Friday 10 December 2021

St. Chrysostom on the Testimony of Scripture

It would be anachronistic and just plain wrong to call any Church Father an advocate of sola scriptura. However, there are certainly analogues in their writings which correspond with the idea of that doctrine. St. Chrysostom writes the following in his 17th sermon on the Gospel of John:

Must not this deserve excessive wrath, when Christ is shown to be less honorable in your estimation than a dancer? Since you have contrived ten thousand defenses for the things they have done, though more disgraceful than any, but of the miracles of Christ, though they have drawn to Him the world, you cannot bear even to think or care at all. We believe in the Father, and the Son, and the Holy Ghost, in the Resurrection of bodies, and in Life everlasting. 

If now any heathen sayWhat is this Father, what this Son, what this Holy Ghost? How do you who say that there are three Gods, charge us with having many Gods? What will you say? What will you answer? How will you repel the attack of these arguments? But what if when you are silent, the unbeliever should again propose this other question, and ask, What in a word is resurrection? Shall we rise again in this body? Or in another, different from this? If in this, what need that it be dissolved? What will you answer? And what, if he say, Why did Christ come now and not in old time? Has it seemed good to Him now to care for men, and did He despise us during all the years that are past? Or if he ask other questions besides, more than these? For I must not propose many questions, and be silent as to the answers to them, lest, in so doing, I harm the simpler among you. 

What has been already said is sufficient to shake off your slumbers. Well then, if they ask these questions, and you absolutely cannot even listen to the words, shall we, tell me, suffer trifling punishment only, when we have been the cause of such error to those who sit in darkness? I wished, if you had sufficient leisure, to bring before you all the book of a certain impure heathen philosopher written against us, and that of another of earlier date, that so at least I might have roused you, and led you away from your exceeding slothfulness. For if they were wakeful that they might say these things against us, what pardon can we deserve, if we do not even know how to repel the attacks made upon us? For what purpose have we been brought forward? Do you not hear the Apostle say, Be ready to give an answer to every man that asks you a reason of the hope that is in you1 Peter 3:15 And Paul exhorts in like manner, saying, Let the word of Christ dwell in you richly. Colossians 3:16 What do they who are more slothful than drones reply to this? Blessed is every simple soul, and, he that walks simply walks surely. Proverbs 10:8 For this is the cause of all sorts of evil, that the many do not know how to apply rightly even the testimony of the Scriptures

          https://www.newadvent.org/fathers/240117.htm

In this section Chrysostom is rebuking his congregation. He asks them how they would respond to the challenging questions of the heathen? He concludes that not knowing how to apply rightly the testimony of the Scriptures is a cause of all sorts of evil.

See how Chrysostom appeals to the testimony of the Scriptures as the way to rightly answer the heathen? He encouraged his congregation to be familiar with this testimony which would seem to contradict all we are told about the world in his time. We are told that many people were illiterate, books were expensive, and only the rich could have books which were oftentimes lengthy scrolls or thick codices unlike the kinds of books we have today. 

Is this sola scriptura? No. But it's not much different. The core idea is similar and that idea is, as Irenaeus writes, the Scriptures are the ground and pillar of our faith. And yet the Orthodox Church's Confession of Dositheus forbids the common man to read them. That is a very different doctrine than the one held by Chrysostom.

Sunday 21 November 2021

The Cause of All Evils According to John Chrysostom

In the Confession of Dositheus The Orthodox Church absolutely forbids the laity to read the Scriptures in the vernacular. Does this reflect the "phronema" of the Church? Not at all. For Chrysostom the cause of all evils is not knowing the Scriptures. And how is one to know them? By listening to sermons?  No. By reading the Scriptures.

Tarry not, I entreat, for another to teach you; you have the oracles of God. No man teaches you as they; for he indeed oft grudges much for vainglory's sake and envy. Hearken, I entreat you, all you that are careful for this life, and procure books that will be medicines for the soul. If you will not any other, yet get you at least the New Testament, the Apostolic Epistles, the Acts, the Gospels, for your constant teachers. If grief befall you, dive into them as into a chest of medicines; take thence comfort of your trouble, be it loss, or death, or bereavement of relations; or rather dive not into them merely, but take them wholly to you; keep them in your mind.

This is the cause of all evils, the not knowing the Scriptures. We go into battle without arms, and how ought we to come off safe? Well contented should we be if we can be safe with them, let alone without them. 

Homilies on Colossians, 9, Chrysostom

Here Chrysostom calls the Scriptures the oracles of God and says, "No man teaches you as they." Then he instructs his listeners to procure and read them. "Dive into them as into a chest of medicines; take thence comfort of your trouble" he says. He does not direct his listeners to the liturgy or to a confessor or to a priest but to the scriptures. 

One wonders what Chrysostom would have to say to those who recite his liturgy and, instead of directing their hearers to the scriptures, read a single portion and parade the Gospels encased in a large golden book.

https://holytrinity.ia.goarch.org/our-faith/liturgy

https://aleteia.org/2020/01/26/why-the-gospel-at-mass-was-kissed-by-everyone/#

Let us follow Chrysostom's advice and rather than parade around and kiss the Gospels, let us read them along with the rest of the scriptures.

Sunday 9 May 2021

St. Chrysostom Teaches that Faith Alone is not Enough to Save a Man

Does St John Chrysostom really teach that faith in Christ alone is not enough to save a man? Yes he does. In his tenth sermon on the Gospel of John he writes the following:

For there is no small fear, lest, having sometime defiled that beautiful robe by our after sloth and transgressions, we be cast out from the inner room and bridal chamber, like the five foolish virgins, or him who had not on a wedding garment. Matthew 25; Matthew 22 He too was one of the guests, for he had been invited; but because, after the invitation and so great an honor, he behaved with insolence towards Him who had invited him, hear what punishment he suffers, how pitiable, fit subject for many tears. For when he comes to partake of that splendid table, not only is he forbidden the least, but bound hand and foot alike, is carried into outer darkness, to undergo eternal and endless wailing and gnashing of teeth. 

Therefore, beloved, let not us either expect that faith is sufficient to us for salvation; for if we do not show forth a pure life, but come clothed with garments unworthy of this blessed calling, nothing hinders us from suffering the same as that wretched one. It is strange that He, who is God and King, is not ashamed of men who are vile, beggars, and of no repute, but brings even them of the cross ways to that table; while we manifest so much insensibility, as not even to be made better by so great an honor, but even after the call remain in our old wickedness, insolently abusing the unspeakable lovingkindness of Him who has called us. For it was not for this that He called us to the spiritual and awful communion of His mysteries, that we should enter with our former wickedness; but that, putting off our filthiness, we should change our raiment to such as becomes those who are entertained in palaces. But if we will not act worthily of that calling this no longer rests with Him who has honored us, but with ourselves; it is not He that casts us out from that admirable company of guests, but we cast out ourselves.

https://www.newadvent.org/fathers/240110.htm

Elsewhere in this sermon he writes the following about Paul's conversion:

Consider; “He came to His own,” not for His personal need, (for, as I said, the Divinity is without wants,) but to do good unto His own people. Yet not even so did His own receive Him, when He came to His own for their advantage, but repelled Him, and not this only, but they even cast Him out of the vineyard, and slew Him. Yet not for this even did He shut them out from repentance, but granted them, if they had been willing, after such wickedness as this, to wash off all their transgressions by faith in Him, and to be made equal to those who had done no such thing, but are His special friends. And that I say not this at random, or for persuasion's sake, all the history of the blessed Paul loudly declares. For when he, who after the Cross persecuted Christ, and had stoned His martyr Stephen by those many hands, repented, and condemned his former sins, and ran to Him whom he had persecuted, He immediately enrolled him among His friends, and the chiefest of them, having appointed him a herald and teacher of all the world, who had been “a blasphemer, and persecutor, and injurious.” 

What Chrysostom is saying is that even those who rejected Christ were not shut out from him so long as they repented and turned to Christ. As an example he uses Paul who he says repented of his sin of persecuting the Church and then Christ "enrolled him among His friends." But this is not what Acts says happens. In Acts Paul is going on his way to persecute the Church when he is struck down by a powerful vision of Jesus Christ. It is only then when confronted by Christ that he sees the error of his ways and repents. He did not run to Christ but Christ turned to him. Chrysostom has this incident totally backwards.

From these two passages it would seem that salvation is based on our effort as well as God's grace. But a littler late in Homily 14 he writes the following:

After having said, “Of His fullness have all we received,” he adds, “and grace for grace.” For by grace the Jews were saved: “I chose you,” says God, “not because you were many in number, but because of your fathers.” (Deut 7:7, LXX.) If now they were chosen by God not for their own good deeds, it is manifest that by grace they obtained this honor. And we too all are saved by grace, but not in like manner; not for the same objects, but for objects much greater and higher. The grace then that is with us is not like theirs. For not only was pardon of sins given to us, (since this we have in common with them, for all have sinned,) but righteousness also, and sanctification, and sonship, and the gift of the Spirit far more glorious and more abundant. By this grace we have become the beloved of God, no longer as servants, but as sons and friends. Wherefore he says, grace for grace.” Since even the things of the law were of grace, and the very fact of man being created from nothing, (for we did not receive this as a recompense for past good deeds, how could we, when we even were not? But from God who is ever the first to bestow His benefits,) and not only that we were created from nothing, but that when created, we straightway learned what we must and what we must not do, and that we received this law in our very nature, and that our Creator entrusted to us the impartial rule of conscience, these I say, are proofs of the greatest grace and unspeakable lovingkindness. And the recovery of this law after it had become corrupt, by means of the written (Law), this too was the work of grace. For what might have been expected to follow was, that they who falsified the law once given should suffer correction and punishments; but what actually took place was not this, but, on the contrary, an amending of our nature, and pardon, not of debt, but given through mercy and grace. For to show that it was of grace and mercy, hear what David says; “The Lord executes righteousness and judgment for all that are oppressed; He made known His ways unto Moses, His acts unto the children of Israel Psalm 103:6-7: and again; “Good and upright is the Lord, therefore will He give lawsto them that are in the way.” Psalm 25:8

https://www.newadvent.org/fathers/240114.htm

Now he says not that our good deeds or pure life saves us but that we were chosen by grace. "By this grace we have become the beloved of God, no longer as servants, but as sons and friends."

What does he mean? Is this a contradiction?  It seems not necessarily so.

In the first instance he is talking about maintaining our salvation. If we do not have a pure life then we defile the garments unworthy of our calling. We defile the robe of righteousness granted unto us by grace. In the second instance Chrysostom is talking about the beginning of our salvation. It is by grace that God grants us to become his sons and friends. 

But if the beginning is all of grace then why is the rest of it not so? Why does any of our salvation depend on our purity of life? Who can even with a straight face say he has lived a pure life when all men are unclean before the Holy God? Even Isaiah, an eminently holy man, cried out, "Woe is me! for I am undone; because I am a man of unclean lips, and I dwell in the midst of a people of unclean lips: for mine eyes have seen the King, the Lord of hosts."

So there does seem to be a contradiction in Chrsyostom's thinking regarding salvation.

Monday 19 April 2021

The God Culture: A Closer Look at Jubilees as Cited by The Church Fathers

This is a cross-post from my other blog. It is relevant here as the subject matter is the canonical status of the Book of Jubilees and in particular how it was employed by the Church Fathers.

The Book of Jubilees is very critical to Timothy Jay Schwab of The God Culture's project of proving that the Philippines is the Garden of Eden and the land of creation. One of Tim's arguments for including the Book of Jubilees as canonical scripture is that many of the Church Fathers cited the book as scripture. In his annotated Book of Jubilees Tim provides a list of Fathers who cited from Jubilees.


The Book of Jubilees, Timothy Jay Schwab, pgs 40-41

That list is quite nonsensical because there is no indication of what works exactly is being referring to. Tim has taken this list mostly from R.H. Charles but provides no link or reference where it can be found. It can be found in the introduction to his translation of The Book of Jubilees but with a whole lot more information than Tim has provided. Several of those authors are cited at length in the Codex Pseudepigraphus Veteris Testamenti on pages 849-864. The text is in Latin. 

In this article I propose to look at three of those sources to ascertain just how they employed the text of Jubilees. Did they cite it? Yes. But did they cite it as canonical scripture? That's what we are going to find out. I will only be looking at three of these citations because of space and lack of availability of the original sources. The three are: Jerome, Epiphanius, and the Decretum Gelasii. I believe these three sources will show a normative trend within the Church as regards the canonical status of Jubilees.

First the Decretum Gelasii. In his Torah Test Tim crows that a Pope quoted Jubilees.

Certainly the church quoted Jubilees, even a Pope.

Jubilees, Timothy Jay Schwab, p. 41

Here is what Charles writes about what this Pope said about Jubilees.

Decretum Gelasii. — In this decree (de libris recipiendis et non recipiendis), the date of which is doubtful (see Zahn, Gesch. des Kanons, ii. i. 259-267), our book is included among the writings to be rejected: Liber de filiabus Adae, hoc est Leptogenesis apocryphus.

Once again Tim does not know what he is taking about. Pope Gelasius does not quote Jubilees. The Decree of Pope Gelasius places the Book of Jubilees on the list of rejected books. Why? We are not told but the book is included in a long list with various spurious Acts, Gospels, and Revelations. There were many false gospels and other texts floating around long ago and the church needed to determine what was and was not scripture. There were many deciding factors but the canon was generally agreed upon by all before this point as seen in its liturgy and the bulk of orthodox literature. The councils which promulgated such lists only confirmed what was already widely practiced. In fact the list of canonical books in the Decretum Gelsaii actually originates with the Council of Rome in 382. The list of prohibited books is newly appended. The list of accepted and prohibited books as well as the entire decree can be read at this link. It also includes a list of approved Orthodox teachers whose writings are profitable to read. Oddly enough this list bans Eusebius's Church History. 

Tim repeats ad nauseam that the Church has no right to ban books which were accepted as scripture.  What does he do with this list? Are we to accept every book that comes along proclaiming to be a Gospel or a Revelation? Of course not. The first canon of the New Testament was promulgated by the heretic Marcion. The Church was forced to meet his challenge. Subsequent councils and theologians decreed what was and was not scripture and to be read in the Church in order to safeguard the Church from false teachers. This raises the question of how we can know what is and is not scripture. The answer is pretty simple, the witness and testimony of the Church which is Christ's body on earth and the pillar and ground of the truth.  As Augustine said:

But should you meet with a person not yet believing the gospel, how would you reply to him were he to say, I do not believe? For my part, I should not believe the gospel except as moved by the authority of the Catholic Church

https://www.newadvent.org/fathers/1405.htm

Tim shows his hate for the Church by proclaiming that it was taken over by Satan in the early first century. He blasphemes the Church with such pernicious doctrine. Once again St. Augustine takes him to task.

Let us love our Lord God, let us love His Church: Him as a Father, Her as a Mother: Him as a Lord, Her as His Handmaid, as we are ourselves the Handmaid's sons. But this marriage is held together by a bond of great love: no man offends the one, and wins favour of the other. 

What does it serve you, if you acknowledge the Lord, honour God, preach His name, acknowledge His Son, confess that He sits by His right hand; while you blaspheme His Church? 

Hold then, most beloved, hold all with one mind to God the Father, and the Church our Mother.

https://www.newadvent.org/fathers/1801089.htm

What is Timothy Jay Schwab's epistemic ground for accepting the Bible as scripture when he rejects the Church's authority to prescribe what is and proscribe what is not scripture? He has no ground except himself and his subjective "testing" which is very shaky ground to stand on. I know he will retort by appealing to the community at Qumran but they did not compile the New Testament. There were no letters of Paul or Gospels found in the caves at Qumran. Frankly he has no ground to stand on for his acceptance of the New Testament except his own opinion. Tim is fond of the Cepher Bible saying that "all in his group has one" and that he "loves it in his personal studies."  But that Bible version adds not only to the Old Testament but also the New with the insertion of Acts 29. That he would accept such a Bible as genuine shows that he does not base his canon of the New Testament on the witness of the Church.


The residents of Qumran were also not representative of some remnant of the "True Israel©" which preserved the scriptures as opposed to the Pharisees and Saducees. Jesus called out their hypocrisy but still said the Pharisees sit in the seat of Moses and commanded the people to do as they say (Matthew 23:2-3). He never called them pretenders. We never find Jesus Christ arguing the doctrine Tim preaches concerning Qumran vs Jerusalem. Again, these decrees prescribing scripture and proscribing spurious books were not introducing anything new. They were confirmation of the regular practice of the Church.

The final biblical canon for both religious communities was determined not by a council so much as by widespread use of sacred literature in the communities of faith. Councils typically confirm widespread practice, and that was the case when decisions about canon were made by councils in the fourth and fifth centuries and later: they simply endorsed choices made earlier by majorities or by consensus and convenience rather than by conscious council decisions. Bruce correctly states: “It is probable that, when the canon was ‘closed’ in due course by competent authority, this simply meant that official recognition was given to the situation already obtaining in the practice of the worshipping community.”

The Biblical Canon, Lee Martin McDonald, pg. 160

The implication is that Jubilees was excluded from the canon because it was never considered to be part of the canon by the Church in her practice or doctrine and not because the Church was taken over by Satan and he used the Bishops to cover up the truth. Such thinking is anti-Christian and contradicts Jesus' saying that he would build his Church and the gates of hell would not triumph over it.

This decree was promulgated around 492 and the reason I cite it first is because any citation of Jubilees  after this date will not be cited as scripture. Any citation after this date which does so in a manner affirming the canonicity of Jubilees is out of line with the teaching of the Church. So we can dispense with those citations. That really only leaves two important citations before this decree and those are Jerome and Epiphanus.

Here is what R.H. Charles writes about Jerome:

Jerome {ob. 420). — See quotations in notes on x. 21, xi. 11-13. For other quotations see Index II.

The references Charles gives lead to Jerome's epistle 78. Here is what Jerome says about Jubilees.

This word, memory suggests, I know I never found elsewhere in holy scripture among the Hebrews, except in an apocrypha book, Genesis, which is called lepte, that is small, by the Greeks; there is it put in the building of the tower for stadium, in which boxers and athletes exercize and the speed of runners is tested.

https://epistolae.ctl.columbia.edu/letter/365.html

Here Jerome calls Jubilees apocryphal. He also counts Jubilees among the Holy Scripture of the Hebrews which would seem to contradict its being apocryphal. In section 26 of this same letter he draws a lesson from the Book of Jubilees where Abraham drove away the ravens from the corn.
I find in the above mentioned apocryphal volume Geneseos when the ravens who had been laying waste men’s grain are driven away, the name father Abraham written with this same word and these letters, as the one who drives away or repells them. So we may imitate Thare and be careful to keep away the birds of heaven which hasten to devour a lot of wheat beside the road. 
That he could draw a lesson from a book he considers apocryphal is not strange as he writes elsewhere in letter 107.12 that some gold could be found in the midst of the dirt of apocryphal writings.
Let her avoid all apocryphal writings, and if she is led to read such not by the truth of the doctrines which they contain but out of respect for the miracles contained in them; let her understand that they are not really written by those to whom they are ascribed, that many faulty elements have been introduced into them, and that it requires infinite discretion to look for gold in the midst of dirt.
Anyone familiar with Church history would know that Jerome is the man who gave the world the Vulgate. He lived in Jerusalem and was familiar with Hebrew, Greek, and Latin. He was also familiar with all the various literature circulating in his day. It is therefore no surprise he was aware of Jubilees. But he excludes it from his list of canonical scripture despite referring to it as "holy scripture among the Hebrews." As a man who lived and breathed the scriptures it would be foolish to think he was unaware of what books belonged in the Hebrew canon as well as the traditions surrounding Jubilees and other pseudepigrapha such as Enoch. Here is his list of the Hebrew canon:

The first of these books is called Bresith, to which we give the name Genesis. The second, Elle Smoth, which bears the name Exodus; the third, Vaiecra, that is Leviticus; the fourth, Vaiedabber, which we call Numbers; the fifth, Elle Addabarim, which is entitled Deuteronomy. These are the five books of Moses, which they properly call Thorath, that is law. 

The second class is composed of the Prophets, and they begin with Jesus the son of Nave, who among them is called Joshua the son of Nun. Next in the series is Sophtim, that is the book of Judges; and in the same book they include Ruth, because the events narrated occurred in the days of the Judges. Then comes Samuel, which we call First and Second Kings. The fourth is Malachim, that is, Kings, which is contained in the third and fourth volumes of Kings. And it is far better to say Malachim, that is Kings, than Malachoth, that is Kingdoms. For the author does not describe the Kingdoms of many nations, but that of one people, the people of Israel, which is comprised in the twelve tribes. The fifth is Isaiah, the sixth, Jeremiah, the seventh, Ezekiel, the eighth is the book of the Twelve Prophets, which is called among the Jews Thare Asra. 

To the third class belong the Hagiographa, of which the first book begins with Job, the second with David, whose writings they divide into five parts and comprise in one volume of Psalms; the third is Solomon, in three books, Proverbs, which they call Parables, that is Masaloth, Ecclesiastes, that is Coeleth, the Song of Songs, which they denote by the title Sir Assirim; the sixth is Daniel; the seventh, Dabre Aiamim, that is, Words of Days, which we may more expressively call a chronicle of the whole of the sacred history, the book that amongst us is called First and Second Chronicles; the eighth, Ezra, which itself is likewise divided amongst Greeks and Latins into two books; the ninth is Esther. 

https://www.fourthcentury.com/jerome-samuel-392/

The list looks like this:

Genesis, Exodus, Leviticus, Numbers, Deuteronomy, Joshua, Judges/Ruth, 1-2 Kings. 3-4 Kings, Isaiah,  Jeremiah, Ezekiel, the Twelve minor prophets, Job, Psalms, Proverbs, Ecclesiastes, Song of Solomon,  Daniel,1 -2 Chronicles, 1-2 Esdras, Esther.

That is 22 books and it does not include Jubilees. It also predates the Drectum Gelasii to the year 392. It is in alignment with the Council of Rome from 382 except it excludes Tobit, Judith, and Maccabees and the numbering is not the same due to some books, such as the Twelve minor prophets, being counted as one. Why he does not include Jubilees in this canon despite referring to it as "holy scripture among the Hebrews" is uncertain.


That brings us to our third source, Epiphanius. Here is what R.H.Charles writes concerning his witness to Jubilees:

Epiphanius {ob. 404 a.d.), Haer. xxxix. 6, See Jub. iv. 9, 11 and the continuation of the quotation in my note on iv. 10. For passages where Epiphanius has used our text without acknowledgment see Index II.

There are actually quite a few places in his Panarion where Epiphanius cites Jubilees. I will only look at one. It is as follows:

6,1 But as we find in Jubilees which is also called “The Little Genesis,” the book even contains the names of both Cain’s and Seth’s wives, so that the persons who recite myths to the world may be put to shame in every way. (2) For after Adam had sired sons and daughters it became necessary at that time that the boys marry their own sisters. Such a thing was not unlawful, as there was no other human stock. (3) Indeed, in a manner of speaking Adam himself practically married his own daughter who was fashioned from his body and bones and had been formed by God in conjunction with him, and it was not unlawful. (4) And his sons were married, Cain to the older sister, whose name was Saue; and a third son, Seth, who was born after Abel, to his sister named Azura. 

6,5 And Adam had other sons too as the Little Genesis says, nine after these three, so that he had two daughters but twelve sons, one of whom was killed but eleven survived. (6) You have the reflection of them too in the Genesis of the World, the first Book of Moses, which says, “And Adam lived 930 years, and begat sons and daughters, and died.”

Panarion, Epiphanius, pg. 280

In this passage Epiphanius is very clearly citing from Jubilees in order to confute the Sethians a group of gnostic heretics who believed Seth was not a mere man. But does that mean he considered the Book of Jubilees to be canonical scripture? No. He never lists the book in his canon. However, he draws extensively from its pages and uses it authoritatively. Read "From Jewish Apocrypha to Christian Tradition: Citations of Jubilees in Epiphanius's Panarion" for an insightful study on his use of this book within the context of canon formation in the 4th centuryDespite his usage of this text as authoritative it should be noted that one man does not make the tradition of the Church. The article covers a lot of ground and the issues it discusses are rather complex.

The second reference Epiphanius makes to Jubilees is not so direct and can be found in his book "On Weights and Measures."

And he showed Moses through an angel that there would also be twenty-two heads from Adam to Jacob, otherwise Israel, when he said: "And I will choose for myself from his seed a people more numerous than any other people.” And the heads, which are the generations, concerning whom the Lord spoke, are as follows: Adam, Seth, Enosh, Kenan, Mahalalel, Jared, Enoch, Methuselah, Lamech, Noah, Shem, Arpachshad, Shelah, Eber, Peleg, Reu—for the Scripture omits Cainan from the number —Serug, Nahor, Terah, Abraham, Isaac, Jacob, otherwise Israel —altogether, twenty-two generations. Therefore there are twenty-two letters among the Hebrews, which are these…Therefore also there are twenty-two books of the Old Testament; but they are said among the Hebrews to be counted as twenty- two though they are (really) twenty-seven, because five of their letters also are double…for the books also are counted in this manner. 

On Weights and Measures, pg. 43

Epiphanius then goes on to list those books by title. They are as follows:

Genesis, Exodus, Leviticus, Numbers, Deuteronomy, Joshua, Judges/Ruth, 1-2 Kings. 3-4 Kings, Isaiah, Jeremiah, Ezekiel, the Twelve minor prophets, Job, Psalms, Proverbs, Ecclesiastes, Song of Solomon,  Daniel, 1 -2 Chronicles, 1-2 Esdras, Esther.

That is the same list as Jerome gives and it also excludes Jubilees from the canon despite referencing it when refuting the Sethians and using it authoritatively. It is very important to understand that 1-2 Esdras is what we know as Ezra and Nehemiah. The book referred to as 2 Esdras which is part of the Christian apocrypha is not included in the Hebrew bible and was not found at Qumran as Timothy claims it was. It is also known as 4th Esdras. It was written after the destruction of the temple in 70 A.D. That means Jesus did not quote it as Tim is wont to say. Here we see Tim's astonishing ignorance on full display in this graphic from his annotated Jubilees which proclaims this massive error.


Jubilees, Timothy Jay Schwab, pg. 22

In his notes on Jubilees 2:22-23 Charles says there might be a lacuna at verse 22. He then cites various authors such as Epiphanius, Syncellus, and the Midrash where groups of 22 are mentioned. Among these groups of 22 are 22 letters and 22 sacred books. He then fills in the lacuna as follows:

Thus we should probably restore the lacuna as follows: — As there were two and twenty letters and two and twenty (sacred) books and two and twenty heads of mankind from Adam to Jacob, so there were made two and twenty kinds of work, etc. The thirty-nine books of the Old Testament are equalised to the number of letters by the following device. The twelve minor prophets count as one book, similarly Judges and Ruth, Ezra and Nehemiah, Jeremiah and Lamentations are taken together, and the two books of Samuel, Kings and Chronicles are reckoned respectively as one each. Thus the thirty-nine are reduced to twenty- two. 

Charles does not supply this emendation in the text but leaves it in his footnotes. James VanderKam has this to say about the supposed lacuna:

No text of Jubilees (Hebrew, Ethiopic, Greek, Syriac) says anything about 22 letters and 22 books. These categories were added later (and in other texts) to Jubilees’ list of two groups of 22.

VanderKam, Jubilees Commentary, pg. 199

VanderKam says no known copy of Jubilees has this text and there is not even space for it in copies found at Qumran. According to him there is no lacuna in the text.

What really matters though is that Tim thinks Charles is correct and has this note in his annotated Book of Jubilees:

It is probable that at end of 22 above there is a lacuna in the text (indicated by the dotted line). Charles restores the missing words as follows: As there were two and twenty letters, and two and twenty (sacred) books [viz. in the Old Testament], and two and twenty heads of mankind from Adam to Jacob, so there were made two and twenty kinds of work, etc. 

Jubilees, Timothy Jay Schwab, pg. 60

If this verse is authentic then what it means is that the Book of Jubilees is not scripture. Here you have the author of Jubilees telling us there are 22 sacred books. It would be impossible for Jubilees to fit anywhere in a list of 22 sacred Hebrew texts. Perhaps one could pair it with Genesis and make the two one book but no list of the Old Testament canon ever has that pairing. There are always said to be only five books of Moses and Jubilees is never on that list. One of the oldest lists of the Old Testment canon comes from Melito of Sardis who lived in the 2nd century.

13. Melito to his brother Onesimus, greeting: Since you have often, in your zeal for the word, expressed a wish to have extracts made from the Law and the Prophets concerning the Saviour and concerning our entire faith, and has also desired to have an accurate statement of the ancient book, as regards their number and their order, I have endeavored to perform the task, knowing your zeal for the faith, and your desire to gain information in regard to the word, and knowing that you, in your yearning after God, esteem these things above all else, struggling to attain eternal salvation.

14. Accordingly when I went East and came to the place where these things were preached and done, I learned accurately the books of the Old Testament, and send them to you as written below. Their names are as follows: Of Mosesfive books: Genesis, Exodus, Numbers, LeviticusDeuteronomyJesus Nave, Judges, Ruth; of Kings, four books; of Chronicles, two; the Psalms of David, the Proverbs of Solomon, Wisdom also, Ecclesiastes, Song of Songs, Job; of Prophets, Isaiah, Jeremiah; of the twelve prophets, one book ; Daniel, Ezekiel, Esdras. From which also I have made the extracts, dividing them into six books. Such are the words of Melito.

He lists 26 books. Except for the omission of Esther and the addition of Wisdom his list is identical to that of Jerome and Epiphanius. The difference is that he counts some books as separate which are counted as one elsewhere. That is very significant because it shows a continuity within the church regarding the Old Testament canon regarding the book under question. Jubilees never makes the cut at anytime whatsoever.

Origen is also on the list of men who cited Jubilees. Origen, like Jerome, was a man of letters. He was one of the most learned men of his day or any day. His output was voluminous and he was famous for making several critical editions of the Hebrew bible in both Greek and Hebrew known as the Hexapla. He knew what the Hebrew canon was and it did not include Jubilees.

1. When expounding the first Psalm, he gives a catalogue of the sacred Scriptures of the Old Testament as follows: 

“It should be stated that the canonical books, as the Hebrews have handed them down, are twenty-two; corresponding with the number of their letters.” Farther on he says:

2. “The twenty-two books of the Hebrews are the following: That which is called by us Genesis, but by the Hebrews, from the beginning of the book, Bresith, which means, 'In the beginning'; Exodus, Welesmoth, that is, 'These are the names'; Leviticus, Wikra, 'And he called'; Numbers, Ammesphekodeim; Deuteronomy, Eleaddebareim, 'These are the words'; Jesus, the son of Nave, Josoue ben Noun; Judges and Ruth, among them in one book, Saphateim; the First and Second of Kings, among them one, Samouel, that is, 'The called of God'; the Third and Fourth of Kings in one, Wammelch David, that is, 'The kingdom of David'; of the Chronicles, the First and Second in one, Dabreïamein, that is, 'Records of days'; Esdras, First and Second in one, Ezra, that is, 'An assistant'; the book of Psalms, Spharthelleim; the Proverbs of Solomon, Meloth; Ecclesiastes, Koelth; the Song of Songs (not, as some suppose, Songs of Songs), Sir Hassirim; Isaiah, Jessia; Jeremiah, with Lamentations and the epistle in one, Jeremia; Daniel, Daniel; Ezekiel, Jezekiel; Job, Job; Esther, Esther. And besides these there are the Maccabees, which are entitled Sarbeth Sabanaiel.” He gives these in the above-mentioned work. 

https://www.newadvent.org/fathers/250106.htm

He has a 22 book canon which includes: 

Genesis, Exodus, Leviticus, Numbers, Deuteronomy, Joshua, Judges/Ruth, 1-2 Kings. 3-4 Kings, Isaiah,  Jeremiah/Lamentations/Epistle of Jeremiah, Ezekiel, Job, Psalms, Proverbs, Ecclesiastes, Song of Solomon, Daniel, 1 -2 Chronicles, 1-2 Esdras, Esther, the Maccabees

His canon is different from Jerome in that it excludes the 12 minor prophets and includes the Maccabees. The similarities lie in that it conforms to the number 22 and it omits Jubilees. It is a point of fact that no canonical list of scripture from any Christian theologian has Jubilees or Enoch. Not even the 23 book canon of Jospehus leaves room for Enoch or Jubilees.

In his introduction to Jubilees Tim appeals to the Ethiopian church for Jubilees' canonicity. 

The Abyssinian Church, which has continued Jubilees as canon, names it the“Book of the Division of Days,” from the first words at the beginning. This also proves this book was not only in circulation but considered scripture at least by some at that time. 

Though continued in the Ethiopian canon this entire time to today, in the Western world, Jubilees appeared lost for about 400 years until it was rediscovered in the Ethiopic. Multiple English translations from the Ethiopic were released from the mid-1800s to mid-1900s before the Dead Sea Scrolls were found. Once discovered in Qumran as the sixth most numerous scroll, Jubilees is known to have originated in Hebrew and those fragments coalesce with the Ethiopic. This really proved this was preserved in the Ethiopic Geez language and there is no scripture which ever says that is not acceptable. That is a false paradigm in scholarship as the book is preserved regardless and a rmed in Hebrew as well.

Book of Jubilees, Timothy Jay Schwab, pg. 40-41

Jubilees was preserved in Ge'ez (not Geez) but so what? The canon of the Ethiopian Church adds more than just Jubilees and Enoch. If we are going to hold them as a kind of standard and accept their inclusion of Jubilees and Enoch as legitimate then why should we not adopt the other books they include? Why not adopt their heretical monophysite or miaphysite Christology? Why appeal to this group at all? Tim rejects the authority of the Church to exclude books so why would he accept the authority of this Church to include books? His argument is contradictory.

Tim makes quite a big deal out of some of the Church Fathers referring to the Book of Jubilees. He even makes unfounded claims like this:

The early church fathers quoted and used the Book of Jubilees in sermons through history until about the 14th century.

Jubilees, Timothy Jay Schwab, pgs. 39-40

That is quite an exaggeration and shows that Tim is not familiar with the writings of the Church Fathers or the scholastics at all. Reading this sentence it would appear that Jubilees was constantly and regularly appealed to in sermons until the 1300's. That is a lie. If Tim was familiar with the Church Fathers he would know that the Book of Jubilees is not cited in patristic or medieval theological writings in such a manner as he is claiming. If what he was saying were true there would be more than 26 entries on his list. Just think of all the men missing: Augustine, Basil, Athanasius, St Maximus, John of Damascus, Photius, Gregory the Great, Gregory of Nyssa, Chrysostom, Gregory Palamas, John Cassian, Cyprian, and the list could go on. I would encourage Tim to take his book money and invest in a nice set of the Fathers and actually read them. He won't find them citing Jubilees. 

Tim is basing his claim that the Church Fathers cited Jubilees as scripture on the list R.H. Charles provides in his introduction without actually looking up the references to see what these theologians wrote about Jubilees and how they employed the text. The fact that Tim did not bother to research these citations is shown by the bungled reference to Pope Gelasius where he gleefully asserts that even a Pope cited Jubilees. Let's look at one more citation of Jubilees which Tim lists and that is Severus of Antioch. Tim writes:

542 Severus of Antioch discusses the death of Moses and an argument over his remains between satan and the Archangel Michael. This originates in Jubilees and no where in the Old Testament.

On it's face this is completely wrong because Jubilees does not end with the death of Moses. The story of the death of Moses is not in Jubilees. Nevertheless here is what Severus writes:

Therefore the Holy Scripture says in Deuteronomy also: ´Moses the Lord's bondman ended his life there, in the land of Moab, by the word of the Lord; and they buried him there in the land of Moab beside the house of Peor, and no man hath known the end or his grave to this day; which is also confirmed by that which the evangelist wrote, since Luke one of the evangelists said in the story of the rich man and Lazarus, ´And it happened that the poor man also died, and was carried by the angels into Abraham's bosom. These same details about the burial of Moses men have stated to be contained in an apocryphal Book the more succinct title of which is 'The book of Generation or of Creation, which Moses himself wrote for us.’ 


While Severus refers to Jubilees the story is likely to be found in the alleged missing chapters of the  Assumption of Moses. Like Jerome he refers to Jubilees as apocryphal. Tim gets this reference totally wrong showing once again how poor a researcher he is. He published his own version of Jubilees. Did he really forget that the story of the death of Moses does not occur in Jubilees? That is an incredible blunder.

It is quite evident that while Jubilees was cited by some theologians it was never upheld as being canonical by the normative Orthodox Church. The Ethiopian church is not Orthodox as they reject Chalcedon and teach a false Christology. The two men most familiar with the Hebrew text, Jerome and Origen, do not include Jubilees in their list of canonical scripture nor does Epiphanius, who cited the text authoritatively, or any other Christian theologian. Tim's proof for the contrary is frivolous and frangible. A citation of a text does not mean the person thinks the text is canonical scripture. As Tim says, "That's a false paradigm."

Wednesday 14 April 2021

Augustine on Loving God as Our Father and the Church as Our Mother

A strong case could be made that the Roman Church is a heretical body displaying all the hallmarks of Donatism because it anathematized Constantinople and declared herself to be the Only True Church©. The charge could likewise be leveled at modern Protestants sects like the Protestant Reformed Church which was born in schism and itself has recently undergone a split by those within who claim to be the Only True Church©.

Regardless, the following observation from Augustine at the end of his commentary of Psalm 89 is rather insightful. The gist is you cannot say you honor God while you dishonor his Church and vice versa. To dishonor the Church and say it is impure or overrun by the devil is to repudiate the Body of Christ Himself. We must love God as our Father and the Church as our Mother.

41.  Let us love our Lord God, let us love His Church: Him as a Father, Her as a Mother: Him as a Lord, Her as His Handmaid, as we are ourselves the Handmaid's sons. But this marriage is held together by a bond of great love: no man offends the one, and wins favour of the other. Let no man say, I go indeed to the idols, I consult possessed ones and fortune-tellers: yet I abandon not God's Church; I am a Catholic. While you hold to your Mother, you have offended your Father. Another says, Far be it from me; I consult no sorcerer, I seek out no possessed one, I never ask advice by sacrilegiousdivination, I go not to worship idols, I bow not before stones; though I am in the party of Donatus. What does it profit you not to have offended your Father, if he avenges your offended Mother? What does it serve you, if you acknowledge the Lord, honour God, preach His name, acknowledge His Son, confess that He sits by His right hand; while you blaspheme His Church? Does not the analogy of human marriages convince you? Suppose you have some patron, whom you court every day, whose threshold you wear with your visits, whom you daily not only salute, but even worship, to whom you pay the most loyal courtesy; if you utter one calumny against his wife, could you re-enter his house? Hold then, most beloved, hold all with one mind to God the Father, and the Church our Mother. Celebrate with temperance the birthdays of the Saints, that we may imitate those who have gone before us, and that they who pray for you may rejoice over you; that the blessing of the Lord may abide on you for evermore. Amen and Amen.

Tuesday 6 April 2021

Augustine on Common Grace?

It would be erroneous and anachronistic to insert modern debates about common grace into the works of St. Augustine. However this except from his commentary on Psalm 78 is rather interesting and touches somewhat on that topic.

But without doubt the mystery of the Kingdom of Heaven was veiled in the Old Testament, which in the fullness of time should be unveiled in the New.  For, says the Apostle, they did drink of the Spiritual Rock following them, but the Rock was Christ. 1 Corinthians 10:4 In a mystery therefore theirs was the same meat and drink as ours, but in signification the same, not in form; because the same Christ was Himself figured to them in a Rock, manifested to us in the Flesh. But, he says, not in all of them God was well pleased. 1 Corinthians 10:5 All indeed ate the same spiritual meat and drank the same spiritual drink, that is to say, signifying something spiritual: but not in all of them was God well pleased. When, he says, not in all:there were evidently there some in whom was God well pleased; and although all the Sacraments were common, grace, which is the virtue of the Sacraments, was not common to all. Just as in our times, now that the faith has been revealed, which then was veiled, to all men that have been baptized in the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Ghost, Matthew 28:19 the Laver of regeneration is common; but the very grace whereof these same are the Sacraments, whereby the members of the Body of Christ are to reign together with their Head, is not common to all. For even heretics have the same Baptism, and false brethren too, in the communion of the Catholic name.

https://www.newadvent.org/fathers/1801078.htm

Here Augustine says the Sacraments are common to all who will join the Church but the grace imparted by the Sacrament which makes it effective, its virtue he says, is not common to all as false brethren and heretics also partake of the same Sacraments.