Like I said, there were no books, there were scrolls and letters. Some of these scrolls and letters were combined to make a single “book” at various stages in the church history, but the original writings that contained the teachings of Jesus and the Apostles were collected and disseminated by the end of the first century.
peace to you
Really? You made this claim earlier...
By the end of the first century the 66 books we know as the Bible were collected by the Christian churches (not the Roman Catholic Church which didn’t exist) and compared to first hand witness accounts to what the apostles taught. The “canon” literally means a measuring rod.
This became the standard by which all documents were compared. I believe that collection is the work of God Holy Spirit Who is clearly seen in Acts as directing and influencing these early churches.
They have been very faithfully copied and preserved, despite the Catholic translation into Latin, which occurred about 400 AD with Jerome and added many errors in the translation, undoubtedly to support the Bishop of Rome’s attempt to control the churches.
The current list used by Catholics were added by the Catholic Church during the reformation to support Catholic doctrines not found in scripture that had been rejected by the reformers, including the doctrine of the Pope as Vicar of Christ, purgatory and plenary indulgences and the perpetual virginity of Mary the mother of Jesus.
peace to you
To demonstrate the Catholic Church added books, you need to provide a list of 66 books by ANYONE in Christian history prior to the Reformation.
Can you do that?