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The Formation Of The Canon Of The New Testament

by "Carl" <saints@[EMAIL PROTECTED] > May 9, 2008 at 12:10 PM

The following scholarly article from note theological scholar Benjamin 
Warfield is on the topic of the canon of the New Testament. I recently ran

across the article after seeing the debates on the same topic on Usenet.

May God bless,
Carl
my website -- http://www.nettally.com/saints/
my blog -- http://www.anniemayhem.com/cgi-bin/wordpress/

---

The Formation Of The Canon Of The New Testament
by B.B. Warfield

In order to obtain a correct understanding of what is called the formation

of the Canon of the New Testament, it is necessary to begin by fixing very

firmly in our minds one fact which is obvious enough when attention is
once 
called to it. That is, that the Christian church did not require to form
for 
itself the idea of a "canon," - or, as we should more commonly call it, of
a 
"Bible," -that is, of a collection of books given of God to be the 
authoritative rule of faith and practice. It inherited this idea from the 
Jewish church, along with the thing itself, the Jewish Scriptures, or the 
"Canon of the Old Testament." The church did not grow up by natural law:
it 
was founded. And the authoritative teachers sent forth by Christ to found 
His church, carried with them, as their most precious possession, a body
of 
divine Scriptures, which they imposed on the church that they founded as
its 
code of law. No reader of the New Testament can need proof of this; on
every 
page of that book is spread the evidence that from the very beginning the 
Old Testament was as cordially recognized as law by the Christian as by
the 
Jew. The Christian church thus was never without a "Bible" or a "canon."

But the Old Testament books were not the only ones which the apostles (by 
Christ's own appointment the authoritative founders of the church) imposed

upon the infant churches, as their authoritative rule of faith and
practice. 
No more authority dwelt in the prophets of the old covenant than in 
themselves, the apostles, who had been "made sufficient as ministers of a 
new covenant "; for (as one of themselves argued) "if that which passeth 
away was with glory, much more that which remaineth is in glory." 
Accordingly not only was the gospel they delivered, in their own
estimation, 
itself a divine revelation, but it was also preached "in the Holy Ghost"
(I 
Pet. i. 12) ; not merely the matter of it, but the very words in which it 
was clothed were "of the Holy Spirit" (I Cor. ii. 13). Their own commands 
were, therefore, of divine authority (I Thess. iv. 2), and their writings 
were the depository of these commands (II Thess. ii. 15). "If any man 
obeyeth not our word by this epistle," says Paul to one church (II Thess. 
iii. 14), "note that man, that ye have no company with him." To another he

makes it the test of a Spirit-led man to recognize that what he was
writing 
to them was "the commandments of the Lord" (I Cor. xiv. 37). Inevitably, 
such writings ', making so awful a claim on their acceptance, were
received 
by the infant churches as of a quality equal to that of the old "Bible"; 
placed alongside of its older books as an additional part of the one law
of 
God; and read as such in their meetings for wor****p -a practice which 
moreover was required by the apostles (I Thess. v. 27; Col. iv. 16; Rev.
i. 
3). In the apprehension, therefore, of the earliest churches, the 
"Scriptures" were not a closed but an increasing "canon." Such they had
been 
from the beginning, as they gradually grew in number from Moses to
Malachi; 
and such they were to continue as long as there should remain among the 
churches "men of God who spake as they were moved by the Holy Ghost."

We say that this immediate placing of the new books - given the church
under 
the seal of apostolic authority - among the Scriptures already established

as such, was inevitable. It is also historically evinced from the very 
beginning. Thus the apostle Peter, writing in A.D. 68, speaks of Paul's 
numerous letters not in contrast with the Scriptures, but as among the 
Scriptures and in contrast with "the other Scriptures" (II Pet. 
iii.16) -that is, of course, those of the Old Testament. In like manner
the 
apostle Paul combines, as if it were the most natural thing in the world, 
the book of Deuteronomy and the Gospel of Luke under the common head of 
"Scripture" (I Tim. v.18): "For the Scripture saith ' 'Thou shalt not
muzzle 
the ox when he treadeth out the corn ' [Deut. xxv. 4]; and, 'The laborer
is 
worthy of his hire'" (Luke x. 7). The line of such quotations is never 
broken in Christian literature. Polycarp (c. 12) in A.D. 115 unites the 
Psalms and Ephesians in exactly similar manner: "In the sacred books....
as 
it is said in these Scriptures, 'Be ye angry and sin not,' and 'Let not
the 
sun go down upon your wrath."' So, a few years later, the so-called second

letter of Clement, after quoting Isaiah, adds (ii. 4): "And another 
Scripture, however, says, 'I came not to call the righteous, but 
sinners'" -quoting from Matthew -- a book which Barnabas (circa 97-106
A.D.) 
had already adduced as Scripture. After this such quotations are common.

What needs emphasis at present about these facts is that they obviously
are 
not evidences of a gradually-heightening estimate of the New Testament 
books, originally received on a lower level and just beginning to be 
tentatively accounted Scripture; they are conclusive evidences rather of
the 
estimation of the New Testament books from the very beginning as
Scripture, 
and of their attachment as Scripture to the other Scriptures already in 
hand. The early Christians did not, then, first form a rival "canon" of
"new 
books" which came only gradually to be accounted as of equal divinity and 
authority with the "old books"; they received new book after new book from

the apostolical circle, as equally "Scripture" with the old books, and
added 
them one by one to the collection of old books as additional Scriptures, 
until at length the new books thus added were numerous enough to be looked

upon as another section of the Scriptures.

The earliest name given to this new section of Scripture was framed on the

model of the name by which what we know as the Old Testament was then
known. 
Just as it was called "The Law and the Prophets and the Psalms" (or "the 
Hagiographa"), or more briefly "The Law and the Prophets," or even more 
briefly still "The Law"; so the enlarged Bible was called "The Law and the

Prophets, with the Gospels and the Apostles" (so Clement of Alexandria, 
"Strom." vi. 11, 88; Tertullian, "De Prms. Men" 36), or most briefly "The 
Law and the Gospel" (so Claudius Apolinaris, Irenaeus); while the new
books 
apart were called "The Gospel and the Apostles," or most briefly of all
"The 
Gospel." This earliest name for the new Bible, with all that it involves
as 
to its relation to the old and briefer Bible, is traceable as far back as 
Ignatius (A.D. 115), who makes use of it repeatedly (e.g., "ad Philad." 5;

("ad Smyrn." 7). In one passage he gives us a hint of the controversies 
which the enlarged Bible of the Christians aroused among the Judaizers ("
ad 
Philad." 6). "When I heard some saying," he writes, "'Unless I find it in 
the Old [Books] I will not believe the Gospel' on my saying,' It is 
written.' they answered, 'That is the question.' To me, however, Jesus 
Christ is the Old [Books]; his cross and death and resurrection and the 
faith which is by him, the undefiled Old [Books] - by which I wish, by
your 
prayers, to be justified. The priests indeed are good, but the High Priest

better," etc. Here Ignatius appeals to the "Gospel" as Scripture, and the 
Judaizers object, receiving from him the answer in effect which Augustine 
afterward formulated in the well known saying that the New Testament lies 
hidden in the Old and the Old Testament is first made clear in the New.
What 
we need now to observe, however, is that to Ignatius the New Testament was

not a different book from the Old Testament, but part of the one body of 
Scripture with it; an accretion, so to speak, which had grown upon it.

This is the testimony of all the early witnesses - even those which speak 
for the distinctively Jewish-Christian church. For example, that curious 
Jewish-Christian writing, "The Testaments of the XII. Patriarchs" (Beni. 
11), tells us, under the cover of an ex post facto prophecy, that the
"work 
and word" of Paul, i.e., confessedly the book of Acts and Paul's Epistles,

"shall be written in the Holy Books," i.e., as is understood by all, made
a 
part of the existent Bible. So even in the Talmud, in a scene intended to 
ridicule a "bishop" of the first century, he is represented as finding 
Galatians by "sinking himself deeper" into the same "Book" which contained

the Law of Moses ("Babl. Shabbath," 116 a and b). The details cannot be 
entered into here. Let it suffice to say that, from the evidence of the 
fragments which alone have been preserved to us of the Christian writings
of 
that very early time, it appears that from the beginning of the second 
century (and that is from the end of the apostolic age) a collection 
(Ignatius, II Clement) of "New Books" (Ignatius), called the "Gospel and 
Apostles" (Ignatius, Marcion), was already a part of the "Oracles" of God 
(Polycarp, Papias, II Clement), or "Scriptures" (I Tim., II Pet., Barn., 
Polycarp, II Clement), or the "Holy Books" or "Bible" (Testt. XII. Patt.).

The number of books included-in this added body of New Books, at the
opening 
of the second century, cannot be satisfactorily determined by the evidence

of these fragments alone. The section of it called the "Gospel" included 
Gospels written by "the apostles and their companions" (Justin), which 
beyond legitimate question were our four Gospels now received. The section

called "the Apostles" contained the book of Acts (The Testt. XII. Patt.)
and 
epistles of Paul, John, Peter and James. The evidence from various
quarters 
is indeed enough to show that the collection in general use contained all 
the books which we at present receive, with the possible exceptions of
Jude, 
II and III John and Philemon. And it is more natural to suppose that
failure 
of very early evidence for these brief booklets is due to their 
insignificant size rather than to their nonacceptance.

It is to be borne in mind, however, that the extent of the collection may 
have - and indeed is historically shown actually to have varied in
different 
localities. The Bible was circulated only in handcopies, slowly and 
painfully made; and an incomplete copy, obtained say at Ephesus in A.D.
68, 
would be likely to remain for many years the Bible of the church to which
it 
was conveyed; and might indeed become the parent of other copies,
incomplete 
like itself, and thus the means of providing a whole district with 
incomplete Bibles. Thus, when we inquire after the history of the New 
Testament Canon we need to distinguish such questions as these: (1) When
was 
the New Testament Canon completed? (2) When did any one church acquire a 
completed canon? (3) When did the completed canon -the complete Bible - 
obtain universal circulation and acceptance? (4) On what ground and
evidence 
did the churches with incomplete Bibles accept the remaining books when
they 
were made known to them?

The Canon of the New Testament was completed when the last authoritative 
book was given to any church by the apostles, and that was when John wrote

the Apocalypse, about A.D. 98. Whether the church of Ephesus, however, had
a 
completed Canon when it received the Apocalypse, or not, would depend on 
whether there was any epistle, say that of Jude, which had not yet reached

it with authenticating proof of its apostolicity. There is room for 
historical investigation here. Certainly the whole Canon was not
universally 
received by the churches till somewhat later. The Latin church of the
second 
and third centuries did not quite know what to do with the Epistle to the 
Hebrews. The Syrian churches for some centuries may have lacked the lesser

of the Catholic Epistles and Revelation. But from the time of Ireanaeus 
down, the church at large had the whole Canon as we now possess it. And 
though a section of the church may not yet have been satisfied of the 
apostolicity of a certain book or of certain books; and though afterwards 
doubts may have arisen in sections of the church as to the apostolicity of

certain books (as e. g. of Revelation): yet in no case was it more than a 
respectable minority of the church which was slow in receiving, or which 
came afterward to doubt, the credentials of any of the books that then as 
now constituted the Canon of the New Testament accepted by the church at 
large. And in every case the principle on which a book was accepted, or 
doubts against it laid aside, was the historical tradition of
apostolicity.

Let it, however, be clearly understood that it was not exactly apostolic 
author****p which in the estimation of the earliest churches, constituted a

book a ****tion of the "canon." Apostolic author****p was, indeed, early 
confounded with canonicity. It was doubt as to the apostolic author****p of

Hebrews, in the West, and of James and Jude, apparently, which underlay
the 
slowness of the inclusion of these books in the "canon" of certain
churches. 
But from the beginning it was not so. The principle of canonicity was not 
apostolic author****p, but imposition by the apostles as "law." Hence 
Tertullian's name for the "canon" is "instrumentum"; and he speaks of the 
Old and New Instrument as we would of the Old and New Testament. That the 
apostles so imposed the Old Testament on the churches which they founded -

as their "Instrument," or "Law," or "Canon" - can be denied by none. And
in 
imposing new books on the same churches, by the same apostolical
authority, 
they did not confine themselves to books of their own composition. It is
the 
Gospel according to Luke, a man who was not an apostle, which Paul
parallels 
in I Tim. v. 18 with Deuteronomy as equally "Scripture" with it, in the 
first extant quotation of a New Testament book as Scripture. The Gospels 
which constituted the first division of the New Books, - of "The Gospel
and 
the Apostles," - Justin tells us were "written by the apostles and their 
companions." The authority of the apostles, as by divine appointment 
founders of the church was embodied in whatever books they imposed on the 
church as law not merely in those they themselves had written.

The early churches, in short, received, as we receive, into the New 
Testament all the books historically evinced to them as give by the
apostles 
to the churches as their code of law; and we must not mistake the
historical 
evidences of the slow circulation an authentication of these books over
the 
widely-extended church, evidence of slowness of "canonization" of books by

the authority or the taste of the church itself.
 




 3 Posts in Topic:
The Formation Of The Canon Of The New Testament
"Carl" <sain  2008-05-09 12:10:49 
Mothers day surprise!
Dixe Hollins <mikeakle  2008-05-09 19:03:59 
The Formation Of The Canon Of The New Testament
Carl <saints@[EMAIL PR  2008-05-09 19:28:03 

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