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I'm not sure what you are asking, but there are some disagreements over the Canonical status of certain books in the New Testament between the Roman Catholic, Eastern Orthodox, and certain Protestant churches.Martin Luther declared the book of James as noncanonical and excluded it from his German translationThere seems to have been some debate over the Canonical status of the book of Revelation in the Orthodox church
Raphael is not mentioned in the canonical books of the Bible, but is in the deuterocanonical Book of Tobit. However the Book of Tobit is canonical to the bibles of the Catholics, the Eastern Orthodox, the Oriental Orthodox, The Assyrian Church, the Anglicans and others.... Also these religions also mention Raphael in revelations.
Prophetic authorship, acceptance, and the witness of the spirit are the criteria usedÊto determine the canonical scripture that will be used in the Bible.
The book of John is believed to have been written between 80-110 AD. It is one of the four canonical gospels in the New Testament of the Christian Bible.
Philip is listed as one of the twelve disciples but as far as we know , none of the disciples wrote anything. The four New Testament gospels were originally anonymous and were not written by any of the disciples, in spite of second-century attributions. There is a non-canonical Gospel of Philip but it was, like the canonical gospels, originally anonymous; in any case it is generally believed to have been written after 150 CE. This means that not only did Philip not write a book of the Bible, he also probably did not even write a book outside the Bible.
William Emery Barnes has written: 'The two Books of the Kings' -- subject(s): Books of the Kings 'Early Christmas at prayer' -- subject(s): Prayer 'Canonical and uncanonical gospels' -- subject(s): Accessible book, Bible, Canon 'The Psalms' -- subject(s): Bible 'LEX IN CORDE' 'Lex in corde (the law in the heart)' -- subject(s): Bible 'The First Book of the Kings (The Cambridge Bible for Schools and Colleges)' 'Canonical & Uncanonical Gospels, with a Translation of the Recently Discovered Fragment of the ..' 'The Books of Chronicles' -- subject(s): Bible
The correct spelling is Asmodeus and comes from the non-canonical book of the Christian Bible, Tobit. Asmodeus is also referred to in the Talmud, as Ashmedai.
The Canonical Codes.
Robert E. Wallace has written: 'The narrative effect of book IV of the Hebrew psalter' -- subject(s): Bible, Canonical criticism, Criticism, Narrative, Narration in the Bible, Narrative Criticism
The Book of Revelation, also called Revelation to John, Apocalypse of John (pronounced /əˈpɒkəlɨps/, from the Greek: Ἀποκάλυψις Ἰωάννου, Apokálypsis Iōánnou), and Revelation of Jesus Christ is the last canonical book of the New Testament in the Christian Bible. It is the only biblical book that is wholly composed of apocalyptic literature.[1]
None. The Bible order is for Proverbs followed by the Book of Ecclesiastes.