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gnostic said:Since the 2 books of Enoch are clearly pseudapigraphic, they should remain so as non-canoical pseudapigrapha. Nevertheless, they are both interesting reading.
gnostic said:The 2 Enoch was clearly influenced by Zoroastrianism, because of the complex angelology and demonology heirarchies.
Actually, I think Zoroastrianism had also influenced Gnosticism, perhaps indirectly from Judaism and early Christianity.No*s said:Yes, there is indeed a clear borrowing of ideas (doesn't mean I don't accept some of them lol). Zoroastrianism had a lot of influence on Judaism and Christianity after it.
Actually, it matter little to me if it was canonise or not. I am not against it, because I take every sources as they are.No*s said:I doubt, though, that you have much invested in the canon, since it was partially oppose Gnosticism, from which it appears you draw some inspiration from
gnostic said:Actually, I think Zoroastrianism had also influenced Gnosticism, perhaps indirectly from Judaism and early Christianity.
gnostic said:Actually, it matter little to me if it was canonise or not. I am not against it, because I take every sources as they are.
As an amateur mythologist, I have worked on many different sources in my involvement in Greek, Norse and Celtic mythology. I may across different versions of say, the birth of Aphrodite. Aphrodite is given different parentages or different manners of her birth, so I must be willing to accept any text in regarding to her birth, regardless if they are the norms or unconventional.
I was very interested in the brief description of Enoch's mysterious disappearance in the Genesis, enough to investigate further and find the 2 books of Enoch to read. I did so because of my curiosity as an amateur scholar/researcher. I can accept that the Enoch are non-canonised, just as I accept the difference between canonised Bible and the Gnostic texts from the Nag Hammadi. To me all texts are relevant in their different spheres.
No*s said:*...(No*s) sprinkles a few limbs, eyes of a newt, and reads some ancient incantations, and *poof has used thread necromancy to restore breath to a corpse. *
No*s said:I'll have to google for that again. It's been a long time, but he added "alone" before "faith" in his German translation. Later editions removed it, and it has no bearing on today's Protestant Bibles; it's just a revealing detail lol.
No*s said:There were at least two separate canons. The Palestinian Canon and the Alexandrian Canon. The Palestinian Canon was similar to the modern Jewish canon and eventually became that. The Alexandrian Canon was the LXX. The latter, with the NT, became the universal Bible of Christians (until the Reformation) and the former the Bible of the Jews.
No*s said:The Dead Sea Scrolls intermix several different books with the OT books. Who is to say they didn't consider them canon?
No*s said:Simply the existence of the apocryphal books in a pre-Christian canon gives weight to the idea that there was no set canon at that time yet.
No*s said:This oversimplifies things more than a little bit. If, for instance, the RCC had widely accepted the Apocrypha long before the Reformers, then Trent was a clarification in light of the Reformers' rejection of the books, and by extension, several doctrines connected with it (it was a long-lasting council).
The problem, however, arises in that this is the post-schism Roman Catholic Church. It and Orthodoxy have already gone separate ways. Orthodoxy, though, still maintained the Deuterocanonicals. Interestingly, the division of the principle OT and secondary OT predates Trent, and even our NT is arranged along that principle (this is why Revelation is at the end, Hebrews immediately after the other Pauline epistles, etc. It is a hierarchy). This did not need an infallible proclamation; it was already the accepted practice of the Church before the Schism, making Trent a later clarification for the RCs.
No*s said:There are two fundamental problems with this. First, what about those who were still determining the books of Scripture? Why accept 3 John over the Didache? In fact, heretics like Marcion even had authoritative documents like "Paul's" letters they used to establish their doctrines. Since there was yet no canon, they could not even begin to use the principle you cited.
No*s said:The second one is that most heresies, who would rid themselves of one book or another, bristle with Scriptural quotations; they invariably believe themselves to be Bible-based, and those difficult books that contradict their beliefs (like sacrifice for the dead in 2 Maccabees) could simply be excised or ignored. In their mind, they have biblical basis, and one just as clear as the Reformers.
No*s said:His problem, though, was his theology and his reading of the book of James (faith and works are another issue altogether; obviously I subscribe to neither Sola you mentioned). He was still justifying his exclusion of James on the basis of his personal theology. I would even argue that Luthor was reading the book correctly (it does say blatantly that a man is "justified by works and not faith only" Ja. 2.24). The process of omitting books, even if Luthor had misread it, was created by theology, a belief that James contradicted it, and the belief that his understanding was right and not the book of Scripture's. It maintains itself as a breach of Sola Scriptura (I have often joked that Sola Scriptura for Luthor was "I believe in Sola Scriptura...so long as I pick the books).
No*s said:That I have to grant you. One or more of its sources was concerned with that...but with some restraint. As you say, it is indeed an amalgamation of several men, and well, what one interpolation to the text says does not necessarily have much bearing on another. This has occurred in Daniel, for isntance. There are Hebrew portions, some small Aramaic portions, and Greek portions. No doubt in not accepting the Deuterocanonicals, you reject the Greek additions, but it is still an amalgam piece written two languages still. One interpolation is good, two aren't. Enoch can still stand if some of the interpolations do not.
No*s said:*blinks*
You do realize what this does, right? It elevates the Bible, partly a creation of men, to the status of God. If the Bible is the Logos, then God is partly the product of the human imagination. As divinely inspired as the Bible is, it always uses the vocabulary of its authors, their worldview, etc.
I don't know how to put it mildly, so I'll put it bluntly. That theology is idolatrous. It places a book where God alone belongs. The Word in John is not the Bible, but the preexistant and uncreated Reason and Revelation of God, the Christ.
The Scriptures were created as holy men were moved by the Holy Spirit, but they were still created, and the Bible is a product of this union of the Spirit with men. The Church thus predates the NT writings. It made them. Its bishops told its congregations which ones were binding and which weren't, which would be read in services and which weren't, and this process ended with the closed canon. This isn't discovery, it is creation.
robtex said:For those of us ignorant to theories behind cannonzation of books, what is the conditions or elements neccessary to include a book in the bible ? That will help me, and hopefully others understand the issues in validify or qualifing what should and could go igoes in and what does not and than apply it to the book of Enoch
Radiant_Light said:of course it should be part of the bible. but because it was written in ethiopias language it is deemed as not canoon as the other inspired books.
Radiant_Light said:of course it should be part of the bible. but because it was written in ethiopias language it is deemed as not canoon as the other inspired books.