@@John14-24 THEY LET THE SHERIFF OF NOTTINGHAM'S EDICT STAND?!? Along w/ "no more merciful beheadings" and "cancel kitchen scraps for widows and orphans?"
When a Catholic person picks up a Protestant Bible w/ full Apocrypha . . . "Okay, not where I expect to find this book, but there's that . . . and that one . . . and -- wait, WHAT BOOK IS THIS? And THIS one? Okay, THIS looks familiar but . . . There's a THIRD MACCABEES?!?"
I love the MacLaren series you compared the quality to! Your video on it convinced me to buy it, and it is a beautiful Bible, I love the blue letter and the design on the gilded pages. I get compliments on it at church
May wanna look at the books originally canonized in the bible from the synod of hippo and st augustine listing them in 4th century. Protestants took books OUT of the bible. Catholics didnt insert any new. Martin Luther added sola fide to romans where it never existed and you can check that from the earliest versions of romans. The synod of 393 is best known for two distinct acts. First, for the first time a council of bishops listed and approved a Christian Biblical canon that corresponds to the modern Catholic canon while falling short of the Eastern Orthodox canon
Considering the definition of “Apocrypha”, it should be in any translation of the Bible… Dictionary Definitions from Oxford Languages noun “biblical or related writings not forming part of the accepted canon of Scripture”.
Fun fact: The Geneva Bible that the Pilgrims brought to America included the Apocrypha.
And it was against the law to celebrate Christmas because they recognized it was evil
Since were stating fun facts 😊
Lol
@@John14-24 THEY LET THE SHERIFF OF NOTTINGHAM'S EDICT STAND?!?
Along w/ "no more merciful beheadings" and "cancel kitchen scraps for widows and orphans?"
Such a shame to miss out on it! If nothing else, my great dane wouldn't have been named Tobit without. Episcopalian BTW :)
When a Catholic person picks up a Protestant Bible w/ full Apocrypha . . .
"Okay, not where I expect to find this book, but there's that . . . and that one . . . and -- wait, WHAT BOOK IS THIS? And THIS one? Okay, THIS looks familiar but . . . There's a THIRD MACCABEES?!?"
and a 4th 😯
I love the MacLaren series you compared the quality to! Your video on it convinced me to buy it, and it is a beautiful Bible, I love the blue letter and the design on the gilded pages. I get compliments on it at church
The Oxford Annotated Bible has it. I have a copy of my father's from his seminary days...It is a college edition. Love it! ❤️
Best short yet . That was good
I have a bible with the Apocrypha in it.
That’s what I’m wondering?
Ok. I didn't know what that meant..😮
😂😂
May wanna look at the books originally canonized in the bible from the synod of hippo and st augustine listing them in 4th century. Protestants took books OUT of the bible. Catholics didnt insert any new. Martin Luther added sola fide to romans where it never existed and you can check that from the earliest versions of romans.
The synod of 393 is best known for two distinct acts. First, for the first time a council of bishops listed and approved a Christian Biblical canon that corresponds to the modern Catholic canon while falling short of the Eastern Orthodox canon
So where in Roman’s is this added
Considering the definition of “Apocrypha”, it should be in any translation of the Bible…
Dictionary
Definitions from Oxford Languages
noun
“biblical or related writings not forming part of the accepted canon of Scripture”.
I mean, to many it's Scripture.
Apocrypha literally teeters the line of fan art. Fan made works basically.
Deuterocanon
@@stevenburns2680 WHAT???!!
@@ddawe31635 Catholics don't call those books the apocrypha. We call it the deuterocanonical books. Which means 2nd canon.