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6 - CANONICAL AND NON-CANONICAL

from III - THE OLD TESTAMENT

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  28 March 2008

G. W. Anderson
Affiliation:
Edinburgh University
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Summary

Difficult as is the task of tracing the growth of Old Testament literature and disentangling the strands of the several traditions which preceded the written records, that of reconstructing the processes by which the Old Testament Canon emerged is still more complex. It is salutary to recall that even within the Christian Church, with its reiterated appeal to canonical scripture as authoritative for faith and practice, either apart from or in conjunction with ecclesiastical tradition, the understanding of the nature of canonical authority and the definition of the contents of the Canon vary in different communions today, and have varied over the centuries. Accordingly, any attempt to discover how the Old Testament Canon was formed must reckon not only with the fact that the evidence available is far from complete, but also with the possibility that different conceptions of canonicity were presupposed at different stages in the process and in different regions and communities. These difficulties are aggravated by the lack, during the period under review, of a clear and consistent conception of canonicity and of unambiguous terminology with which to express it.

In the present survey the subject will be treated under the following main sections: (1) a consideration of the terms used to describe the canonical writings and of the definition of canonisation and canonicity within the relevant period; (2) a discussion of the evidence for acts of canonisation by which the several sections, and finally the collection as a whole, came to be recognised as canonical;

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Chapter
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Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 1970

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References

Andrews, H. T., in Charles, R. H. (ed.), The Apocrypha and Pseudepigrapha of the Old Testament (Oxford, 1913), II.
Audet, J.-P., ‘A Hebrew-Aramaic List of Books of the Old Testament in Greek Transcription’, Journal of Theological Studies, Oxford. n.s. 1 (1950).Google Scholar
Buhl, F., Canon and Text of the Old Testament (Edinburgh, 1892). [Particularly valuable for its ample references to rabbinic and patristic sources.]
Christie, W. M., ‘The Jamnia Period in Jewish History’, Journal of Theological Studies, Oxford. XXVI (1925).Google Scholar
Cross, F. M., ‘The discovery of the Samaria Papyri’, The Biblical Archaeologist, New Haven (Conn.). XXVI (1963) –21.Google Scholar
Cross, F. M., ‘The History of the Biblical Text in the light of discoveries in the Judean Desert’, Harvard Theological Review, Cambridge (Mass.)., LVII (1964) –99.Google Scholar
Eybers, I. H., ‘Some Light on the Canon of the Qumrân Sect’, New Light on Some Old Testament Problems: Papers read at 5th Meeting of Die O., T. Werkgemeenskap in Suid-Afrika (Pretoria, 1962).Google Scholar
Filson, F. V., Which Books belong in the Bible? A Study of the Canon (Philadelphia, 1957). [A lucid discussion of the problem of canonicity and of the status of the Old Testament and of the Apocrypha. Protestant standpoint.]
Goshen-Gottstein, M. H., ‘The Psalms Scroll (IIQPsa): A Problem of Canon and Text’, Annual of the Hebrew University Bible Project, Jerusalem. v (1966) ;Google Scholar
Hölscher, G., Kanonisch und Apokryph. Ein Kapitel aus der Geschichte des alttestamentlichen Kanons (Leipzig, 1905).
Hölscher, G., Kanonisch und Apokryph. Ein Kapitel aus der Geschichte des alttestamentlichen Kanons (Leipzig, 1908).
Jepsen, A., ‘Zur Kanongeschichte des Alten Testaments’, Zeitschrift für die Alttestamentliche Wissenschaft (Giessen), Berlin. LXXI (1959).Google Scholar
Katz, P., ‘The Old Testament Canon in Palestine and Alexandria’, Zeitschrift für die Neutestamentliche Wissenschaft (Giessen), Berlin. XLVII (1956).Google Scholar
Milik, J. T., Ten Years of Discovery in the Wilderness of Judaea (London, 1959), p..
Mullen, T., The Canon of the Old Testament (New York, 1892). [An extended discussion and historical survey of differing ecclesiastical and sectarian attitudes to the Canon up to the nineteenth century. Roman Catholic standpoint.]
Östborn, G., Cult and Canon: A Study in the Canonization of the Old Testament (Uppsala Universitets Årsskrift 1950: 10, Uppsala and Leipzig, 1950).
Rabinowitz, I., ‘The Qumrân Authors' spr hhgw/y’, Journal of Near Eastern Studies, Chicago (111.). XX (1961) –14.Google Scholar
Roberts, B. J., ‘The Old Testament Canon: A Suggestion’, Bulletin of the John Rylands Library, Manchester. XLVI (1963).Google Scholar
Ryle, H. E., The Canon of the Old Testament, An Essay on the Gradual Growth and Formation of the Hebrew Canon of Scripture (London, 1892). [Contains ample references to, and extensive citations from, rabbinic and patristic sources.]
Sanders, J. A., The Psalms Scroll of Qumran Cave II (II QPsa), Discoveries in the Judaean Desert of Jordan, IV (Oxford, 1965).
Smith, W. R., The Old Testament in the Jewish Church (2nd ed. revised and much enlarged, London and Edinburgh, 1892).
Starcky, J., ‘Psaumes apocryphes de la grotte 4 de Qumrân (4QPsf VII-X)’, Revue Biblique, Paris. LXXIII (1966) –71.Google Scholar
Sundberg, A. C., The Old Testament of the Early Church (Harvard Theological Studies, XX, Cambridge, Mass. and London, 1964).
van der Ploeg, J., ‘Le psaume xci dans une recension de Qumrân’, Revue Biblique, Paris. LXXII (1965) –17.Google Scholar
Wright, G. Ernest, Shechem: The Biography of a Biblical City (London, 1965) –81.
Yadin, Y., ‘Another Fragment (E) of the Psalms Scroll from Qumrân Cave II’, Annual of the Hebrew University Bible Project, Jerusalem. v (1966).Google Scholar

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