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Saint Peter died in around 64-67 AD and the Revelation was written around 90-96 AD. Obviously saint Peter would never have read revelation on earth because he was no longer on earth when it was written.
Well, considering the revelation, itself, speaks of it being written during Nero's reign, (the latter part of the 60's AD), I suppose that is possible.
Regardless, the leader (Pope in your opinion ) of the Church would not be without that book would He? So my point stands.
I thought I said, "Yes", that was possible...... Revelation WAS probably written early enough.Lets loom at it this way. If RC, or EO or any other Church was in fact the first Church, wouldn't they have known about Revelation?
I have no idea what point you think is standing because if saint Peter was dead and gone by the time the Revelation was written then he didn't have it while he was still alive on earth.
I assume that if Peter had a successor after he died (the Pope in your opinion) that this man would have had the book of Revelation. Correct?
I thought I said, "Yes", that was possible......
Regardless, the leader (Pope in your opinion ) of the Church would not be without that book would He? So my point stands.
Is there a contention on the table that the Church could not have existed, or not been the Church, if it did not have the complete Canon of Scripture?
In just the last couple of days, I've read at least three versions of the Nicene Creed. Are you guys all talking about "one", and if so, is it the "We believe..." or the "I believe..." one? And, then which one of each of THOSE?
Eventually , yes. Clement of Rome may have had it since he was pope in the 90s AD.
Well, it was the most controversial of the books that finally were included in the canon back in the 4th century.So ... what if Luther had gotten his way? Did you know he wanted to remove Revelation from the Bible?
Because it's the most simplistic of all the epistles. It has really only one point to make and that's almost too obvious.Jude, Hebrews, and James as well. Especially James. He really didn't like James.
That could make sense for this forum, as each of us is affirming as an individual..... thereby making up the collective "We".The site rules say we believe
http://www.christianforums.com/rules/#faq_rule_0
No, im only saying that the first Church and its successors must have had the record of the Gospel, the commands of the Apostles in the 1st century, and the book of revelation.
I feel as if you guys are toying with me.
RightThat would make sense for this forum, as each of us is affirming as an individual..... thereby making up the collective "We".
So ... what if Luther had gotten his way? Did you know he wanted to remove Revelation from the Bible?
Jude, Hebrews, and James as well. Especially James. He really didn't like James.
In that case ... there is a chance that everyone who has a 66-book Bible today would instead think that a 62-book Bible was correct.
Would that make none of them part of the Church, since they lack Revelation?
Well, it was the most controversial of the books that finally were included in the canon back in the 4th century.
Because it's the most simplistic of all the epistles. It has really only one point to make and that's almost too obvious.
Although I'm not a Lutheran, I'm kinda sensitive to the idea that the greatest Bible scholar of his time (and one who argued that the EOs had right a lot of what he though the RCs had wrong) doubted these books merely because he wanted to "stack the deck," as it were, in support of his theology.
No, I don't think anyone is toying with you. Because the things you bring up are important, I think everyone is trying to give you information.
However, all of this is off-topic. I don't mind the info, but endlessly debating it would seem unproductive.
(Incidentally, you speak as if you refer to a single Church in a single location? The Church spread out to many regions - that was the intent. To spread the Gospel. But you should look up what dates the various books were thought to have been written, and you will see that "the Church" could not immediately possess them all since they did not exist.)
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