RE: Living Biblically
June 30, 2015 at 11:39 pm
(This post was last modified: June 30, 2015 at 11:39 pm by Randy Carson.)
(June 30, 2015 at 7:41 pm)Wyrd of Gawd Wrote:(June 29, 2015 at 1:12 pm)SteveII Wrote: No, not because I say so, because there is a name for the documents that contain the list of laws she cherry picked. They are contained in the Torah. This is specifically a Jewish book. If you refer to the Bible, you would be adding a whole bunch of other Jewish books and then 27 more NT books. Since the culmination of the Bible is the NT, living "biblically" would have to include those teachings (which supersede many of the laws in the Torah).The Bible didn't exist until the English wrote it. There was no "book" until they created it.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Torah
The English, huh?
The Canon and the Councils
Council of Rome (382 A.D.)
Convoked by Pope Damasus, this council produced the Roman Code. The Roman Code identified a list of scriptural books identical to canon that would be defined by the Council of Trent. Pope Damasus I approved the work of the first Council of Constantinople, accepting St. Athanasius’ list as divinely inspired, and indicated that if any bishop used a list of books inconsistent with the Roman canon he would need a convincing explanation.
Council of Hippo (AD 393)
This council reiterated the list of books established by the Council of Rome.
First Council of Carthage (AD 397)
This council reiterated the list of books established by the Council of Rome and also affirmed the Decree of Damasus issued in 382 A.D. Carthage, unlike Hippo, sent its decisions to Rome for ratification.
Pope Innocent I (AD 405)
In a letter to Exsuperius, the Bishop of Toulouse, Pope Innocent listed the same books established by the Council of Rome.
Second Council of Carthage (AD 419)
This council, presided over by Augustine, reiterated the list of books established by the Council of Rome and notified Pope Boniface of its action.
Pope Boniface (ca. AD 420)
Pope St. Boniface I (418-422) ratified the decision of the Council of Carthage and declared the canon settled for the Western Patriarchate. Boniface also sent the decision to the Eastern patriarchs in Alexandria, Antioch and Jerusalem. At that point, the Catholic Canon of Sacred Scripture was informally accepted worldwide.
Second Council of Nicaea (787 A.D.)
This council formally ratified the African Code which contained the same list of books that Trent would name “canonical”.
Council of Florence (1441 A.D.)
This council defined a list of inspired books identical to those defined by the African Code and the Second Council of Nicaea.
Council of Trent (1546 A.D.)
On April 8, 1546, this council produced a decree, Sacrosancta, which was the first, formal canonical definition of Old and New Testament scripture. This was the third formal affirmation of the list by an ecumenical council and at least the eighth overall.