Fact #1 - All the New Testament books were written and distributed among the congregations of Christ BEFORE the end of the first century.
A bare assertion. You have repeatedly been asked to produce evidence for this and have repeatedly failed to do so, so it does you no credit to keep harping on about this being a 'fact'.
Fact #2 - Tetullian speaks of the "entire volume" of "Christian scriptures" established BEFORE either Marcion or Valentinus came on the scene in history and Marcion produced what Tertullian accused as a stripped down and edited version of the New Testament scriptures as early as 140 A.D.
Marcion's Canon included only 10 letters of Paul plus the Gospel of Luke. If you want to cite Tertullian then be careful! - he also was a firm advocate of Apostolic Succession, so choose your friends carefully! Tertullian, in
Adversus Marcion says that Marcion 'mutilated' Luke's Gospel and also rejected the other three, together with Paul's Pastoral Epistles; however, Tertullian does not mention 2 Peter,
James, II Jn or III Jn and elsewhere cites the
Shepherd of Hermas with approval. All fo this is rather a stretch to claiming that the whole 27-book NT was in place by c 140 AD!
You simply do not have sufficient data to deny what these two facts confirm to be the case long before Rome canonized scriptures. Your argument is akin to denying that Alexandria had a complete gospel as early as the 2nd century because we only find papyi fragments instead of a whole gospel. Such reasoning shelfs all common sense just because we cannot find a copy of "the entire volume" that Tertullian vehemently states existed and cannot be added unto or subtracted from whether by the addition or subtraction practiced by Marcion or by faulty intepretations practiced by Valentinus.
And you haven't proved it either!
Why is it then you nor anyone else on this forum was able to overthrow what I said. Go back and look at your response! You could not overthrow the evidence all you could do is pronounce anathema's on the evidence presented. I took you to task for the overall context of Isaiah 8, the immediate context of Isaiah 8:14-20 and its direct use by Christ and the Apostles in the New Testament and the immediate context. You did not and could not refute contextual based evidence placed in your faces. I would be more than happy to repeat it!
Neither could you or any other pro-Catholic soterioligical advocates on this forum repudiate my interpetations of 2 Tim. 3:16-17 or 2 Peter. 1:17-21. I would be more than happy to repeat the specifics you could not deal with.
I think that was me you were quoting not TS. The point is that that doesn't help us with determining why
James and
Revelation are in the Canon but
Didache and
Barnabas (for example) are not. All of them claim to be authored by an Apostle or Apostles, but only the first two are in (and weren't as far as your friend Tertullian was concerned!).