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Exploring Christianity
Daniel Book Missing?
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<blockquote data-quote="dzheremi" data-source="post: 73150551" data-attributes="member: 357536"><p>The canon has never been closed in the Chriatian East/"Orient" (where the two communions claiming Orthodoxy come from), so you can find variations between different traditions, though to what degree they may vary depends on which particular chirches you are looking at.</p><p></p><p>The Eastern Orthodox (Greek, Slavic, Arab, etc. churches) published some time ago the Orthodox Study Bible, which uses the LXX for its OT (this is the case for all Orthodox churches). I don't own it, so I can't comment exactly on its content, but knowing the general Eastern/Oriental approach to what Protestants call the 'Deuterocanonical books' (that they are just part of the Bible, no special status required), I would expect it to contain whatever the Protestant translations have removed.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="dzheremi, post: 73150551, member: 357536"] The canon has never been closed in the Chriatian East/"Orient" (where the two communions claiming Orthodoxy come from), so you can find variations between different traditions, though to what degree they may vary depends on which particular chirches you are looking at. The Eastern Orthodox (Greek, Slavic, Arab, etc. churches) published some time ago the Orthodox Study Bible, which uses the LXX for its OT (this is the case for all Orthodox churches). I don't own it, so I can't comment exactly on its content, but knowing the general Eastern/Oriental approach to what Protestants call the 'Deuterocanonical books' (that they are just part of the Bible, no special status required), I would expect it to contain whatever the Protestant translations have removed. [/QUOTE]
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