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The Bible of the Church
Part 3
Old Testament Apocryphal Writings
"The Apocrypha"
The term
"apocrypha" comes from a Greek word meaning "hidden" or "secret" and
the books were originally considered by the early church as too
exalted to be available to the general public. As time progressed,
the exalted nature of the books was lost and the books were deemed
by some as false. Between the Book of Malachi and Matthew there is a
gap of approximately 450 years. It is these books that fill that gap
and, in the time of Christ, these books formed part of the
Septuagint Greek Bible that was in circulation at that time.
What is
missing from most Bibles, and our understanding of it, is what
happened in that 450-year gap. Prophets were still writing and
reflecting on life in the Holy Land right up until the Romans
destroyed the temple of Jerusalem in 70 AD. The world that Jesus
entered in 4 BC is not the world that Daniel and Malachi
experienced. One of the values of these books is how they reflect
the mindset of Judaism and a Roman world that the New Testament
writers faced. Malachi and Daniel leave us in Persia; Matthew brings
us into a Roman world. The Apocrypha bridges that gap and gently
nudges us into the reality of Roman Palestine. It was only in the
fourth century AD that Christians first started to question the
“canonicity” of the works, although most survived to be included in
the King James translation of the Bible in 1611.
Unknown
to almost all of the over two billion people who claim the Bible as
their spiritual foundation is that there are several books and two
sections missing from all but a few modern versions of that Bible.
Perhaps one of the best kept secrets of the modern Protestant church
is that the Bible used by that church is not the original King James
Bible. That translation, completed in 1611, and the Bibles published
for the use of the clergy and the church members until late in the
19th Century, contained 80 books. Although attempts to remove the 14
books, known as the Apocrypha, from the Bible began immediately
after the King James translation was completed, they remained in the
Bible until the end of the 19th Century. There is no doubt that the
14 books of the Apocrypha were controversial, but it cannot be
denied they were included in the original King James Bible.
The
concept of the Protestant Church about the Apocrypha is virtually
non-existent, with the general understanding that only the Catholic
Church uses it. One would be hard-pressed to find any members of the
clergy even aware that these books were ever included in the King
James Bible. There are 155,683 words and over 5,700 verses contained
in 168 chapters now missing from the King James translation of the
Bible due to the exclusion of the Apocrypha. Although this only
happened just over a hundred years ago, their existence as fully
accepted scripture is virtually unknown.
A clear
history exists of the inclusion of the Apocrypha in the King James
Bible:
· In
the year 1615 Archbishop Gorge Abbott, a High Commission Court
member and one of the original translators of the 1611 translation,
"forbade anyone to issue a Bible without the Apocrypha on pain of
one year's imprisonment".
· "It
should be observed that the Old Testament thus admitted as
authoritative in the Church was somewhat bulkier and more
comprehensive than the [Protestant Old Testament] . . . It always
included, though with varying degrees of recognition, the so-called
Apocrypha or Deutero-canonical books. The use made of the Apocrypha
by Tertullian, Hippolytus, Cyprian and Clement of Alexandria is too
frequent for detailed references to be necessary". (Early Christian
Doctrines, J. Kelly)
· "In
405 Pope Innocent I embodied a list of canonical books in a letter
addressed to Exsuperius, bishop of Toulouse; it too included the
Apocrypha. The Sixth Council of Carthage (419) Re-enacted the ruling
of the Third Council, again with the inclusion of the apocryphal
books… "The Sixth Council of Carthage repromulgated in Canon 24 the
resolution of the Third Council regarding the canon of scripture,
and added a note directing that the resolution be sent to the bishop
of Rome (Boniface I) and other bishops: ‘Let this be made known also
to our brother and fellow-priest Boniface, or to other bishops of
those parts, for the purpose of confirming that Canon [Canon 47 of
the Third Council], because we have received from our fathers that
these are the books which are to be read in church.’" (The Canon on
Scripture, F. F. Bruce)
· "The
holy ecumenical and general Council of Trent . . . following the
example of the orthodox Fathers, receives and venerates all the
books of the Old and New Testament . . . and also the traditions
pertaining to faith and conduct . . . with an equal sense of
devotion and reverence . . . If, however, any one receive not, as
sacred and canonical, the said books entire with all their parts, as
they have by custom been read in the Catholic Church, and as they
are contained in the old Latin Vulgate, and knowingly and
deliberately rejects the aforesaid traditions, let him be accursed."
(Decree of the Council of Trent in 1546)
· "In
the name of Holy Scripture we do understand those canonical books of
the Old and New Testament, of whose authority was never any doubt in
the Church. . . And the other books (as Jerome saith) the Church
doth read for example of life and instruction of manners: but yet
doth it not apply them to establish any doctrine." (Articles of
Religion of the Church of England, 1563, Sixth Article)
Most early
Bibles contained the Apocrypha; here are just a few:
· 1534
Luther's German translation of the Bible
· 1534
The Coverdale Bible
· 1537
Thomas Matthew Bible
· 1539
The Taverner Bible
· 1541
The "Great" or "Cromwell's" Bible
· 1551
The "Tyndale/ Matthews" Bible
· 1560
The Geneva Bible
· 1568
The Bishops' Bible
· 1610
Catholic Old Testament
· 1611
King James Bible
· 1615
King James Version Robert Barker at London, England
· 1625
A King James Version
· 1717
King George 1st, AKA, The "Vinegar Bible"
· 1782
The Aitken Bible
· 1791
The Family Bible
· 1846
The Illuminated Bible
The Apocrypha
are also contained in the following:
· The
Septuagint (LXX) - Except II Esdras.
· Codex
Alexandrinus (A) - Also contains III & IV Maccabees
· Codex
Vaticanus - Except I & II Maccabees and The defaulter of Manassah
· Codex
Sinaiticus (Aleph)
· Codex
Ephraemi Rescriptus - Includes Wisdom of Solomon and Ecclesiasticus
· Chester
Beatty Papyri - Fragments of Ecclesiasticus
· The
Dead Sea Scrolls - Some apocryphal writing was found among the Dead
Sea Scrolls - interestingly written in Greek.
· Several
writings of Church Fathers
Bibles are
still available with Apocrypha:
· The
Bible: Authorized King James Version with Apocrypha: Published by
Oxford University Press; ISBN: 0192835254 (Pub. Date: July 1998)
· KJV
Standard Reference Edition With Apocrypha: Published by Cambridge
Univ Pr (Bibles); ISBN: 0521509467; Slipcase edition (Pub. Date:
August 1997)
· 1611
Edition: a reprint of the 1611 KJV With Apocrypha, Published by
Nelson Bible; ISBN: 0840700415; Reissue edition (Pub. Date: June 1,
1982)
· King
James Version Lectern Edition: Published by Cambridge Univ Pr
(Bibles); ISBN: 0521508169; (Pub. Date: March 1998)
· The
Dake Annotated Reference Bible, Standard Edition: King James Version
With Apocrypha, Published by Dake Publishing ISBN: 1558290699 (Pub.
Date: April 1996)
For 275 years
there were efforts to purge the Apocrypha from the Bible:
· "APOCRYPHA,
that is, Books which are not to be esteemed like the Holy
Scriptures, and yet which are useful and good to read." (Luther
Bible, 1534)
· "The
books and treatises which among the Fathers of old are not reckoned
to be of like authority with the other books of the Bible, neither
are they found in the Canon of Hebrew." (Coverdale Bible 1535)
· "The
books that follow in order after the Prophets unto the New
Testament, are called Apocrypha, that is, books which were not
received by a common consent to be read and expounded publicly in
the Church, neither yet served to prove any point of Christian
religion save in so much as they had the consent of the other
scriptures called canonical to confirm the same, or rather whereon
they were grounded: but as books proceeding from godly men they were
received to be read for the advancement and furtherance of the
knowledge of history and for the instruction of godly manners: which
books declare that at all times God had an especial care of His
Church, and left them not utterly destitute of teachers and means to
confirm them in the hope of the promised Messiah, and also witness
that those calamities that God sent to his Church were according to
his providence, who had both so threatened by his prophets, and so
brought it to pass, for the destruction of their enemies and for the
trial of his children." (Geneva Bible, 1560, Preface)
· The
Synod of the Reformed Church held at Dordrecht in 1618 condemned the
Apocrypha.
· "The
books commonly called Apocrypha, not being of divine inspiration,
are no part of the Canon of Scripture; and therefore are of no
authority in the Church of God, nor to be any otherwise approved, or
made use of, than other human writings." (Westminster Confession,
1647)
· The
thirty nine Articles of the Church of England in 1562 recognized
this and rejected the canonicity of these apocryphal writings which
the Roman church had proclaimed.
· In
1880 the American Bible Society voted to remove the "Apocrypha"
Books from the King James Version. These 14 Books [There are 155,683
words in over 5,700 verses in 168 Chapters] of the Apocrypha had
been part of the King’s bible since 1611.
· The
"Apocrypha" was officially removed from the English printings of the
KJV by the Archbishop of Canterbury in 1885 leaving only 66 books.
An Apocryphal
Comparison of the King James and Douay Rheims Bibles:
The
common belief is that even though the Apocryphal books do not appear
in the modern King James Bible, they all do appear in the Catholic
Douay Rheims Bible. This is not correct as a simple comparison will
show.
· The
Apocrypha in the original King James Bible:
1st Esdras
2nd Esdras
Tobit
Judith
Add to Esther
The Wisdom of Solomon
Ecclesiasticus or the Wisdom of Jesus Son Sirach
Baruch
Letter of Jeremiah
Prayer of Azariah or Song of the Three Young Men
Susanna
Bel and the Dragon
Prayer of Manasseh
1st Macabees
2nd Macabees
· The
Apocrypha in the Douay Rheims Bible:
1st Esdras
2nd Esdras
Tobias
Judith
Wisdom of Solomon
Ecclisiasticus (The Wisdom of Jesus' Son Sirach)
Baruch
Abdias
Micheas (This is the book of Micah)
Aggeus (This is the book of Haggai)
1st Macabees
2nd Macabees
· These
Apocrypha books are missing from in the Douay Rheims Bible:
Addition to Esther
Letter of Jeremiah
Prayer of Azariah or Song of the Three Young Men
Susanna
Bel and the Dragon
Prayer of Manasseh
The Other
Missing Sections of the Original King James Bible
Two
introductory sections were also removed from the original King James
Translation. There was a Preface written for the original King James
Bible, which is mysteriously missing from that work, called
The Translators
Preface.
There was also a Dedication written for the original King James
Bible called
The Epistle Dedicatory.
The
Bible of the Church Part 4

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