|
Old Testament ApocryphaApocrypha (greek ἀπόκρῠφος — hidden, secret) Books that are not included in the biblical canon. It is not necessary to confuse the Apocrypha with the Gospel of Thomas and other forgery. Apocrypha are historical books, but not inspired, therefore do not enter into the canon.
Initially, all the books were in separate scrolls and were in one place - a jug, a special shelf or...
There was no gradation, they were just there. And the Jews themselves translated these books into Greek and called them the Septuagint. They chose books to translate, especially since there was no canon yet. The Septuagint was popular in the early church because most people did not speak Hebrew. Rome considered Christians a Jewish sect and Gospels and epistles began to appear. Then the Jews decided to distance themselves from Christians and protect themselves from the penetration of new holy books. This is how the canon was determined, which included 22 books according to the number of letters in the Hebrew alphabet, so that it was complete. For this purpose, the very best books were selected, many were combined, for example:
They were called deuterocanonical. The generally accepted definition is that they are not divinely inspired, but historical. ApocryphaThe Apocrypha is included in some Bibles, for example, the Russian Orthodox Bible.But they are included as apocrypha, as additional literature, historical, useful, but not divinely inspired. These books are also called deuterocanonical. They found their way into the Bible during the first translation of the TaNaKh (Old Testament) into Greek - the Septuagint. Apocryphal books:
Quotes from deuterocanonical books in the New TestamentJesus
Apostles
Non-canonical books
|
Bible, glossary
Bible Study
Did the Jews copy history from the Sumerians?
Bible History
Bible development
Russian Bible History
Dividing Bible into verses
Bible formats
Authorship
Authorship of the Bible
Bible authors
List of Bible authors
Bible statistics
Bible statistics
Bible and Mathematics
Canon
Canon
Old Testament Canon
New Testament Canon
Later insertions of the New Testament
Gospel harmony
New Testament Apocrypha
Bible division
Tanah
Septuagint
Vulgata
Comparison table
Canons - Jewish, Orthodox, Catholic, Protestant
|