Why Were They Excluded - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 22
About This Presentation
Title:

Why Were They Excluded

Description:

The Life of Adam and Eve (between 100-400 A.D. ... of Cain and Awan in The Life of Adam and Eve, angels mating with humans in The Book of Enoch, ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:73
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 23
Provided by: hpcu94
Category:
Tags: adam | and | eve | excluded

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Why Were They Excluded


1
Why Were They Excluded?
  • A critique of The History Channels Banned from
    the Bible

2
The Scriptures Teaching on Inspiration
  • After Jesus Christ, only certain people were
    promised to be guided by the Holy Spirit.
  • His apostles (John 1426 1526 1613).
  • Those granted this spiritual gift by apostolic
    authority (1 Corinthians 128-10 Acts 814-15,
    18 Romans 111).
  • The apostles were well aware of this principle
    and wrote about it to their readers.
  • At one point in time the gospel message was
    hidden, yet through the apostles it was revealed
    (1 Corinthians 24-12 Ephesians 31-7).
  • The apostles of Jesus Christ had a trustworthy
    message as eyewitnesses of Jesus on earth
    (Hebrews 23-4 2 Peter 116-20 1 John 11-3).
  • Any writing in contradiction or in addition to
    the apostles was to be rejected (2 Corinthians
    46 Galatians 16-9 Revelation 2218-19).
  • Such writings were anticipated (2 Timothy
    313-17 42-4).
  • The miraculous work of the Holy Spirit was to
    cease when this work was complete (1 Corinthians
    138-13 Jude 3 cf Hebrews 928).

3
The Scriptures Teaching on Inspiration
  • So, what does this mean?
  • According to Jesus, His apostles and the books
    always accepted (homolougomena)
  • The Holy Spirits work in inspiration was only to
    a limited of people for a limited amount of
    time!
  • Since it was limited to the apostles and those
    under their authority, it would have ceased soon
    afterwards.
  • When divine revelation ceases so does the
    possibility of a divinely-inspired book.
  • Notice the differences with the timeframe of the
    canonical vs. non-canonical books!

4
Dating the Books
5
Dating the Books
6
Dating the Books
  • How do these dates compare to
  • The Life of Adam and Eve (between 100-400 A.D.)
  • The Book of Jubilees (150 B.C.period
    intertestamental silence).
  • The Book of Enoch (160s BC).
  • Thomas Gospel of the Infancy of Jesus Christ
    (late 2nd century).
  • The Protoevangelion of James (225 A.D.)
  • The Gospel According to Mary (mid-2nd century)
  • Gospel of Nicodemus (3rd or 4th century)
  • Apocalypse of Peter (after 100 A.D.)
  • Testament of Solomon (2nd century)
  • The Alphabet of Ben Sira (Middle Ages)
  • The Acts of Peter (late 2nd century)
  • The Acts of Paul (late 2nd century)
  • The Secret Gospel of Mark (2nd century)
  • The Gospel of Judas (2nd century at earliest)

7
Principles Governing Canonization
  • It is reasonable to want to know about the
    process of canonization.
  • The term canon means reed.
  • The reed was used as a measuring stick.
  • Thus, canon is a fancy way of saying that
    certain books live up to the divine measuring
    stick of approval.
  • This was a reasonable task for the early church
  • Some were being persecuted for their beliefs.
  • Many spurious and fictional writings were
    beginning to be passed around in various
    localities.
  • Who wants to die for a belief not truly Gods
    Word?
  • Who wants to face eternity believing a lie?
  • Now, as we mentionedthe key principle behind
    canonization seems to be apostolic approval.
  • See also Ephesians 220 Acts 242
  • Yet, what other proof might there be concerning
    the exclusion of these texts and other Apocryphal
    books?

8
Principles Governing Canonization
  • Geisler and Nixs A General Introduction to the
    Bible offer ten reasons why the Old Testament
    Apocrypha is rejected.
  • Philo, Alexandrian Jewish philosopher (20
    B.C.-A.D. 40), quoted the Old Testament
    prolifically and even recognized the three-fold
    division, but he never quoted from the Apocrypha
    as inspired.
  • Josephus (A.D. 30-100), Jewish historian,
    explicitly excludes the Apocrypha, numbering the
    books of the Old Testament as twenty-two.
    Neither does he quote these books as Scripture.
  • Jesus and the New Testament writers never once
    quote the Apocrypha although there are hundreds
    ofreferences to almost all of the canonical
    books of the Old Testament.
  • The Jewish scholars of Jamnia (A.D. 90) did not
    recognize the Apocrypha.
  • No canon or council of the Christian church for
    the first four centuries recognized the Apocrypha
    as inspired.

9
Principles Governing Canonization
  • Geisler and Nixs A General Introduction to the
    Bible offer ten reasons why the Old Testament
    Apocrypha is rejected.
  • 6. Many of the great Fathers of the early church
    spoke out against the Apocrypha, for example,
    Origen, Cyril of Jerusalem, Athanasius.
  • 7. Jerome (340-420), the great scholar and
    translator of the Vulgate, rejected the Apocrypha
    as part of the canon.
  • 8. Many Roman Catholic scholars through the
    Reformation period rejected the Apocrypha.
  • 9. Luther and the Reformers rejected the
    canonicity of the Apocrypha.
  • Not until A.D. 1546, in a polemical action at the
    Counter Reformation Council of Trent, did the
    Apocryphal books receive full canonical status by
    the Roman Catholic Church.
  • (pp. 175-176).

10
Principles Governing Canonization
  • Josh McDowells The New Evidence That Demands a
    Verdict quotes from Ungers Bible Dictionary
    citing four reasons for exclusion of the Old
    Testament Apocrypha,
  • They abound in historical and geographical
    inaccuracies and anachronisms.
  • They teach doctrines that are false and foster
    practices that are at variance with inspired
    Scripture.
  • They resort to literary types and display an
    artificiality of subject matter and styling out
    of keeping with inspired Scripture.
  • They lack the elements that give genuine
    Scripture its divine character, i.e., prophetic
    power and poetic and religious feeling.
  • (pp. 29-30).

11
Principles Governing Canonization
  • Geisler and Nix also write about the New
    Testament Pseudepigrapha (books rejected by all)
    saying,
  • During the first few centuries, numerous books
    of a fanciful and heretical nature arose that are
    neither genuine nor valuable as a whole.
    Eusebius called these totally absurd and
    impious. Virtually no orthodox Father, canon or
    council considered these books to be canonical
    and, so far as the church is concerned, they have
    historical value only, indicating the heretical
    teachings of Gnostic, Docetic and ascetic groups,
    as well as the exaggerated fancy of religious
    lore in the early church. At best, these books
    were revered by some of the cults and referred to
    by some of the orthodox Fathers, but they were
    never considered canonical by the mainstream of
    Christianity (A General Introduction to the
    Bible, p. 199).

12
Principles Governing Canonization
  • Among the books listed in the Pseudepigrapha are
    some mentioned in Banned from the Bible
    including
  • Thomas Gospel of the Infancy of Jesus Christ
  • Protoevangelion of James
  • The Gospel of Nicodemus
  • The Gospel of Barnabas
  • The Acts of Peter
  • The Acts of Paul
  • The Acts of Philip
  • The Lost Epistle to the Corinthians
  • The Epistle to the Laodiceans
  • The Apocalypse of Peter
  • Concerning the Apocryphal books of the New
    Testament Neil Lightfoot writes in How We Got the
    Bible,
  • These writings, along with the apocryphal books,
    are sometimes erroneously described as the lost
    books of the Bible, a sensational and misleading
    title because these books were never a part of
    the Bible (p. 123).

13
So, what were the motives of the producers?
14
The Motives of the Producers
  • These books are outside of the realm of being
    considered truly inspired and were almost
    unanimously rejected in history.
  • Clearly, their evidence is weak
  • Their dating of books is obviously too late for
    real consideration.
  • Their logic is poor.
  • Popularity does not equal inspiration.
  • The Left Behind series is popular, but fictional
    and sensationalized.
  • The DaVinci Code was popular, but fictional and
    over-hyped.
  • Charlton Hestons role in the Ten Commandments
    was popular, but does not take the place of the
    original, inspired text.
  • Attaching a first-century name to a 2nd-century
    text is misleading.
  • It will increase popularity and curiosity, but
    you still have a counterfeit.
  • This type of influence is nothing but scholarly
    name-dropping.
  • The classic example is The Gospel of Judasif the
    same text was titled The Gospel of a 4th Century
    Gnostic nobody would pay attentionthats all it
    really is!
  • Yet, the easily deceived are fooled into thinking
    a man who HUNG HIMSELF somehow managed to write a
    gospel afterwards!
  • So, why do the producers go to the lengths they
    do to air Banned from the Bible?

15
The Motives of the Producers
  • The Bible is the best-selling book in the world
    and most often discussed.
  • Jews want to discredit the New Testament, Muslims
    want to discredit the whole Bible, and Christians
    want to defend it.
  • Thus, who will watch a series titled Banned from
    the Bible?
  • If all these groups want to watch, what happens?
  • off of commercial ads.
  • off of DVD sales.
  • off of future programs at The History Channel.
  • Create skepticism
  • There is obvious bias in the title Banned from
    the Bible.
  • It is intended to make one skeptical.
  • Yet, it takes more of a leap of faith to believe
    in those banned books than it does to believe
    the canonical books of the Bible!

16
The Motives of the Producers
  • Promote a liberal agenda
  • This includes the idea of relative truth.
  • If there is the possibility that there is more to
    the Bible than what we have, then truth can be
    reshaped and expanded.
  • If truth varies, then the popular concept of
    relative truth wins.
  • This includes the acceptance of other religious
    groups, such as Islam, Kabbala and Catholicism.
  • Several times the Quran is mentioned in this
    documentary as being in agreement with many of
    the cited non-canonical works.
  • In fact, this video is very popular among Islamic
    groups and is talked about often on Islamic
    message boards (see whyislam.org).
  • The idea is that if these non-canonical books are
    in agreement with Islam then perhaps these
    documents are truly inspired.
  • Yet, it most likely proves the oppositethat
    Muhammad was copying the ideas found in the Quran
    out of the fanciful lore of rejected literature!

17
The Motives of the Producers
  • For further proof of this position concerning
    Islam notice Goldsacks The Origins of the
    Quran,
  • Every reader of the Qur'an knows that it
    contains several references to the Lord Jesus
    Christ, and mentions certain stories connected
    with His birth, some of which are not to be found
    in the genuine Gospels. These stories, like that
    of the palm-tree, can also be traced to
    Apocryphal sources, and show conclusively whence
    Muhammad drew the materials which he afterwards
    recast and embodied in the Qur'an. One of these
    legends has reference to certain miracles said to
    have been performed by Christ in His infancy. One
    allusion to them may be found in Suratu'l-Ma'ida
    (v. 109-110),
  • "When God shall say, O Jesus! son of Mary!
    remember My favour upon thee, and upon thy
    mother when I strengthened thee with the Holy
    Spirit that thou shouldest speak unto men in the
    cradle and when grown up. And when I taught thee
    the Scripture and Wisdom and the Law and the
    Gospel, and when thou didst create of clay as it
    were the figure of a bird by my permission, and
    didst breathe thereon, and it became a bird by my
    permission."

18
The Motives of the Producers
  • Goldsack goes on to write,
  • Now the genuine Gospels have nothing of all
    this on the contrary, it is distinctly stated
    that the first miracle of Jesus was wrought after
    the beginning of His public ministry at thirty
    years of age. In the Injil (John ii. 11) we read,
    "This beginning of His signs did Jesus in Cana of
    Galilee, and manifested His glory." A reference
    to the spurious Gospel of the Infancy," "The
    Gospel of Thomas the Israelite," and other
    Apocryphal works, however, makes it clear that
    the legend must have been current in Arabia in
    the time of Muhammad. The latter must often have
    heard it repeated by his Christian
    contemporaries, and, imagining it to be part of
    the genuine Gospels, incorporated it into his
    Qur'an. On no other theory can the extraordinary
    likeness between the two narratives be accounted
    for. Let the reader, for example, remembering the
    Qur'an version quoted above, read the following
    from the "Gospel of Thomas the Israelite," a
    spurious and fanciful work of late date which was
    never regarded as inspired by any Christian sect.
    It is there written that "The child Jesus when
    five years of age was playing by the road by a
    dirty stream of running water and having brought
    it all together into ditches immediately made it
    pure and clean, and all this by a single word.
    Then having moistened some earth he made of it
    twelve sparrows, .... Jesus clapping his hands at
    the sparrows cried aloud to them 'Go off.' So
    they clucking flew away.

19
The Motives of the Producers
  • He continues,
  • The 'Gospel of the Infancy,' another fanciful
    romance, also tells us that when Jesus was in the
    cradle He spoke to His mother, and acquainted her
    with His Divine Mission.
  • Much more could be written to show that Muhammad
    was indebted not a little to the heretical
    Christians of his time for the legendary tales
    and religious conceptions which are now found in
    the Qur'an
  • http//answering-islam.org.uk/Books/Goldsack/Sourc
    es/index.htm

20
The Motives of the Producers
  • The motives of the producers seem to include
  • The acceptance of relative truth
  • Leading to the acceptance of different religious
    systems.
  • Thus, leading to a new system of morality and
    beliefs
  • Notice the points emphasized in this video
  • Sexuality
  • of Cain and Awan in The Life of Adam and Eve,
  • angels mating with humans in The Book of Enoch,
  • Lilith in The Alphabet of Ben Sira.
  • Jesus and the naked man in The Secret Gospel of
    Mark.
  • Feminism
  • Gospel According to Mary excluded because of
    sexism.
  • The characters of Lilith and Thecla were seen as
    too bold in the church because they were strong,
    dominant women in a male-dominated culture.
  • No hell
  • The Gospel of Nicodemus speaks of hell as being
    here on earth
  • This concept is being taught more and more among
    liberal theologians today.

21
Banned from the BibleA Smooth Presentation with
Biting Content
  • Romans 1617-18, Now I urge you, brethren, note
    those who cause divisions and offenses contrary
    to the doctrine which you learned, and avoid
    them. For those who are such do not serve our
    Lord Jesus Christ, but their own belly, and by
    smooth words and flattering speech deceive the
    hearts of the simple.

22
Believing in the Scriptures is the Sure Way to
Being Prepared for the Judgment!
  • 2 Timothy 316-17
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com