Why Isn't the Apocrypha in the Bible?
Apocrypha (‘hidden’, ‘doubtful’) most commonly refers to disputed books
rejected by Protestants and accepted by both the Roman Catholics and the
Orthodox Church. In 1546 the Council of Trent declared the apocryphal seven
books and four parts of books in the Old Testament as part of inspired
Scripture, stating that anyone who did not accept the said books as sacred..
“Let him be anathema”. (The four parts of books are integrated into Esther and
Daniel). Apocryphal books did appear in Protestant Bibles prior to the Council
of Trent but were generally placed in a separate section, as they were not
considered of equal credence.
There are several main reasons for the rejection of the Apocrypha.
Non-acceptance by the Jewish canon
The Jewish Canon does not include the Apocrypha. This is significant as it was
to the Jews that the OT was entrusted (Rom 3:1,2) and they are the custodians of
the limits of their own canon. (Some of the Apocrypha books were written in
Greek, not Hebrew).
The Jewish scholars of Jamnia (ca. A.D. 90) did not accept the Apocrypha as part
of divinely inspired canon.
Philo, an Alexandrian Jewish teacher (20 B.C.- A.D. 40) quoted extensively from
virtually every canonical book but never once quoted the Apocrypha as inspired.
Josephus (A.D. 30-100), a Jewish historian explicitly excluded the Apocrypha,
speaking of the number of Jewish books which are divinely trustworthy, not
leaving a place for the apocryphal books. . He numbered the OT books as 22 (the
equivalent of the 39 books in the Protestant Old Testament). Josephus expressed
the common Jewish perspective when he said that the prophets wrote from the time
of Moses to that of Artaxerxes, and that no writing since that time had the same
authority.
The Jewish Talmud teaches that the Holy Spirit departed from Israel after the
time of Malachi, both of whom lived about four centuries before Christ, while
the books of the Apocrypha were composed in the vicinity of two centuries before
Christ.
There are several statements by Rabbis that prophecy ceased in the fourth
century B.C. acknowledging that the Apocrypha was written in a period when God
had ceased giving inspired writings.
Seeming Exclusion by Jesus Himself
When Jesus or the apostles appealed simply to "the Scriptures" against their
Jewish opponents, there is no suggestion whatsoever that the identity and limits
of such writings were vague or in dispute.
Jesus seems to exclude the Apocrypha in his statement in Luke 11:51 - "from the
blood of Abel to the blood of Zechariah who perished between the altar and the
temple. Yes, I say to you, it shall be required of this generation" (NKJV).
Christ uses the expression "from the blood of Abel to the blood of Zechariah,"
The death of Abel is recorded in Genesis, the first book in the Hebrew canon.
The death of Zechariah is included in 2Chronicles, which appears troublesome
since Zechariah was not chronologically the last martyr mentioned in the Bible
(cf. Jer. 26:20-23). However, Zechariah is the last martyr we read of in the Old
Testament according to Jewish canonical order (cf. II Chron. 24:20-22), which
was apparently recognized by Jesus and his hearers. The traditional Jewish canon
was divided into three sections (Law, Prophets, Writings), and an unusual
feature of the last section was the listing of Chronicles out of historical
order, placing it after Ezra-Nehemiah and making it the last book of the canon.
In light of this, the words of Jesus in Luke 11:50-51 reflect the settled
character of the Jewish canon (with its peculiar order) already established in
his day.
(The order of books as they appear today is taken from the Septuagint (second
century BC Greek translation of the OT).
Lack of reference to the Apocrypha in the NT
While the NT quotes mainly from the Greek Old Testament (LXX) it is uncertain as
to whether the Septuagint contained the Apocrypha. No direct quotations from any
Apocryphal books appear in the NT although they were aware of these books and
alluded to them at times. However Hebrews 11:37 may very well refer to 1 Kings
17:22 and not 1 Maccabees, as is often claimed. But none of these allusions rise
to the apostles using the Apocrypha as an authoritative source. On the other
hand there are literally hundreds of quotations in the NT from the ‘Law and
Prophets’ which Jesus called “all the Scripture”. Luke 24:27).
So with the lack of authoritative quotes from the Apocrypha in the NT, it
appears the NT writers, and Jesus Himself, did not accept the Apocrypha as
Scripture.
Not every book of the Hebrew canon is quoted in the NT (such as the Song of
Solomon, or Canticles as it is named in Catholic Bibles). But every section of
the OT as Jews divided it is quoted from (i.e. the Torah, the Prophets, and the
Writings).
The absent of any quotes from any of the Apocryphal books is rather striking.
This is especially so given that many of the OT quotes in the NT were actually
taken from the Septuagint and not from the Hebrew text (It is for this reason
that if you compare OT quotes in the NT with their OT counterparts they don't
match up exactly). In any case, what this means is, the Bible text the NT
authors had before them had the Apocrypha in it; but they seem to have
completely ignored the Apocrypha when they were looking to support a statement
with an authoritative source.
So the evidence of the NT strongly suggest the writers of the NT did not accept
the Apocryphal books as canon.
Rejection by many early church fathers
Early church fathers like Origen, Cyril of Jerusalem, Athanasius, and The great
Roman Catholic translator Jerome spoke out against the Apocrypha.
In 382 Bishop Damascus had Jerome (the greatest Bible scholar of the early
Medieval period) work on a Latin text to standardize the Scripture. The
resulting Vulgate was used throughout the Christian world though Jerome himself
separated the Apocrypha from the rest. He stated the church reads them “for
example and instruction of manners”, but does not “apply them to establish any
doctrine”. More damning was his statement that “they exhibit no authority as
Holy Scripture” (Preface to Vulgate Book of Solomon,) He initially refused to
translate the apocrypha into Latin but later made a hasty translation of a few
books.
But Augustine (c. 400 AD) did recognize the Apocrypha. So it was mainly from his
influence that the Apocrypha eventually became accepted. However, the Catholic
Church itself did not officially canonize the Apocrypha until the council of
Trent in the 1500's. (Called as a response to the Protestant heresy by the
Catholic Church) Before that, there was always debate as to their inspiration.
Some of the Church Fathers, for instance, quoted from the Apocrypha as Scripture
but others didn't. But however it is looked at, the official acceptance of the
Apocrypha occurred well after the NT was written and the final canonization of
the Hebrew Scriptures by the Jews.
The reformers were also forced to face the Canon issue. After the Reformation
the books of the canon were widely agreed on. Instead of the authority of the
Church, Luther and the reformers focused on the internal witness of the Holy
Spirit.
Test of Propheticity
One of the tests of whether writing was seen as inspired or not was propheticity.
God determined which books would be in the Bible by giving their message to a
prophet. Only books written by a prophet or accredited spokesperson for God
belong in the canon. The people to whom the prophet wrote knew which of the
prophets fulfilled the requirements for god’s representatives and authenticated
the writings by accepting them. Moses’ books were accepted and stored in a holy
place (Deut 31:26) as was Joshua’s writings (Joshua 24:26). Daniel already had a
copy of Jeremiah and Peter had a collection of Paul’s writings, equating them
with the OT as Scripture. False prophets were weeded out if their prophecy did
not come true (Deut 18: 20-22) and alleged revelations that contradicted
previously revealed truths were rejected as well. (Deut 13:1-3.).
Additionally Moses’ writings are cited through the OT beginning with Joshua all
the way to Malachi. (E.g. Josh 1:7, 1 Kings 2:3, Ezra 6:18, Jeremiah 8:8,
Malachi 4:4.
Later prophets cite earlier ones (E.g. Jer 26:18, Ezek 14:14, Dan 9:2, Jonah 2:
2-9).
On the NT Paul cites Luke (1Tim 5:18), Peter recognizes Paul’s Epistles (2 Peter
15-16)
Revelation Is filled with imagery largely from Daniel.
On the other hand no Apocryphal book claims to be written by a prophet and there
is no predictive prophecy in the Apocrypha. Not once is a an Apocryphal book
cited authoritatively by a prophetic book written after it, nor is there any
supernatural confirmation of the writers of the Apocrypha as there is for
prophets who wrote the canon.
Errors in the Apocrypha
The books of the Apocrypha abound in doctrinal, ethical, and historical errors.
For instance, Tobit claims to have been alive when Jeroboam revolted (931 B.C.)
and when Assyria conquered Israel (722 B.C.), despite the fact that his lifespan
was only a total of 158 years (Tobit 1:3-5; 14:11)! Judith mistakenly identifies
Nebuchadnezzar as king of the Assyrians (1:1, 7). Tobit endorses the
superstitious use of fish liver to ward off demons (6: 6,7)!
The theological errors are equally significant. Wisdom of Solomon teaches the
creation of the world from pre-existent matter (7:17). II Maccabees teaches
prayers for the dead (12:45-46), and Tobit teaches salvation by the good work of
almsgiving (12:9) -- quite contrary to inspired Scripture (such as John 1:3; II
Samuel 12:19; Hebrews 9:27; Romans 4:5; Galatians 3:11).
Conclusion
The apocryphal books were sometimes highly regarded or cited for their antiquity
or for their historical, moral, or literary value, but the conceptual distance
between "valuable" and "divinely inspired" is considerable. Roman Catholic
apologists sometimes jump to canonical conclusions from the simple fact that the
books of the Apocrypha were copied and included among ancient manuscripts or
from the fact than an author draws upon them. But obviously a writer can quote
something from a work, which he takes to be true without thereby ascribing
divine authority to it (for instance, Paul quoting a pagan writer in I Cor.
15:33).
Roman Catholic apologists often misunderstand the Protestant rejection of the
Apocrypha, thinking it entails having no respect or use for these books
whatsoever. Calvin himself wrote, "I am not one of those, however, who would
entirely disapprove the reading of those books"; his objection was to "placing
the Apocrypha in the same rank" with inspired Scripture ("Antidote" to the
Council of Trent, pp. 67,68). Likewise, Luther placed the Apocrypha in an
appendix to the Old Testament in his German Bible, describing them in the title
as "Books which are not to be held equal to holy scripture, but are useful and
good to read."
To sum up, Jews, apparently the NT writers and Jesus, some Church Fathers, and
Protestants do not accept the Apocrypha all of which is strong evidence against
the inclusion of the Apocrypha.