Claim ID: BIB-IS08

Claim: Books of the Bible Carefully Authenticated by Church Councils

Summary: The 66 books of the Bible were carefully recognized as inspired by God and authorized by God's people for use in Jewish and Christian communities. A strict set of criteria was used to qualify each book as inspired.

Description: The Canon is a collection of books recognized by the Church as authoritative. The 66 books of the Bible were recognized as authoritative, not made authoritative. This is an important distinction. Canonicity is determined by God and discovered by man.

The word canon means ruler or measuring rod. It is derived from a word that means cane or reed (Greek, kanon; Hebrew, qaneh). In the ancient world, cane was used as a measuring stick. When applied to the books of the Bible, it means that they measure up to the standard of being divinely inspired. The canon becomes the yardstick for measuring spiritual truth from all other sources. It is our standard for measuring truth.

The process by which the canon of the Bible was recognized is based on the following considerations [REF-GEI03].

The Old Testament canon consisting of the 39 books of the Law and the Prophets was settled and acknowledged over time. As the books were handed down from the prophets, they were accepted by the Jewish rabbis and community at large. The Jewish nation accepted the Old Testament canon as closed after the prophet Malachi. God was not speaking through any prophet from BC 400 until the time of Christ.

Twenty of the 27 books of the New Testament were accepted by the Apostolic Fathers as early as the first half of the second century. All 27 books of the New Testament canon were fully settled and acknowledged by the Council of Carthage in 397 AD.

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