Agnus_Dei said:
For one, there was no New Testament, as we know it today until at least the fourth century. By the mid 90 A.D. all the Epistles and Gospels were written, but still it wasn’t until the fourth century until the N.T. was clarified.
Get a grasp of Scripture and what made up the NT canon, and when. It certainly had nothing to do with the RCC and any of its councils. The canon was completed by the end of the first century with the completion of the book of Revelation and Bible-believing Christians, by the authority of the Apostles themselves, knew which books were inspired and which were not. Confuson came later on when various gnostics and other heretics tried to influence the purity and integrity of God's revelation to mankind in the inspired canon of the NT accepted by all of the Bible-believing churches of that era. Paul and the other apostles warned of false prophets that would come--even perverting the very Word of God, and so they did.
If the canon wasn't ratified until the fourth century, what on earth did the Waldenses use in their Itala version, translated into Old Latin in 150 A.D. from the Received Text. I guess they were ignorant of the non-existent RCC which didn't exist until the 4th century, and their silly declaration that they had the "real Bible" God has never left Himself without a witness. He didn't have to wait until the fourth century to tell the Christians of the first four centuries: "Hey, we've decided which books you can read now!"
What did the Syrians from Antioch use. The Antioch church was second only to the church at Jerusalem. Rome (at that time in history) would have been a dwarf in comparison. The Syrian Peshitta was another translation made from the Received Text in 150 A.D. This is fify years or less from the death of John, and from the Book of Revelation. These may be apographs--that is copies from the originals. The Antioch church is the church where the Apostle Paul was a member. All three of his missionary journeys began and ended from that church. It was very missionary-minded. It was a church that spread the word of God. The Syrian Peshitta was spread quickly. A church of around 300,000 to 500,000 would have no problem making copies and spreading them afar.
150 AD?? But you say that the canon wasn't ratified until the fourth century! What on earth did they use then? What was their canon composed of?
The Gothic Version went out to the Germanic tribes about 350 A.D.
None of these Bibles contained the apocrypha. They all contained the same books that we have today. They were all translated from the same Greek textual base that our KJV comes from. The canon had absolutely nothing to do with the RCC or any of its councils. It came: first through the Apostles, and then through the Bible believing churches of every era since then.
As I said in my previous post the deity of Christ was NOT an Early Church issue.
Actually it was. Gnosticism was attaking the humanity of Christ, and thus his Messiahship itself. One of the chief aims of Johns first epistle is an apologetic against gnosticism. If that wasn't enough Origen, a supposed church father, raised his head in defence of Arainism denying the deity of Christ.
It was Tradition as passed down from the Apostles that safeguarded the proper belief of the deity of Christ; the problem was exactly HOW the 3 persons of the Trinity coexisted together as one.
There was no tradition that the Apostles handed down by the apostles. This is where the Catholics like to have a dichotomy in their word-definitions endiing up with confusion for the readers. They are not better than neo-orthodoxy in that respect. Take a term, use it, but give it a different meaning other than the traditional meaning of the word. You love to play semantics. Is this a game or what. Actually it is the wolves in sheep's clothing trying to pull the wool over the eyes of the sheep!
Here is a good example:
2 Thessalonians 2:15 Therefore, brethren, stand fast, and hold the
traditions which ye have been taught, whether by word, or our epistle.
The Catholic encyclopedia defines tradition as knowledge accumulated orally or written over a long period of time, usually centuries.
That is a part of the definition that is given. Notice the part about "long period of time...centuries"
Obviously this is not what Paul was referring to in 2 Thessalonians. From the death of Christ (29 AD) to the time that Paul wrote that epistle (ca. 58 AD) is a period of only about 30 years. This is not centuries. How do you get tradition, "in the traditional" sense of the word out of this verse?? It is an impossibility! Paul is talking about the truth of the Word which he has taught them. "Hold the truths which you have been taught, whether by word or by our epistle." There (very obviouosly) was no Catholic tradition! It was the preaching of the cross, the teaching of the Word, and his epistles, that they were to hold to. This was not tradition as it is defined today. You are neo-orthodox in your ways. You give different meanings to Biblical words to confuse the reader.
But even then what Scripture was available to the early Church wasn’t a guarantee against heresy, hence the Arian heretics that took a different interpretation of Scripture, just as the Jehovah’s Witness of our time.
You do err not knowing the Scripture, neither the power of God.
Have you read 2Peter 3 which refers to the writings of the other apostles, and singles out the epistles of Paul in particular as Scripture. They certainly did have New Testament Scripture. Why do you think that Paul wrote letters to them?
Isaiah 9:6 For unto us a child is born, unto us a son is given: and the government shall be upon his shoulder: and his name shall be called Wonderful, Counsellor, The mighty God, The everlasting Father, The Prince of Peace.
DHK