HOW THE BIBLE CANON WAS SETTLED
1). INTRODUCTION
The theme of this post is to address the canonicity of the Bible, a topic that is too much neglected given the frequency of attacks on it from Muslims and others.
The question of canonicity addresses what documents belong in the Bible and why. The “canon” refers to the books that are contained within the Bible; those which are the word of God. Amongst the questions to be addressed are:
▪︎ How do we know which books belong in the Bible?
▪︎ How do we know that the 66 books we have are the correct ones?
▪︎ How do we know we’re not missing something?
▪︎ And who decided what would be included in the Bible and what would not?
Some have called the issue of canonicity the “Achilles heel” of Christianity. It’s often the point of attack from Muslims and other unbelievers. At some point, most Christians will be challenged here. Related, Roman Catholic proponents take issue with canonicity. They propose that holding to the canonicity of the 66 books of Scripture alone is “blind faith,” irrational, opposed to evidence, and arbitrary. But nothing could be further from the truth. In fact, an honest study of biblical canonicity will only build one’s necessary faith in the integrity of the God-breathed 66-books of the Bible. At the same time, it will prove that later books such as the Quran cannot be from God.
A popular myth needs correction from the outset. No men, church council, or spiritual leaders ever gathered to collectively determine what would and would not be included in the Bible. No council decided which books to keep and toss. No human being defined the list of biblical books. And that does not make the biblical canon less reliable, but more secure.
2). CANONICITY: A THEOLOGICAL ISSUE
The canon debate is primarily a theological issue, not a historical one. What should, and should not, be in the Bible is a matter of inspiration and revelation, not church councils and magisterium.
The question of the canon begins with understanding the nature of Scripture. We cannot understand what should be in the Bible until we understand what the Bible is. The canon of Scripture depends on the attributes of Scripture. A document must have certain attributes before it can be considered as canon. It’s the same way, for example, in professional baseball. Who gets to play major league baseball is determined by who possesses certain attributes and fulfils certain criteria necessary to the sport.
So it is with what is, and is not, in the Bible. That’s why our discussion of canon begins with a study of revelation and inspiration.
3). CANONCITY IS THE “CONSEQUENCE OF INSPIRATION”
Scripture is special revelation from God. It is otherwise undisclosed to, and unattainable by, man; that is, until God reveals. Humanity received God’s revelation through the act of verbal plenary inspiration, whereby God the Holy Spirit superintended the human authors to write exactly what He wished upon the original manuscripts. The result was the 66 books of God-breathed revelation. Since God is a God of truth, these 66 books are without error. They are truth. They are complete. This is what directs our understanding of what must be in the Bible; what constitutes the word of God.
Canonicity of the biblical text is the necessary consequence of the Holy Spirit’s work of verbal plenary inspiration. Whatever God inspired is consequently canonical. Because God gave revelation, it is thereby the word of God, or, canonical. Thus, the canonicity of a document depends entirely on the source and nature of the document, and not the outside opinion of man. Is the document the product of verbal plenary inspiration? If so, it is canonical.
The 66 books are God-breathed special revelation. So then, they are canonical by God’s doing, not man’s determination. The Bible is canonical whether or not anyone recognizes or acknowledges it. Inspiration establishes canonicity. The construction of the canon was the act of God, independent of man: God inspired the books of Scripture. In doing so, the canon was created.
4). A FLAWED APPROACH TO CANONICITY
So, how does imperfect man recognize what is and is not inspired and canonical?
The question has now changed from, “How was the canon formed, historically?” to “How can we, as Christians, know that these books are the right ones?”
One way to answer this question is to see how it should not be done. Enter the Vatican. The Roman Catholic religion takes a flawed approach to this question. Rome teaches that the canon exists because the church has infallibly decreed which books are Scripture. Thus, the magisterium determines the canon absolutely. The authority to do so lies, they teach, in who the pope is. For Rome, the pope is the successor of the apostle Peter, vicar of Christ, and head of the church. Thus, the authority to pronounce canonicity is vested uniquely by the pope and by the bishops who assume that they are in communion with the correct and true teachings of the faith. Add to that, when Rome speaks ex cathedra, she claims to speak infallibly. So, in her eyes, Rome does more than recognize canonicity; she determines it.
Though this is a flawed approach, Rome does get one thing right: the response of the church matters. We should care what the church has historically believed. However, by her numerous aberrant teachings, including denial of the true gospel and Christ as head of the church, Rome declares herself a false church (cf. Galatians 1:8-9). This has been the position of the true church, historically.
Rome undermines the authority of Scripture by teaching that canonicity is determined by the magisterium. In effect then, the authority of Scripture is beneath the authority of Rome. Though she teaches that God’s authority is vested in the magisterium, legitimizing her canonical determination, this must be rejected on the grounds that Rome has deviated from the true church. Thus, Rome’s say on the canon cannot be considered or recognised.
5). MAN RECOGNIZES THE CANON, BUT DOES NOT DETERMINE IT
God himself is the highest authority as to the nature of His word. Men and magisteria are not God. Therefore, they are not qualified nor instrumental in determining canonicity. Since God is the highest authority, He is the one who testifies to the authenticity of His word.
Since Scripture is the word of God, it is the highest authority, and thus alone qualified to declare its own canonicity. Scripture is self-authenticating in that sense.
If we assume to use anything outside of the canon (e.g. church council, magisterium, men) as determinative of what is and is not the canon, then we have wrongfully put that thing in authority over God. But God and His word are the highest authority. The thing of highest authority must adjudicate what is and is not the canon. This means that God determines what is God’s word and is not. The canon itself must be self-authenticating. Certain Bible passages give us clues to this fact:
“I assure you: Anyone who doesn’t enter the sheep pen by the door but climbs in some other way, is a thief and a robber. [2] The one who enters by the door is the shepherd of the sheep. [3] The doorkeeper opens it for him, and the sheep hear his voice. He calls his own sheep by name and leads them out. [4] When he has brought all his own outside, he goes ahead of them. The sheep follow him because they recognize his voice. [5] They will never follow a stranger; instead they will run away from him, because they don’t recognize the voice of strangers.” (John 10:1-5 HCSB)
The true sheep know the voice of the shepherd.
“Then the Jews surrounded Him and asked, “How long are You going to keep us in suspense? If You are the Messiah, tell us plainly.” [25] “I did tell you and you don’t believe,” Jesus answered them. “The works that I do in My Father’s name testify about Me. [26] But you don’t believe because you are not My sheep. [27] My sheep hear My voice, I know them, and they follow Me. [28] I give them eternal life, and they will never perish — ever! No one will snatch them out of My hand.” (John 10:24-28 HCSB)
The voice of the Shepherd is authoritative, powerful, and effective. His voice is recognized by those who know Him. The sheep do not need external authentication to discern the Shepherd’s voice. They only need His voice to discern His voice. We might think of it this way: what is the best way to recognize your spouse’s voice in a sea of people? To have someone you don’t know tell you, “This is your spouse’s voice”? To read a document that explains what your spouse’s voice sounds like? The best way to discern your spouse’s voice amongst other voices is to listen out for until you hear your spouse’s voice. Likewise, the best way to discern God’s word is to listen until you hear God’s word. By nature of being the Chief Shepherd’s sheep, He assures that they are able, and will, hear His voice. His voice is Scripture (cf. 2 Timothy 3:16-17, Hebrews 1:1-2). Again, Scripture is self-authenticating. Thus the canon declares itself canonical.
6). MISSING PIECES TO THE CANON?
Is it possible, however, that the canon is incomplete? What if we found another letter by an Apostle and we could verify that it was genuine? After all, 2 Kings 22 demonstrates that the Bible has been lost before, so, parts of it could be lost now, right? Should we expect to find new books which belong in the canon?
Presupposing God’s care for His Church, it’s reasonable to affirm that He would not likely inspire a book/letter, then forget or neglect to bring it into the possession of His Church. Anything that has been lost for 2000 years was not intended by God to be foundational for the edification of The Church. We would simply recognize that God did not intend for it to be a permanent foundation for the Church, so we could not add it to the canon. #FACT: Canonical books cannot be lost. In the case of 2 Kings 22, the book of the law wasn’t really “lost”, it was neglected.
The Bible was in the Temple, yet sinfully abandoned due to Israel’s apostasy. Certain letters during the first century have been lost, but we have no record of them ever being considered part of Scripture. In such cases, they were lost in God’s providence because they were not canonical. God is that good to outfit His church with His word. These truths more than prove there is no such thing as the ludicrous Muslim claim of a “lost gospel of Jesus”.
7). CANONICITY & THE DIVINE QUALITY OF SCRIPTURE
Though there is no higher authority for determining the canon than the canon itself, we can observe criteria inherent to biblical canonicity.
The divine qualities present in Scripture testify to its canonicity. John Calvin wrote:
“It is easy to see that the sacred Scriptures, which so far surpass all gifts and graces of human endeavor, breathe something divine” (Institutes, 1.8.1. p. 82).
Again, “Scripture exhibits fully as clear evidence of its own truth as white and black things do of their color, or sweet and bitter things do of their taste” (Institutes, 1.8.1. p. 76).
8). WHICH DIVINE QUALITIES OF SCRIPTURE TESTIFY TO ITS CANONICITY?
First, Scripture has an unmatched excellency to it.
“The law of the Lord is perfect” (Psalms 19:7).
“How sweet are your words to my taste! Yes, sweeter than honey to my mouth” (Psalms 119:103).
“Your testimonies are wonderful; therefore my soul observes them” (Psalms 119:129).
Second, Scripture possesses unique power.
“The word of God is living and active; sharper than any two-edged sword…able to judge the thoughts and intentions of the heart” (Hebrews 4:12).
Scripture has the power to expose sin and guilt (2 Kings 22:11-13, Acts 2:34-37, Hebrews 4:12-13), give joy to the heart (Nehemiah 8:8-12, Psalms 119:111), bring wisdom (Psalms 119:98, 2 Timothy 3:16), give understanding (Psalms 119:144), comfort (Psalms 119:50), convert the unconverted (Psalms19:7, James 1:18, 1 Peter 1:23), and sanctify the converted (John 17:17, 1 Peter 2:2).
Third, Scripture possesses extraordinary unity. God cannot lie (Psalms 89:35, Titus 1:2) or change (Hebrews 13:8), so His word must confirm itself (consistent and never contradicting). Despite 66 separate books, inspired through 40 different authors from varying demographics, over a time span of at least 1500 years, the Bible tells one cohesive story of God’s redemptive plan. These divine qualities speak to the divine origin of Scripture, and its canonicity.
9). CANONICITY & THE APOSTOLIC ROLE
Canonicity is also observed in the role that the apostles played as human instruments in inspiration. Apostles were commissioned by the authority of Christ and entrusted with both composing and delivering the gospel to the world. The Holy Spirit guided them into truth, empowering them to testify inerrantly in Scripture (John 14:26, 15:26-27, 16:13).
10). CANOCITY & THE CHURCH’S EMBRACING OF THE CANON
Since the Shepherd’s voice is unmistakably discernable by His sheep, it follows that there will be a visible embracing of the canon in church history. This is exactly what is observed. That the true church—regenerate people through faith in the biblical Christ—recognize and affirm the canon testifies to the self-authenticating nature of Scripture. The church is not authoritatively determining which books belong in the canon. Jesus said that the church consists of sheep who hear, not Shepherds who determine. The church is more like a thermometer than a thermostat. They both tell you something about the temperature of the room. But one determines the temperature while the other responds to it. In the same way, the church does not determine the canon, it responds to it. As the canon developed, the church heard her Shepherd’s voice, and has unanimously recognized the canon. It also provided a chain of custody for it.
But what about all those disagreements over what should and should not be in the Bible? Why would God allow specious books to confuse the church? First, there are relatively few disagreements historically. Even more, the disagreements are a commentary on sinful man and the deception of Satan. But also, in the providence of.God, the counterfeit books were a blessing to the early church. They forced the church to hear the Shepherd’s voice. God’s people had to clarify what God has already done, namely, canonize his verbal plenary inspired word.
11). REGENERATION ESSENTIAL TO RECOGNITION
Only Holy-Spirit-indwelt people are able to recognize the canon. In regeneration, sinners are awakened to discern the things of the Spirit (cf. 1 Corinthians 2:14-16); what would otherwise be “foolishness” to unregenerate man. Thus, the internal testimony of the Holy Spirit is the means by which we perceive canonicity. This becomes the test of canonicity: the Holy Spirit’s testimony to the canonical nature of His own word. The Spirit overcomes the effects of sin and produces belief within us consequent of regeneration/the new birth. The Holy Spirit opens eyes to perceive objective qualities that are present in the text. Consequently, the true Church recognizes the canon.
12). GOD’S SOVEREIGNTY & THE CANON
God is the living God; active and sovereignly involved in life. He wishes for His people to discern what He has made canonical. God intends for His word to be known by His people (Romans 15:4, 2 Timothy 3:16-17). More than intention, God is sovereign in accomplishing His purposes (Psalms 135:6, Daniel 4:35, Acts 17:25-28, Ephesians 1:11, Hebrews 1:3). He will not fail to accomplish what He wishes (Psalms 115:3). Therefore, He will certainly both produce the canon and ensure that His people correctly recognize it. God is our Shepherd and we do not lack. How did, and does, God do that? God providentially guided the true Church to recognize what He had inspired. The recognition of the canon was the act of God, through regenerate man: God illumined regenerate individuals by the Holy Spirit to recognize what He had inspired. In doing so, the canon was recognized.
13). A BRIEF HISTORY OF CANON RECOGNITION
▪︎ Old Testament
Jesus affirmed the first-century Jewish canon, which is identical to our Old Testament canon. The New Testament contains no hint that the Jews had an incorrect canon. The subject of canon is never under dispute as far as the Old Testament is concerned. Jesus, Paul, Peter, Apollos, and Stephen, for example, appeal to the Old Testament as canonical. Further, Jesus endorses the three-fold structure of the Old Testament that the Jews observed (the Law of Moses and the Prophets and the Psalms; Luke 24:44).
▪︎ New Testament
By the close of the first century, God had completed the canon. The church immediately recognized the canonical character of New Testament letters (2 Peter 3:16). As time passed, the greater church heard her Shepherd’s voice. Between 70-170 AD, the authority of the apostles was considered equal to the Old Testament. The gospels and Paul’s letters were accepted as part of the canon. It seems that every New Testament book except for 2 Peter was recognized. Due to geographical separation, difficulty communicating in the ancient world, persecution, and Satanic opposition, we would expect recognition of the 27 books to take time. Over the next few centuries, there was little debate over the New Testament canon. All 27 books were recognized as the word of God.
During the fourth century, Athanasius completed the task started by Eusebius with recognizing the canon. Codex Sinaiticus existed, which contained all 27 books of the NT, indicating widespread recognition of the canon. That we know of, the Council of Laodicea (363 AD) became the earliest council to recognize the canon.
□ Summary
The divine qualities of Scripture, the apostolic involvement in inspiration, and the church’s embracing of the canon speak volumes as to the canonical nature of the Bible. Each of the attributes implies the other two attributes. If a book bears divine qualities, it follows that it contains apostolic teaching, which implies that the church should properly recognize it by the power of the Spirit. And, if the church receives it, then that implies that the book contains divine qualities and that it contains apostolic teaching. In other words, the 66 books of Scripture declare objectively their own canonicity.
So, what council determined what would be in the bible? Because of God’s act of inspiration, the only council which determined what would be in the canon and what would not, was the counsel of God. God inspired the canon by His Holy Spirit. In God’s providence, regenerate man recognizes the canon by the illumination of the Holy Spirit.
14). WAS THE CANON CLOSED?
We can discern the answer to this question by observing characteristics about the Old and New Testaments. The OT concludes, leaves us wondering what is next. The NT concludes, leaves us at praising God. Where is the Seed (Genesis 3:15) who will crush the serpent? Who’s the one to reign forever on the throne of David? Is mankind doomed to repeat an endless cycle of animal sacrifices for all eternity? It leaves mankind looking forward to more, to expect the arrival of the Messiah at some point.
But the NT leaves us only looking forward to the triumphant return of Christ. The New Testament is God’s final word. Jesus is the final messenger and complete revelation of God. Only the Apostles were commissioned to authoritatively testify about Christ.
“Long ago God spoke to the fathers by the prophets at different times and in different ways. [2] In these last days, He has spoken to us by His Son. God has appointed Him heir of all things and made the universe through Him.” (Hebrews 1:1-2 HCSB)
God’s redemptive story is complete. Revelation is the perfect ending. In it, God ties up the “loose ends” from Genesis on.
The early church believed the canon was closed. The Muratorian fragment rejected the popular work “Shepherd of Hermas” because it was written “very recently, in our own times.” So as early as the second century, the church did not consider the canon to be open. The early church recognized the close of the canon with the death of the Apostles.
When was it closed? God closed the canon with the conclusion of inspiration. The cessation of inspiration closes the canon.
15). BONUS QUESTION: WHAT ABOUT THE APOCRYPHA?
The Apocrypha is a collection of books and writings that were written during the intertestamental period. Rome considers them canonical. However, as Wayne Grudem wrote, “It was not until 1546, at the Council of Trent, that the Roman Catholic Church officially declared the Apocrypha to be part of the canon (with the exception of 1 and 2 Esdras and the Prayer of Manasseh)” (Systematic Theology, 59).
Even so, the church does not consider them to be Scripture. Why? The first-century Jews did not consider them inspired. The New Testament never affirms or cites the Apocrypha as Scripture. The dominant position of the early church was that these writings were not authoritative. The testimony of the Holy Spirit from within the regenerate/church, has universally concluded that the Apocrypha is not inspired/God-breathed.
16). CONCLUSIONS
Because we know how the Canon of Scripture was chosen, (by inspiration of God) and how it concluded (when Apostolic inspiration ended), we have complete assurance that nothing that was intended to be included is missing and that nothing that is included is not rightfully there.
The last chapter of the last book of Scripture contains a sombre warning:
“I testify to everyone who hears the prophetic words of this book: If anyone adds to them, God will add to him the plagues that are written in this book. [19] And if anyone takes away from the words of this prophetic book, God will take away his share of the tree of life and the holy city, written in this book.” (Revelation 22:18-19 HCSB)
By all this we know, there is no further revelation from God that supercedes or follows the completed canon. The New Testament is God’s final word to humanity, and Jesus Christ His final revelation. There is no more. And we should not expect anything else. For God in closing the Canon left nothing unfinished, left no loose ends and gave no hint that He had left anything unsaid, or that there would be anything to follow it. The only matters left to follow are the fulfilment of remaining End Times prophecies including the Second Coming of our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ in power and glory. Amen.
Anything that claims to follow it, claims to alter, correct or supercede it is heresy. By this fact alone, we know that only Satan could have inspired the Quran or the Book of Mormon.