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Dan Brown’s Da Vinci Code popularised the notion that there were many books which could have gone into the Bible; scholars who should know better, like Bart Ehrman, provided the ‘scholarly’ underpinning of such an idea, and he has pushed the idea is a series of book. The ‘truth is out there’, but seems slower to get to people than the lies.

There is a superb new book by Charles Hill and Michael J Kruger, The Early Text of the New Testamentwhich deals with the myths. It builds on Hill’s excellent Who chose the Gospelswhich has to be one of the best short books on the subject I have ever read. For those who don’t want even that much, there is a very good summary in the Huffpo here. Michael J Kruger’s website is on my blogroll, and there is a good set of pieces here.

The message is clear enough. There never was a time when the Church accepted more than 4 Gospels. From their first mention in Irenaeus through to Trent, there were only four Gospels. Paul, himself, famously cites Luke in 1 Timothy 5:18 and calls it ‘Scripture’, and there is clearly a relationship with that Gospel in Colossians and  2 Timothy, and he even asks Timothy to bring the ‘books’ and the ‘parchment’ (ta biblia and tas membranas), which suggests that he has copies of Luke to hand.

Paul’s own writings are referred to by St. Peter himself (2 Peter 3:15-16)

 And account that the longsuffering of our Lord is salvation, even as our beloved brother Paul also, according to the wisdom given unto him, hath written unto you,

16 as also in all his epistles, speaking in them of these things. Therein are some things hard to understand, which those who are unlearned and unstable wrest, as they do also the other Scriptures, unto their own destruction

and the reference to ‘other Scriptures’ suggests that the Apostolic Church put its own writings on a par with those of the Jewish Scriptures.

It is true that in the next generation, not all Paul’s letters were received, and that right through to the fourth century some of the smaller books like the Petrine epistles, 2 and 3 John and Jude were not generally received, any more than was the Revelation of St. John, but that hardly suggests that there was great doubt; no one was suggesting other books should be added.

In his 39th Festal Letter of 367, St. Athanasius gives us the full canon as we have had it ever since, and he clearly did not regard himself as putting forward any thing novel:

These are the springs of salvation, in order that he who is thirsty may fully refresh himself with the words contained in them. In them alone is the doctrine of piety proclaimed. Let no one add anything to them or take anything away from them.

He listed other books which Christians had and could use, but specifically added:

 mention is nowhere made of the apocrypha; rather they are a fabrication of the heretics, who write them down when it pleases them and generously assign to them an early date of composition in order that they may be able to draw upon them as supposedly ancient writings and have in them occasion to deceive the guileless.

Things have not changed. That is still the case, and Christians should not be misled.