Now the Bible wasn't put together until like 1400 so a lot of these books used to be scriptures to people.
Historical Problems:
1. Your late date of 1400 for the canon isn't accepted by Protestants or Catholics.
2. The "Apocryphal Gospels" aren't accepted by Protestants or Catholics.
3. These ideas are principally found in WORKS OF FICTION, like the Da Vinci Code by Dan Brown... which is a WORK OF FICTION, and which NO HISTORICAL SCHOLARS SUPPORT.
What historians actually find are:
A.) Early church fathers using specific books, and writing about them, and naming specific books as inspired, very early.
B.) Surviving lists, of books considered canon, going all the way back to the 2nd century, from such important figures as
Athanasius, Origen, Irenaeus, Eusebius, and the Muratorian Fragment, among others.
Historical Record:
1.) Historically we have records of the early church fathers, at very early dates, using specific books, and calling them scripture... showing us the books that were considered canonical, and which were being USED by the early church.
2.) Later, but still very early (from the 2nd to 4th century) we have surviving lists, where inspired books were actually written down into canonical lists.
3.) Around this same time we see church fathers, like Eusebius, mentioning known apocryphal books, and calling them out by name as being spurious. Many of the non-canonical books were known very early, and were specifically called out as such by name, by the church fathers.
Conclusion:
1.)
Canon:
- The protestant view, is that the canon came not by arbitrary decree, but by consensus.
- The historical record shows consensus, of the holy spirit moving in early Christians, to accept as inspired, and to use in religious practice, certain books over others. These books were soon put into lists. Those lists became the canon of scripture.
- The Catholic View is similar, but with the canon being finally settled by Papal authorities by the 6th Century.
2.)
Canonical Date of 1400:
- Even if we want to debate the canon, which is perfectly rational to do, we simply don't have it coming together arbitrarily in 1400.
- No scholars would agree to this, and even Protestants and Catholics are in agreement here.
3.)
Late Canon & Fiction:
- The ideas of a LATE and ARBITRARY CANON, and of an "APOCRYPHAL GOSPEL" with SECRET TRUTHS... are ideas from gnostics and fiction writers like Dan Brown (Da Vinci Code), not from the work of genuine New Testament scholars and historians.
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