, under the dominant influence of its Russian
offshoot, it is shifting its attitude towards the deuterocanonical
Scriptures. The rejection of these books by the Russian
theologians and authorities is a lapse which began early in the
eighteenth century (cf. "Revue biblique", April, 1901).
The Monophysites, Nestorians, Jacobites, Armenians, and Copts,
while concerning themselves little with the Canon, admit the
complete catalogue and several apocrypha besides.
(2) Among Protestants
The Protestant Churches have
continued to exclude the deutero writings from their canons,
classifying them as "Apocrypha". Presbyterians and
Calvinists in general, especially since the Westminster Synod of
1648, have been the most uncompromising enemies of any
recognition, and owing to their influence the British and Foreign
Bible Society decided in 1826 to refuse to distribute Bibles
containing the Apocrypha. Since that time the publication of the
deuterocanonicals as an appendix to Protestant Bibles has almost
entirely ceased in English-speaking countries. The books still
supply lessons for the liturgy of the Church of England, but the
number has been lessened by the hostile agitation. There is an
Apocrypha appendix to the British Revised Version, in a separate
volume. The deuteros are still appended to the German Bibles
printed under the auspices of the orthodox Lutherans.
IV. THE CANON OF THE NEW
TESTAMENT
The Catholic N. T., as defined by
the Council of Trent, does not differ, as regards the books
contained, from that of all Christian bodies at present. Like the
O. T., the New has its deuterocanonical books and portions
of books, their canonicity having formerly been a subject of some
controversy in the Church. These are for the entire books: the
Epistle to the Hebrews that of James, the Second of St. Peter, the
Second and Third of John, Jude, and Apocalypse; giving seven in
all as the number of the N. T. contested books. The formerly
disputed passages are three: the closing section of St. Mark's
Gospel, xvi, 9-20 about the apparitions of Christ after the
Resurrection; the verses in Luke about the bloody sweat of Jesus,
xxii, 43, 44; the Pericope Adulterae, or narrative of the
woman taken in adultery, St. John, vii, 53 to viii, 11. Since the
Council of Trent it is not permitted for a Catholic to question
the inspiration of these passages.
(1) The formation of the New
Testament Canon; c. A.D. 100-220
The idea of a complete and
clear-cut canon of the N. T. existing from the beginning, that is
from Apostolic times, has no foundation in history. The Canon of
the New Testament, like that of the Old, is the result of a
development, of a process at once stimulated by disputes with
doubters, both within and without the Church, and retarded by
certain obscurities and natural hesitations, and which did not
reach its final term until the dogmatic definition of the
Tridentine Council.
(a) The witness of the N. T. to
itself: The first collections.—Those writings which
possessed the unmistakable stamp and guarantee of Apostolic origin
must from the very first have been specially prized and venerated,
and their copies eagerly sought by local Churches and individual
Christians of means, in preference to the narratives and Logia,
or Sayings of Christ, coming from less authorized sources. Already
in the N. T. itself there is some evidence of a certain diffusion
of canonical books: II Peter, iii, 15, 16, supposes its readers to
be acquainted with some of St. Paul's Epistles; St. John's Gospel
implicitly presupposes the existence of the Synoptics (Matthew,
Mark, and Luke). There are no indications in the N. T. of a
systematic plan for the distribution of the Apostolic
compositions, any more than there is of a definite new Canon
bequeathed by the Apostles to the Church, or of a strong
self-witness to Divine inspiration. Nearly all the N. T. writings
were evoked by particular occasions, or addressed to particular
destinations. But we may well presume that each of the leading
Churches—Antioch, Thessalonica, Alexandria, Corinth,
Rome—sought by exchanging with other Christian communities
to add to its special treasure, and have publicly read in its
religious assemblies all Apostolic writings which came under its
knowledge. It was doubtless in this way that the collections grew,
and reached completeness within certain limits, but a considerable
number of years must have elapsed (and that counting from the
composition of the latest book) before all the widely separated
Churches of early Christendom possessed the new sacred literature
in full. And this want of an organized distribution, secondarily
to the absence of an early fixation of the Canon, left room for
variations and doubts which lasted far into the centuries. But
evidence will presently be given that from days touching on those
of the last Apostles there were two well defined bodies of sacred
writings of the N. T., which constituted the firm, irreducible,
universal minimum, and the nucleus of its complete Canon: these
were the Four Gospels, as the Church now has them, and thirteen
Epistles of St. Paul—the Evangelium and the
Apostolicum.
(b) The principle of
canonicity.—Before entering into the historical proof for
this primitive emergence of a compact, nucleative Canon, it is
pertinent to briefly examine this problem: During the formative
period what principle operated in the selection of the N. T.
writings and their recognition as Divine?—Theologians are
divided on this point. The view that Apostolicity was the test of
the inspiration during the building up of the N. T. Canon, is
favored by the many instances where the early Fathers base the
authority of a book on its Apostolic origin, and by the truth that
the definitive placing of the contested books on the N. T.
catalogue coincided with their general acceptance as of Apostolic
authorship. Moreover, the advocates of this hypothesis point out
that the Apostles' office corresponded with that of the Prophets
of the Old Law, inferring that as inspiration was attached to the
munus propheticum so the Apostles were aided by Divine
inspiration whenever in the exercise of their calling they either
spoke or wrote. Positive arguments are deduced from the N. T. to
establish that a permanent prophetical charisma (see
Charismata) was enjoyed by the Apostles through. a special
indwelling of the Holy Ghost, beginning with Pentecost: Matth., x,
19, 20; Acts, xv, 28; I Cor., ii, 13; II Cor., xiii, 3; I Thess.,
ii, 13, are cited. The opponents of this theory allege against it
that the Gospels of Mark and of Luke and Acts were not the work of
Apostles (however, tradition connects the Second Gospel with St.
Peter's preaching and St. Luke's with St. Paul's); that books
current under an Apostle's name in the Early Church, such as the
Epistle of Barnabas and the Apocalypse of St. Peter, were
nevertheless excluded from canonical rank, while on the other hand
Origen and St. Dionysius of Alexandria in the case of Apocalypse,
and St. Jerome in the case of II and III John, although
questioning the Apostolic authorship of these works,
unhesitatingly received them as Sacred Scriptures. An objection of
a speculative kind is derived from the very nature of inspiration
ad scribendum, which seems to demand a specific impulse
from the Holy Ghost in each case, and preclude the theory that it
could be possessed as a permanent gift, or charisma. The weight of
Catholic theological opinion is deservedly against mere
Apostolicity as a sufficient criterion of inspiration. This
adverse view has been taken by Franzelin (De Divina, Traditione et
Scripture, 1882), Schmid (De Inspirations Bibliorum Vi et Ratione,
1885), Crets (De Divine, Bibliorum Inspiration, 1886), Leitner
(Die prophetische Inspiration, 1895—a monograph), Pesch (De
Inspiratione Sacrie Scriptures, 1906). These authors (some of whom
treat the matter more speculatively than historically) admit that
Apostolicity is a positive and partial touchstone of inspiration,
but emphatically deny that it was exclusive, in the sense that all
non-Apostolic works were by that very fact barred from the sacred
Canon of the N. T. They hold to doctrinal tradition as the true
criterion.
Catholic champions of
Apostolicity as a criterion are: Ubaldi (Introductio in Sacram
Scripturam, II, 1876); Schanz (in Theologische Quartalschrift,
1885, pp. 666 sqq., and A Christian Apology, II, tr. 1891);
Szekely (Hermeneutica Biblica, 1902). Recently Professor Batiffol,
while rejecting the claims of these latter advocates, has
enunciated a theory regarding the principle that presided over the
formation of the N. T. Canon which challenges attention and
perhaps marks a new stage in the controversy. According to
Monsignor Batiffol, the Gospel (i.e. the words and acommandments
of Jesus Christ) bore with it its own sacredness and authority
from the very beginning. This Gospel was announced to the world at
large by the Apostles and Apostolic disciples of Christ, and this
message, whether spoken or written, whether taking the form of an
evangelic narrative or epistle, was holy and supreme by the fact
of containing the Word of Our Lord. Accordingly, for the primitive
Church, evangelical character was the test of Scriptural
sacredness. But to guarantee this character it was necessary that
a book should be known as composed by the official witnesses and
organs of the Evangel; hence the need to certify the Apostolic
authorship, or at least sanction, of a work purporting to contain
the Gospel of Christ. In Batiffol's view the Judaic notion of
inspiration did not at first enter into the selection of the
Christian Scriptures. In fact, for the earliest Christians the
Gospel of Christ, in the wide sense above noted, was not to be
classified with, because transcending, the O. T. It was not until
about the middle of the second century that under the rubric of
Scripture the New Testament writings were assimilated to
the Old; the authority of the N. T. as the Word preceded and
produced its authority as a new Scripture. (Revue Biblique, 1903,
226 sqq.) Monsignor Batiffol's hypothesis has this in common with
the views of other recent students of the N. T. Canon, that the
idea of a new body of sacred writings became clearer in the Early
Church as the faithful advanced in a knowledge of the Faith. But
it should be remembered that the inspired character of the N. T.
is a Catholic dogma, and must therefore in some way have been
revealed to, and taught by, Apostles.—Assuming that
Apostolic authorship is a positive criterion of inspiration, two
inspired Epistles of St. Paul have been lost. This pears from I
Cor., v, 9 sqq.; II Cor., ii, 4, 5.
(c) The formation of the
Tetramorph, or Fourfold Gospel.—Irenseus, in his work
"Against Heresies" (A., D. 182-88), testifies to the
existence of a Tetra-morph, or Quadriform Gospel, given by
the Word and unified by one Spirit; to repudiate this Gospel or
any part of it, as did the Alogi and Marcionites, was to sin
against revelation and the Spirit of God. The saintly Doctor of
Lyons explicitly states the names of the four Elements of this
Gospel, and repeatedly cites all the Evangelists in a manner
parallel to his citations from the O. T. From the testimony of St.
Irenaeus alone there can be no reasonable doubt that the Canon of
the Gospel was inalterably fixed in the Catholic Church by the
last quarter of the second century. Proofs might be multiplied
that our canonical Gospels were then universally recognized in the
Church, to the exclusion of any pretended Evangels. The
magisterial statement of Irenseus may be corroborated by the very
ancient catalogue known as the Muratorian Canon, and St.
Hippolytus, representing Roman tradition; by Tertullian in Africa,
by Clement in Alexandria; the works of the Gnostic Valentinus, and
the Syrian Tatian's Diatessaron, a blending together of the
Evangelists' writings, presuppose the authority enjoyed by the
fourfold Gospel towards the middle of the second century. To this
period or a little earlier belongs the pseudo-Clementine epistle
in which we find, for the fist time after II Peter, iii, 16, the
word Scripture applied to a N. T. book. But it is needless
in the present article to array the full force of these and other
witnesses, since even rationalistic scholars like Harnack admit
the canonicity of the quadriform Gospel between the years 140-175.
But against Harnack we are able
to trace the Tetra-morph as a sacred collection back to a more
remote period. The apocryphal Gospel of St. Peter, dating from
about 150, is based on our canonical Evangelists. So with the very
ancient Gospel of the Hebrews and Egyptians (see Apocrypha). St.
Justin Martyr (130-63) in his Apology refers to certain "memoirs
of the Apostles, which are called gospels", and which "are
read in Christian assemblies together with the writings of the
Prophets". The identity of these "memoirs" with our
Gospels is established by the certain traces of three, if not all,
of them scattered through St. Justin's works; it was not yet the
age of explicit quotations. Marcion, the heretic refuted by Justin
in a lost polemic, as we know from Tertullian, instituted a
criticism of Gospels bearing the names of Apostles and disciples
of the Apostles, and a little earlier (c. 120) Basilides, the
Alexandrian leader of a Gnostic sect, wrote a commentary on "the
Gospel" which is known by the allusions to it in the Fathers
to have comprised the writings of the Four Evangelists.
In our backward search we have
come to the sub-Apostolic age, and its important witnesses are
divided into Asian, Alexandrian, and Roman: (a) St. Ignatius,
Bishop of Antioch, and St. Polycarp, of Smyrna, had been disciples
of Apostles; they wrote their epistles in the first decade of the
second century (100-110). They employ Matthew, Luke, and John. In
St. Ignatius we find the first instance of the consecrated term
"it is written" applied to a Gospel (Ad Philad., viii,
2). Both these Fathers show not only a personal acquaintance with
"the Gospel" and the thirteen Pauline Epistles, but they
suppose that their readers are so familiar with them that it would
be superfluous to name them. Papias, Bishop of Phrygian
Hierapolis, according to Irenaeus a disciple of St. John, wrote
about A.D. 125. Describing the origin of St. Mark's Gospel, he
speaks of Hebrew (Aramaic) Logia, or Sayings of Christ, composed
by St. Matthew, which there is reason to believe formed the basis
of the canonical Gospel of that name, though the greater part of
Catholic writers identify them with the Gospel. As we have only a
few fragments of Papias, preserved by Eusebius, it cannot be
alleged that he is silent about other parts of the N. T. (b) The
so-called Epistle of Barnabas, of uncertain origin, but of highest
antiquity (see Epistle of Barnabas), cites a passage from the
First Gospel under the formula "it is written". The
Didache, or Teaching of the Apostles, an uncanonical work dating
from c. 110, implies that "the Gospel" was already a
well-known and definite collection. (c) St. Clement, Bishop of
Rome, and disciple of St. Paul, addressed his Letter to the
Corinthian Church c. A.D. 97, and, although it cites no Evangelist
explicitly, this epistle contains combinations of texts taken from
the three synoptic Gospels, especially from St. Matthew. That
Clement does not allude to the Fourth Gospel is quite natural, as
it was not composed till about that time.
Thus the patristic testimonies
have brought us step by step to a Divine inviolable fourfold
Gospel existing in the closing years of the Apostolic Era. Just
how the Tetramorph was welded into unity and given to the Church,
is a matter of conjecture. But, as Zahn observes, there is good
reason to believe that the tradition handed down by Papias, of the
approval of St. Mark's Gospel by St. John the Evangelist, reveals
that either the latter himself or a college of his disciples added
the Fourth Gospel to the Synoptics, and made the group into the
compact and unalterable "Gospel", the one in four, whose
existence and authority left their clear impress upon all
subsequent ecclesiastical literature, and find their conscious
formulation in the language of St. Irenseus.
(d) The Pauline
Epistles.—Parallel to the chain of evidence we have traced
for the canonical standing of the Gospels extends one for the
thirteen Epistles of St. Paul, forming the other half of the
irreducible kernel of the complete N. T. Canon. All the
authorities cited for the Gospel Canon show acquaintance with, and
recognize, the sacred quality of these letters. St. Irenseus, as
acknowledged by the Harnackian critics, employs all the Pauline
writings, except the short Philemon, as sacred and canonical. The
Muratorian Canon, contemporary with Irenseus, gives the complete
list of the thirteen, which, it should be remembered, does not
include Hebrews. The heretical Basilides and his disciples quote
from this Pauline group in general. The copious extracts from
Marcion's works scattered through Iremeus and Tertullian show that
he was acquainted with the thirteen as in ecclesiastical use, and
selected his Apostolikon of six from them. The testimony of
Polycarp and Ignatius is again capital in this case. Eight of St.
Paul's writings are cited by Polycarp; St. Ignatius of Antioch
ranked the Apostles above the Prophets, and must therefore have
allowed the written compositions of the former at least an equal
rank with those of the latter ("Ad Philadelphios", v).
St. Clement of Rome refers to Corinthians as at the head "of
the Evangel"; the Muratorian Canon gives the same honor to I
Corinthians, so that we may rightfully draw the inference, with
Dr. Zahn, that as early as Clement's day St. Paul's Epistles had
been collected and formed into a group with a fixed order. Zahn
has pointed out confirmatory signs of this in the manner in which
Sts. Ignatius and Polycarp employ these Epistles. The tendency of
the evidence is to establish the hypothesis that the important
Church of Corinth, was the first to form a complete collection of
St. Paul's writings.
The remaining Books.—In
this formative period the Epistle to the Hebrews did not obtain a
firm footing in the Canon of the Universal Church. At Rome it was
not yet recognized as canonical, as shown by the Muratorian
catalogue of Roman origin; Irenaeus probably cites it, but makes
no reference to a Pauline origin. Yet it was known at Rome as
early as St. Clement, as the latter's epistle attests. The
Alexandrian Church admitted it as the work of St. Paul, and
canonical. The Montanists favored it, and the aptness with which
vi, 4-8, lent itself to Montanist and Novatianist rigour was
doubtless one reason why it was suspect in the West. Also during
this period the excess over the minimal Canon composed of the
Gospels and thirteen epistles varied. The seven "Catholic"
Epistles (James, Jude, I and II Peter, and the three of John) had
not yet been brought into a special group, and, with the possible
exception of the three of St. John, remained isolated units,
depending for their canonical strength on variable circumstances.
But towards the end of the second century the canonical minimum
was enlarged and, besides the Gospels and Pauline Epistles,
unalterably embraced Acts, I Peter, I John (to which II and III
John were probably attached), and Apocalypse. Thus Hebrews, James,
Jude, and II Peter remained hovering outside the precincts of
universal canonicity, and the controversy about them and the
subsequently disputed Apocalypse form the larger part of the
remaining history of the Canon of the N. T. However, at the
beginning of the third century the N. T. was formed in the sense
that the content of its main divisions, what may be called its
essence, was sharply defined and universally received, while all
the secondary books were recognized in some Churches. A singular
exception to the universality of the above-described substance of
the N. T. was the Canon of the primitive East Syrian Church, which
did not contain any of the Catholic Epistles or Apocalypse.
The idea of a New Testament: The
question of the principle that dominated the practical
canonization of the N. T. Scriptures has already been discussed
under (b). The faithful must have had from the beginning some
realization that in the writings of the Apostles and Evangelists
they had acquired a new body of Divine Scriptures, a New written
Testament destined to stand side by side with the Old.
That the Gospel and Epistles were
the written Word of God, was fully realized as soon as the fixed
collections were formed; but to seize the relation of this new
treasure to the old was possible only when the faithful acquired a
better knowledge of the faith. In this connection Zahn observes
with much truth that the rise of Montanism, with its false
prophets, who claimed for their written productions—the
self-styled Testament of the Paraclete—the authority of
revelation, aroused the Christian Church to a fuller sense that
the age of revelation had expired with the last of the Apostles,
and that the circle of sacred Scripture is not extensible beyond
the legacy of the Apostolic Era. Montanism began in 156; a
generation later, in the works of Irenaeus, we discover the
firmly-rooted idea of two Testaments, with the same Spirit
operating in both. For Tertullian (c. 200) the body of the new
Scriptures is an instrumentum on at least an equal footing
and in the same specific class as the instrumentum formed
by the Law and the Prophets. Clement of Alexandria was the first
to apply the word "Testament" to the sacred library of
the New Dispensation. A kindred external influence is to be added
to Montanism: the need of setting up a barrier, between the
genuine inspired literature and the flood of pseudo-Apostolic
apocrypha, gave an additional impulse to the idea of a N. T.
Canon, and later contributed not a little to the demarcation of
its fixed limits.
(2) The period of discussion;
c. A.D. 220-367
In this stage of the historical
development of the Canon of the N. T. we encounter for the first
time a consciousness, reflected in certain ecclesiastical writers,
of the differences between the sacred collections in divers
sections of Christendom. This variation is witnessed to, and the
discussion stimulated by, two of the most learned men of Christian
antiquity, Origen, and Eusebius of Caesarea, the ecclesiastical
historian. A glance at the Canon as exhibited in the authorities
of the African, or Carthaginian, Church, will complete our brief
survey of this period of diversity and discussion:
Origen and his school.—Origen's
travels gave him exceptional opportunities to know the traditions
of widely separated portions of the Church and made him very
conversant with the discrepant attitudes toward certain parts of
the N. T. He divided books with Biblical claims into three
classes: (a) those universally received; (b) those whose
Apostolicity was questioned; (c) apocryphal works. In the first
class, the Homologoumena, stood the Gospels, the thirteen
Pauline Epistles, Acts, Apocalypse, I Peter, and I John. The
contested writings were Hebrews, II Peter, II and III John, James,
Jude, Barnabas, the Shepherd of Herman, the Didache, and probably
the Gospel of the Hebrews. Personally, Origen accepted all of
these as Divinely inspired, though viewing contrary opinions with
toleration. Origen's authority seems to have given to Hebrews and
the disputed Catholic Epistles a firm place in the Alexandrian
Canon, their tenure there having been previously insecure, judging
from the exegetical work of Clement, and the list in the Codex
Claromontanus, which is assigned by competent scholars to an early
Alexandrian origin.
Eusebius, Bishop of Caesarea in
Palestine, was one of Origen's most eminent disciples, a man of
wide erudition. In imitation of his master he divided religious
literature into three classes: (a) Homologoumena, or
compositions universally received as sacred, the Four Gospels,
thirteen Epistles of St. Paul, Hebrews, Acts, I Peter, I John, and
Apocalypse. There is some inconsistency in his classification; for
instance, though ranking Hebrews with the books of universal
reception, he elsewhere admits it is disputed. (b) The second
category is composed of the Antilegomena, or contested writings;
these in turn are of the superior and inferior sort. The better
ones are the Epistles of St. James and St. Jude, II Peter, II and
III John; these, like Origen, Eusebius wished to be admitted to
the Canon, but was forced to record their uncertain status; the
Antilegomena of the inferior sort were Barnabas, the Didache,
Gospel of the Hebrews, the Acts of Paul, the Shepherd, the
Apocalypse of Peter. (c) All the rest are spurious (notha).
Eusebius diverged from his
Alexandrian master in personally rejecting Apocalypse as
un-Biblical, though compelled to acknowledge its almost universal
acceptance. Whence came this unfavorable view of the closing
volume of the Christian Testament?—Zahn attributes it to the
influence of Lucian of Samosata, one of the founders of the
Antioch school of exegesis, and with whose disciples Eusebius had
been associated. Lucian himself had acquired his education at
Edessa, the metropolis of Eastern Syria, which had, as already
remarked, a singularly curtailed Canon. Lucian is known to have
edited the Scriptures at Antioch,' and is supposed to have
introduced there the shorter N. T. which later St. John Chrysostom
and his followers employed—one in which Apocalypse, II
Peter, II and III John, and Jude had no place. It is known that
Theodore of Mopsuestia rejected all the Catholic Epistles. In St.
John Chrysostom's ample expositions of the Scriptures there is not
a single clear trace of the Apocalypse, while he seems to
implicitly exclude the four smaller Epistles—II Peter, II
and III John, and Jude—from the number of the canonical
books. Lucian, then, according to Zahn, would have compromised
between the Syriac Canon and the Canon of Origen by admitting the
three longer Catholic Epistles and keeping out Apocalypse. But
after allowing fully for the prestige of the founder of the
Antioch school, it is difficult to grant that his personal
authority could have sufficed to strike such an important work as
Apocalypse from the Canon of a notable Church, where it had
previously been received. It is more probable that a reaction
against the abuse of the Johannine Apocalypse by the Montanists
and Chiliasts—Asia Minor being the nursery of both these
errors—led to the elimination of a book whose authority had
perhaps been previously suspected. Indeed it is quite reasonable
to suppose that its early exclusion from the East Syrian Church
was an outer wave of the extreme reactionist movement of the
Aloges—also of Asia Minor—who branded Apocalypse and
all the Johannine writings as the work of the heretic Cerinthus.
Whatever may have been all the influences ruling the personal
Canon of Eusebius, he chose Lucian's text for the fifty copies of
the Bible which he furnished to the Church of Constantinople at
the order of his imperial patron Constantine; and he incorporated
all the Catholic Epistles, but excluded Apocalypse. The latter
remained for more than a century banished from the sacred
collections as cur-rent in Antioch and Constantinople. However,
this book kept a minority of Asiatic suffrages, and, as both
Lucian and Eusebius had been tainted with Arianism, the
approbation of Apocalypse, opposed by them, finally came to be
looked upon as a sign of orthodoxy. Eusebius was the first to call
attention to important variations in the text of the Gospels,
viz., the presence in some copies and the absence in others of the
final paragraph of Mark, the passage of the Adulterous Woman, and
the Bloody Sweat.
(c) The African Church.—St.
Cyprian, whose Scriptural Canon certainly reflects the content of
the first Latin Bible, received all the books of the N. T. except
Hebrews, II Peter, James, and Jude; however, there was already a
strong inclination in his environment to admit II Peter as
authentic. Jude had been recognized by Tertullian, but, strangely,
it had lost its position in the African Church, probably owing to
its citation of the apocryphal Henoch. Cyprian's testimony to the
non-canonicity of Hebrews and James is confirmed by Commodian,
another African writer of the period. A very important witness is
the document known as Mommsen's Canon, a MS. of the tenth century,
but whose original has been ascertained to date from West Africa
about the year 360. It is a formal catalogue of the sacred books,
unmutilated in the N. T. portion, and proves that at its time the
books universally acknowledged in the influential Church of
Carthage were almost identical with those received by Cyprian a
century before. Hebrews, James, and Jude are entirely wanting. The
three Epistles of St. John and II Peter appear, but after each
stands the note una sola, added by an almost contemporary
hand, and evidently in protest against the reception of these
Antilegomena, which; presumably, had found a place in the official
list recently, but whose right to be there was seriously
questioned.
(3) The period of fixation: c.
A.D. 367-405
(a) St. Athanasius
While the influence of Athanasius
on the Canon of the O. T. was negative and exclusive (see supra),
in that of the N. T. it was trenchantly constructive. In his
"Epistola Festalis" (A.D. 367) the illustrious Bishop of
Alexandria ranks all of Origen's N. T. Antilegomena, which are
identical with the deuteros, boldly inside the Canon, without
noticing any of the scruples about them. Thence-forward they were
formally and firmly fixed in the Alexandrian Canon. And it is
significant of the general trend of ecclesiastical authority that
not only were works which formerly enjoyed high standing at
broadminded Alexandria—the Apocalypse of Peter and the Acts
of Paul—involved by Athanasius with the apocrypha, but even
some that Origen had regarded as inspired—Barnabas, the
Shepherd of Hermas, the Didache—were ruthlessly shut out
under the same damnatory title.
(b) The Roman Church: The Synod
under Damasus: St. Jerome
The Muratorian Canon or Fragment,
composed in the Roman Church in the last quarter of the second
century, is silent about He-brews, James, II Peter; I Peter,
indeed, is not mentioned, but must have been omitted by an
oversight, since it was universally received at the time. There is
evidence that this restricted Canon obtained not only in the
African Church, with slight modifications, as we have seen, but
also at Rome and in the West generally until the close of the
fourth century. The same ancient authority witnesses to the very
favorable and perhaps canonical standing enjoyed at Rome by the
Apocalypse of Peter and the Shepherd of Hermas. In the middle
decades of the fourth century the increased intercourse and
exchange of views between the Orient and the Occident led to a
better mutual acquaintance regarding Biblical canons and the
correction of the catalogue of the Latin Church. It is a singular
fact that while the East, mainly through St. Jerome's pen, exerted
a disturbing and negative influence on Western opinion regarding
the O. T., the same influence, through probably the same chief
intermediary, made for the completeness and integrity of the N. T.
Canon. The West began to realize that the ancient Apostolic
Churches of Jerusalem and Antioch, indeed the whole Orient, for
more than two centuries had acknowledged Hebrews and James as
inspired writings of Apostles, while the venerable Alexandrian
Church, supported by the prestige of Athanasius, and the powerful
Patriarchate of Constantinople, with the scholarship of Eusebius
behind its judgment, had canonized all the disputed Epistles. St.
Jerome, a rising light in the Church, though but a simple priest,
was summoned by Pope Damasus from the East, where he was pursuing
sacred lore, to assist at an eclectic, but not ecumenical, synod
at Rome in the year 382. Neither the general council at
Constantinople of the preceding year nor that of Nice (365) had
considered the question of the Canon. This Roman synod must have
devoted itself specially to the matter. The result of its
deliberations, presided over, no doubt, by the energetic Damasus
himself, has been preserved in the document called "Decretum
Gelasii de recipiendis et non recipiendis libris", a
compilation partly of the sixth century (Turner, in "Journal
of Theological Studies", I, 1900), but containing much
material dating from the two preceding ones. The Damasan catalogue
presents the complete and perfect Canon which has been that of the
Church Universal ever since. The N. T. portion bears the marks of
Jerome's views (cf. Zahn, "Grundriss der Geschichte d.
neutest. Kanons", in loco). St. Jerome, always
prepossessed in favor of Oriental positions in matters Biblical,
exerted then a happy influence in regard to the N. T.; if he
attempted to place any Eastern restriction upon the Canon of the
O. T. his effort failed of any effect. The title of the
decree—"Nunc vero de scripturis divinis agendum est
quid universalis Catholica recipiat ecclesia, et quid vitare
debeat"—proves that the council drew up a list of
apocryphal as well as authentic Scriptures. The Shepherd and the
false Apocalypse of Peter now received their final blow. "Rome
had spoken, and the nations of the West had heard" (Zahn).
The works of the Latin Fathers of the period—Jerome, Hilary
of Poitiers, Lucifer of Sardinia, Philaster of Brescia—manifest
the changed attitude toward Hebrews, James, Jude, II Peter, and
III John.
(c) Fixation in the African and
Gallican Churches
It was some little time before
the African Church perfectly adjusted its N. T. to the Damasan
Canon. Optatus of Mileve (370-85) does not' use Hebrews. St.
Augustine, while himself receiving the integral Canon,
acknowledged that many contested this Epistle. But in the Synod of
Hippo (393) the great Doctor's view prevailed, and the correct
Canon was adopted. However, it is evident that it found many
opponents in Africa, since three councils there at brief
intervals—Hippo, Carthage, in 393; Third of Carthage in 397;
Carthage in 419—found it necessary to formulate catalogues.
The introduction of Hebrews was an especial crux, and a reflection
of this is found in the first Carthage list, where the much vexed
Epistle, though styled of St. Paul, is still numbered separately
from the time-consecrated group of thirteen. The catalogues of
Hippo and Carthage are identical with the Catholic Canon of the
present. In Gaul some doubts lingered for a time, as we find Pope
Innocent I, in 405, sending a list of the Sacred Books to one of
its bishops, Exsuperius of Toulouse.
So at the close of the first
decade of the fifth century the entire Western Church was in
possession of the full Canon of the N. T. In the East, where, with
the exception of the Edessene Syrian Church, approximate
completeness had long obtained without the aid of formal
enactments, opinions were still somewhat divided on the
Apocalypse. But for the Catholic Church as a whole the content of
the N. T. was definitely fixed, and the discussion closed.
The final process of this Canon's
development had been twofold: positive, in the permanent
consecration of several writings which had long hovered on the
line between canonical and apocryphal; and negative, by the
definite elimination of certain privileged apocrypha that had
enjoyed here and there a canonical or quasi-canonical standing. In
the reception of the disputed books a growing conviction of
Apostolic authorship had much to do, but the ultimate criterion
had been their recognition as inspired by a great and ancient
division of the Catholic Church. Thus, like Origen, St. Jerome
adduces the testimony of the ancients and ecclesiastical
usage in pleading the cause of the Epistle to the Hebrews (De
Viris Illustribus, lix) . There is no sign that the Western Church
ever positively repudiated any of the N. T. deuteros; not admitted
from the beginning, these had slowly advanced towards a complete
acceptance there. On the other hand, the apparently formal
exclusion of Apocalypse from the sacred catalogue of certain Greek
Churches was a transient phase, and supposes its primitive
reception. Greek Christianity everywhere, from about the beginning
of the sixth century, practically had a complete and pure N. T.
Canon. (See Epistle to the Hebrews; Epistles of Saint Peter.
Epistle of Saint James. Epistle of Saint Jude. Epistles of Saint
John; Apocalypse.)
(4) Subsequent history of the
N. T. Canon
(a) To the Protestant Reformation
The N. T. in its canonical aspect
has little history between the first years of the fifth and the
early part of the sixteenth century. As was natural m ages when
ecclesiastical authority had not reached its modern
centralization, there were sporadic divergences from the common
teaching and tradition. There was no diffused contestation of any
book, but here and there attempts by individuals to add something
to the received collection. In several ancient Latin MSS. the
spurious Epistle to the Laodiceans is found among the canonical
letters, and, in a few instances, the apocryphal III Corinthians.
The last trace of any Western contradiction within the Church to
the Canon of the N. T. reveals a curious transplantation of
Oriental doubts concerning the Apocalypse. An act of the Synod of
Toledo, held in 633, states that many contest the authority of
that book, and orders it to be read in the churches under pain of
excommunication. This opposition in all probability came from the
Visigoths, who had recently been converted from Arianism. The
Gothic Bible had been made under Oriental auspices at a time when
there was still much hostility to Apocalypse in the East.
(b) The New Testament and the
Council of Trent (1546)
This ecumenical synod had to
defend the integrity of the New Testament as well as the Old
against the attacks of the pseudo-Reformers. Luther, basing his
action on dogmatic reasons and the judgment of antiquity, had
discarded Hebrews, James, Jude, and Apocalypse as altogether
uncanonical. Zwingli could not see in Apocalypse a Biblical book.
Ecolampadius placed James, Jude, II Peter, II and III John in an
inferior rank. Even a few Catholic scholars of the Renaissance
type, notably Erasmus and Cajetan, had thrown some doubts on the
canonicity of the above-mentioned Antilegomena. As to whole books,
the Protestant doubts were the only ones the Fathers of Trent took
cognizance of; there was not the slightest hesitation regarding
the authority of any entire document. But the deuterocanonical
parts gave the council some concern, viz., the last twelve verses
of Mark, the passage about the Bloody Sweat in Luke, and the
Pericope Adulterae in John. Cardinal Cajetan had
approvingly quoted an unfavorable comment of St. Jerome regarding
Mark, xvi, 9-20; Erasmus had rejected the section on the
Adulterous Woman as unauthentic. Still, even concerning these no
doubt of authenticity was expressed at Trent; the only question
was as to the manner of their reception. In the end these portions
were received, like the deuterocanonical books, without the
slightest distinction. And the clause "cum omnibus Buis
partibus" regards especially these portions.—For an
account of the action of Trent on the Canon, the reader is
referred back to the respective section of this article: II. The
Canon of the Old Testament in the Catholic Church.
The Tridentine decree defining
the Canon affirms the authenticity of the books to which proper
names are attached, without however including this in the
definition. The order of books follows that of the Bull of
Eugenius IV (Council of Florence), except that Acts was moved from
a place before Apocalypse to its present position, and Hebrews put
at the end of St. Paul's Epistles. The Tridentine order has been
retained in the official Vulgate and vernacular Catholic Bibles.
The same is to be said of the titles, which as a rule are
traditional ones, taken from the Canons of Florence and
Carthage.—For the bearing of the Vatican Council on the N.
T. see II. The Canon of the Old Testament in the Catholic
Church.
(5) The New Testament Canon
outside the Church
(a) The Orthodox
Russian and other branches of the
schismatic Greek Church have a N. T. identical with the Catholic.
In Syria the Nestorians possess a Canon almost identical with the
final one of the ancient East Syrians; they exclude the four
smaller Catholic Epistles and Apocalypse. The Monophysites receive
all the books. The Armenians have one apocryphal letter to the
Corinthians and two from the same. The Coptic-Arabic Church
includes with the canonical Scriptures the Apostolic Constitutions
and the Clementine Epistles. The Ethiopic N. T. also contains the
so-called "Apostolic Constitutions".
(b) Protestantism
As for Protestantism, the
Anglicans and Calvinists always kept the entire N. T. But for over
a century the followers of Luther excluded Hebrews, James, Jude,
and Apocalypse, and even went further than their master by
rejecting the three remaining deuterocanonicals, II Peter, II and
III John. The trend of the seventeenth century Lutheran
theologians was to class all these writings as of doubtful, or at
least inferior, authority. But gradually the German Protestants
familiarized themselves with the idea that the difference between
the contested books of the N. T. and the rest was one of degree of
certainty as to origin rather than of intrinsic character. The
full recognition of these books by the Calvinists and Anglicans
made it much more difficult for the Lutherans to exclude the N. T.
deuteros than those of the Old. One of their writers of the
seventeenth century allowed only a theoretic difference between
the two classes, and in 1700 Bossuet could say that all Catholics
and Protestants agreed on the N. T. Canon. The only trace of
opposition now remaining in German Protestant Bibles is in the
order, Hebrews, coming with James, Jude, and Apocalypse at the
end; the first not being included with the Pauline writings, while
James and Jude are not ranked with the Catholic Epistles.
(6) The criterion of
inspiration (less correctly known as the criterion of
canonicity)
Even those Catholic theologians
who defend Apostolicity as a test for the inspiration of the N. T.
(see above) admit that it is not exclusive of another criterion,
viz., Catholic tradition as manifested in the universal reception
of compositions as Divinely inspired, or the ordinary teaching of
the Church, or the infallible pronouncements of ecumenical
councils. This external guarantee is the sufficient, universal,
and ordinary proof of inspiration. The unique quality of the
Sacred Books is a revealed dogma. Moreover, by its very nature
inspiration eludes human observation and is not self-evident,
being essentially superphysical and supernatural. Its sole
absolute criterion, therefore, is the Holy inspiring Spirit,
witnessing decisively to Itself, not in the subjective experience
of individual souls, as Calvin maintained, neither in the
doctrinal and spiritual tenor of Holy Writ itself, according to
Luther, but through the constituted organ and custodian of Its
revelations, the Church. All other evidences fall short of the
certainty and finality necessary to compel the absolute assent of
faith. (See Franzelin, "De Divina, Traditione et Scripture";
Wiseman, "Lectures on Christian Doctrine", Lecture ii;
also Inspiration of the Bible.)
George J. Reid.