BilliardsBall
Veteran Member
Again, no where in the New Testament, does it mention that there are 66 books.
And Jesus make no mention of which books were to be included in canon and which don't make the cut.
The early church fathers wrote about the books to include in the canon, from the 2nd century and onwards, but there were no final count until a lot later. And the list varied, depending on the fathers.
Revelation was nearly not included in the canonical book.
Matthew, Luke and Paul may quote from the OT, but not from the original Hebrew, but from Greek translation, the same translation that included the non-canonical apocrypha.
And Jude was clearly citing sources that were never in the Old Testament, like Enoch's prophecy and the dispute between Michael and devil over the body of Moses.
Why would Jude cite from non-canonical sources?
He did, because none of the NT authors knew of canonical books, and none of them have ever rejected them outright.
Why does everyone assume that the non-canonical sources were written BEFORE Jude? Because they read Jude quotes outside sources somewhere on Google, that's why.
Repeating the NT quotes OT passages many hundreds of times, and arguably a couple of verses MAY touch on apocrypha, yes. Of course, Paul quotes pagan prophets when he is illuminating the inferiority of the pagan, secular position!
And you are wrong about NT authors rejecting non-canonical writings. Paul wrote telling people "see the large letters with which I SIGN this work in my own hand" and the apostles warned people about all kinds of false teachings, false teachers, false Christs, etc.