Knee V
It's phonetic.
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The primary meaning of "canon" is that it is part of the church's cycle of public readings. In other words, if a given book has passages that are on the church's calendar to be read on any given day, that book is "canonical". The secondary meaning is that, while it is not read publicly, it is basically as useful as those books which are read publicly, but it didn't make it into the cycle of public readings for one reason or another.
If we found an epistle from any given Apostle, and we could somehow 100% conclusively prove that it was absolutely written by an Apostle, it would probably take the definition of "canon" in the secondary sense.
An example of that would be books like Esther and Revelation. Esther is not read from publicly in any Orthodox service, but it is not considered to be any fundamentally different from any other Old Testament book, and we still read from it privately as we would any other Old Testament book that is read publicly. Likewise, the eastern church had a lectionary established before Revelation was universally acknowledged as Apostolic, and as such we do not read from it publicly, but it is not of a lesser status than any other New Testament book, and we read from it privately just as we would any other New Testament that is read from publicly.
However, we also take the stance that the way the Holy Spirit has worked in the church over time is not an accident of history. The historic life of the church is what it is, and we have the Apostolic writings that we have as the Holy Spirit has seen fit to give to us.
If we found an epistle from any given Apostle, and we could somehow 100% conclusively prove that it was absolutely written by an Apostle, it would probably take the definition of "canon" in the secondary sense.
An example of that would be books like Esther and Revelation. Esther is not read from publicly in any Orthodox service, but it is not considered to be any fundamentally different from any other Old Testament book, and we still read from it privately as we would any other Old Testament book that is read publicly. Likewise, the eastern church had a lectionary established before Revelation was universally acknowledged as Apostolic, and as such we do not read from it publicly, but it is not of a lesser status than any other New Testament book, and we read from it privately just as we would any other New Testament that is read from publicly.
However, we also take the stance that the way the Holy Spirit has worked in the church over time is not an accident of history. The historic life of the church is what it is, and we have the Apostolic writings that we have as the Holy Spirit has seen fit to give to us.
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