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Major Church
Pronouncements on the Bible
- Pentecost (30/33AD)
- The beginning of the
Church; the Church exists before a determination of a canon or a definitive
list of books of what was later called the Bible. The NT was not even
written yet. The Bible is the book of the Church, we are not a church of the
Bible.
-
- Melito, Bishop of Sardis
(c. 170)
- Produced the first known
Christian attempt at an Old Testament canon. His list maintains the
Septuagint order of books but contains only the Old Testament
protocanonicals minus the Book of Esther.
-
- Council of Laodicea (c.
360)
- A local council of the
church in union with Rome produced a list of books of the Bible similar to
the Council of Trent's canon. This was one of the Church's earliest
decisions on a canon.
-
- Council of Rome (382)
- Local church council under
the authority of Pope Damasus, (366-384) gave a complete list of canonical
books of the OT and NT which is identical with the list later approved by
the Council of Trent.
-
- Council of Hippo (393)
- Local North African Church
council in union with and under the authority of the Bishop of Rome approved
a list of OT and NT canon (same as later approved by the Council of Trent)
-
- Council of Carthage
(397)
- Local North African Church
council in union with and under the authority of the Bishop of Rome approved
a list of OT and NT canon (same as later approved by the Council of Trent)
-
- Pope Innocent I, Bishop
of Rome, 401-417 (405)
- Responded to a request by
Exuperius, Bishop of Toulouse, with a list of canonical books of Scripture;
this list was the same as later approved by the Council of Trent.
-
- Council of Carthage
(419)
- Local North African Church
council in union with and under the authority of the Bishop of Rome approved
a list of OT and NT canon (same as later approved by the Council of Trent)
This canon was ratified by the Second Council of Nicea
(An Ecumenical Council).
-
- Council of Florence, an
ecumenical council (1441)
- Complete list of OT and NT
canon was drawn up; this list later adopted by the Fathers of the Council of
Trent
-
- Council of Trent, an
ecumenical council called to respond to the heresy of the Reformers
(1545-1563)
- The canon of OT and NT
received final definitions: 46 books in the OT; 27 in the NT; "Henceforth
the books of the OT and the NT, protocanonical and deuterocanonical alike,
in their entirety and with all their parts, comprise the canon and are held
to be of equal authority." The ancient Vulgate edition of the Bible was
called the authoritative edition of the Bible.
-
- Vatican I Council
(1869-1870)
- Reaffirmed the decree of
Trent. The Church holds the books of Holy Scripture as sacred and canonical,
not because she subsequently approved them, nor because they contain
revelation without error, but precisely because "having been written by the
inspiration of the Holy Spirit, they have God as their author and, as such,
they have been handed down to the Church itself."
-
-
Providentissimus
Deus (1893), Pope Leo XIII, Bishop of Rome, 1878-1903
- Inaugurated a new era in
Roman Catholic biblical studies. Presented a plan for biblical study;
Defined inspiration: "By supernatural power God so moved and impelled the
human authors to write - he so assisted them in writing - that the things he
ordered and those only they first rightly understood, then willed faithfully
to write and finally expressed in apt words and with infallible truth."
-
-
Pascendi
Dominica Gregis (1907), Pope Pius X, Bishop of Rome, 1903-1914
- Refuted the errors of the
Modernists; Scored erroneous teaching on the origin and nature of the Sacred
Books, on inspiration; on the distinction between the purely human Christ of
history and the divine Christ of faith; on the origin and growth of the
Scriptures.
-
-
Spiritus Paraclitus
(1920), Pope Benedict XV, Bishop of Rome, 1914-1922
- Commends modern critical
methods in biblical studies. All biblical interpretation rests upon the
literal sense. Goal of biblical studies is to learn spiritual perfection, to
arm oneself to defend the faith, to preach the word of God fruitfully.
-
-
Divino Afflante
Spiritus (1943), Pope Pius XII, Bishop of Rome, 1939-1958
- Permitted scholars to use
original text of Scriptures. No claim was made that the Vulgate is always an
accurate translation, but that it is free from any errors in faith or
morals. The scholar must be principally concerned with the literal sense of
the Scriptures; search out and expound the spiritual sense; avoid other
figurative senses. Literary criticism should be employed. Stated that there
are but few texts whose sense was determined by the authority of the Church
(only seven biblical passages have been definitively interpreted in
defending traditional doctrine and morals--Jn 3:5, Lk 22:19, 1 Cor 11:24, Jn
20:22, Jn 20:23, Rom 5:12, Ja 5: 14); this counteracts the frequent
misunderstanding that Catholics have no freedom interpreting the Scriptures.
-
-
Humani Generis
(1950), Pope Pius XII, Bishop of Rome, 1939 - 1958
- Instructs scholars on
evolution, polygenism and OT historical narratives
-
- Vatican II Council
(1962-1965)
- The decree,
On Divine Revelation, declares that there is one source of
Divine Revelation, Jesus Christ; that there are two modes of handing on
revelation: Sacred Scripture and Sacred Tradition : "in a certain way merge
into a unity and tend toward the same end," and "it is not from sacred
Scripture alone that the Church draws her certainty about everything that
has been revealed." Concerning Inerrancy of Scripture: "The Books of
Scripture must be acknowledged as teaching firmly, faithfully, and without
error that truth which God wanted put into the sacred writings for the sake
of our salvation. "Emphasized that "in order to see what God wanted to
communicate in Scripture, we must investigate the intention of the sacred
author, and one way to do this is by paying attention to the literary form
employed by the sacred writer."
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