The term Biblical Canon refers to the various books that are accepted as books of Holy Scripture. Different religions have their own lists of sacred books.
Protestants and Jews agree on the same 39 books of the Old Testament but disagree on the order of placement. Roman Catholics and Orthodox add more books, the Catholics have two more books in their Old Testament Canon than the Orthodox. All Christians agree on the Canon of 27 books for the New Testament.
Muslims have for their Canon: The first 5 books of Moses, Psalms, the four Gospels, and the Koran.
Other religions have different Canons.
Esther is a part of the Biblical canon. You may be thinking of Judith, which is not part of the Biblical canon because it was written in Greek.
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.
The term 'hypenated' is not biblical.
Goy is a Hebrew biblical term for a nation.
The word cat(s) is not in the Bible
The decision to establish the biblical canon was made over several centuries, with the final list being confirmed by the Council of Carthage in 397 AD.
The Book of Enoch was rejected from the biblical canon because it was not considered to be divinely inspired or authoritative by the early Christian church leaders who decided which texts to include in the Bible.
In the context of biblical teachings, the term "raca" is a derogatory Aramaic term that means "fool" or "empty-headed." It is used in the Bible to emphasize the seriousness of insulting or belittling others.
The term 'score' is not found in many English translations.
The biblical canon was officially established by the early Christian church in the 4th century AD, specifically at the Councils of Hippo (393 AD) and Carthage (397 AD).
Canon. The term is canon.
In the context of biblical teachings on anger and insults, the term "raca" is considered a derogatory Aramaic term meaning "fool" or "empty-headed." It is used to emphasize the seriousness of insulting someone's character or intelligence.