The "canon" of scripture refers to an authoritative list of books accepted as Holy Scripture such as the Old and New Testaments of The Bible.
The "canon" of scripture refers to an authoritative list of books accepted as Holy Scripture such as the Old and New Testaments of the Bible.
The Book of Enoch is not considered part of the canon of scripture by most major religious traditions, but it is included in the Ethiopian Orthodox Tewahedo Church's biblical canon.
Canon comes from the Greek word kanon, meaning reed or measurement. A canonical book is one that measures up to the standard of Holy Scripture. The canon of Scripture refers to the books that are considered the authoritative Word of God.
The canon of scripture was officially determined by religious authorities in the 4th century AD, specifically at the Councils of Hippo (393 AD) and Carthage (397 AD).
In scripture, the term "canon" refers to the authoritative list of books recognized as divinely inspired and accepted as scripture by a religious community. These books form the sacred and foundational texts of that faith tradition.
Setting the canon is the process by which each book in the bible was selected. A canon is a collection of works deemed authoritative and important. This means that books in the biblical canon are the most important surviving works on those subjects.
They were broght to the church and the church put them all together.
The Council of Rome made decisions about which books should be included in the Bible, establishing the official list of scripture for the Catholic Church.
Their use and referral to the Gospels and to the letters of the Apostles as Scripture, inspired by God.
Enoch is not considered part of the canon of the Bible because it is an ancient Jewish text that was not included in the final selection of books that were officially recognized as scripture by early Christian leaders.
The canon of scripture was decided over time by many people. Before the printing press the stories that early Christians found most important to their faith were copied and used more often, so more of those manuscripts exist today. After the printing press churches would evaluate how accurate they thought each part of the Bible was, and accept the most accurate parts.
It depends on what you accept as the canon of Scripture. A typical Protestant canon does not include any mention of Judas Maccadaeus. Almost all of our information about this man comes from the books of the Maccabees (I believe it is split into 1st and 2nd Maccabees) and the writings of Josephus. It is a typical Protestant canon, the Apocrypha is not viewed as equal to the other works nor are they accepted as part of Scripture and so we do not find mention of him. If you want to read about him, find a Catholic Bible- or a study Bible with the inclusion of Apocryphal books.