Difference between revisions of "Category:OT Apocrypha Studies"

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  |title= OT Apocrypha Studies (Home Page)
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[[File:OT Apocrypha.jpg|500px]]
'''OT Apocrypha Studies / Studies in the OT Apocrypha''' is a field of research in [[Second Temple Judaism]], that specializes in the study of the [[OT Apocrypha]].  
'''OT Apocrypha Studies / Studies in the OT Apocrypha''' is a field of research in [[Second Temple Judaism]], that specializes in the study of the [[OT Apocrypha]].  


''4 Enoch'' treats the [[OT Apocrypha]] as a corpus of [[Second Temple Literature]]. The Encyclopedia includes editions, translations, and monographs on the corpus of the [[OT Apocrypha]] as well as on each of the documents in the collection.
* '''[[Topics]]''' : [[OT Apocrypha Intro]] -- [[OT Apocrypha Editions]] -- [[OT Apocrypha Translations]] -- [[OT Apocrypha Bibliographies]]
 
* '''[[Texts]]''' : [[Book of Tobit]] --  [[Book of Judith]] -- [[Esther Additions]] -- [[Wisdom of Solomon]] -- [[Book of Sirach]] -- [[1 Baruch]] and the [[Letter of Jeremiah]] -- [[Daniel Additions]] ([[Prayer of Azariah and Song of the Children]] -- [[Susanna]] -- [[Bel and the Dragon]]) -- [[1 Maccabees]] -- [[2 Maccabees]] -- [[3 Ezra|3 Ezra (1 Esdras)]] -- [[Prayer of Manasseh]] -- [[Psalm 151]] -- [[3 Maccabees]] -- [[4 Ezra|4 Ezra (2 Esdras)]]
 
* '''[[People]]''' :  [[Baruch]] -- [[Esther]] -- [[Ezra]] -- [[Judith]] -- [[Solomon]] -- [[Susanna]] -- [[Tobit]]
 
* '''[[Timeline]]''' : [[:Category:OT Apocrypha Studies--2020s|2020s]] -- [[:Category:OT Apocrypha Studies--2010s|2010s]] -- [[:Category:OT Apocrypha Studies--2000s|2000s]] -- [[:Category:OT Apocrypha Studies--1990s|1990s]] -- [[:Category:OT Apocrypha Studies--1980s|1980s]] -- [[:Category:OT Apocrypha Studies--1970s|1970s]] -- [[:Category:OT Apocrypha Studies--1960s|1960s]] -- [[:Category:OT Apocrypha Studies--1950s|1950s]] -- [[:Category:OT Apocrypha Studies--1940s|1940s]] -- [[:Category:OT Apocrypha Studies--1930s|1930s]] -- [[:Category:OT Apocrypha Studies--1920s|1920s]] -- [[:Category:OT Apocrypha Studies--1910s|1910s]] -- [[:Category:OT Apocrypha Studies--1900s|1900s]] -- [[:Category:OT Apocrypha Studies--1850s|1850s]] -- [[:Category:OT Apocrypha Studies--1800s|1800s]] -- [[:Category:OT Apocrypha Studies--1700s|1700s]] -- [[:Category:OT Apocrypha Studies--1600s|1600s]] -- [[:Category:OT Apocrypha Studies--1500s|1500s]] -- [[OT Apocrypha Studies|Home]]
 
* '''[[Languages]]''' : [[:Category:OT Apocrypha Studies--English language|English]] -- [[:Category:OT Apocrypha--French Apocrypha|French]] -- [[:Category:OT  Apocrypha Studies--German language|German]] -- [[:Category:OT Apocrypha Studies--Italian language|Italian]] -- [[:Category:OT Apocrypha Studies--Latin language|Latin]] -- [[:Category:OT Apocrypha Studies--Spanish language|Spanish]]
 
* '''[[Scholarship]]''' : [[Richard Taverner]] -- [[Sisto da Siena|Sixtus of Siena]] -- [[Johann Gottfried Eichhorn]] -- [[Robert Henry Charles]] -- [[Edgar J. Goodspeed]] -- [[Bruce M. Metzger]] -- [[David Arthur DeSilva]] -- [[Géza G. Xeravits]]


The material can be sort out thematically or chronologically as well as by the languages and countries of origin.
* '''[[Research Tools]]''' : [[International Society for the Study of Deuterocanonical and Cognate Literature]]


For biographical information on scholars and authors, see [[OT Apocrypha Scholars]].
* '''[[Related Fields]]''' : [[Bible Studies]] -- [[Hebrew Bible Studies]] -- [[OT Pseudepigrapha Studies]] -- [[Second Temple Studies]] -- [[Septuagint Studies]]
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'''[[OT Apocrypha Studies]]''' : [[:Category:OT Apocrypha Studies--2020s|2020s]] -- [[:Category:OT Apocrypha Studies--2010s|2010s]] -- [[:Category:OT Apocrypha Studies--2000s|2000s]] -- [[:Category:OT Apocrypha Studies--1990s|1990s]] -- [[:Category:OT Apocrypha Studies--1980s|1980s]] -- [[:Category:OT Apocrypha Studies--1970s|1970s]] -- [[:Category:OT Apocrypha Studies--1960s|1960s]] -- [[:Category:OT Apocrypha Studies--1950s|1950s]] -- [[:Category:OT Apocrypha Studies--1940s|1940s]] -- [[:Category:OT Apocrypha Studies--1930s|1930s]] -- [[:Category:OT Apocrypha Studies--1920s|1920s]] -- [[:Category:OT Apocrypha Studies--1910s|1910s]] -- [[:Category:OT Apocrypha Studies--1900s|1900s]] -- [[:Category:OT Apocrypha Studies--1850s|1850s]] -- [[:Category:OT Apocrypha Studies--1800s|1800s]] -- [[:Category:OT Apocrypha Studies--1700s|1700s]] -- [[:Category:OT Apocrypha Studies--1600s|1600s]] -- [[:Category:OT Apocrypha Studies--1500s|1500s]] -- [[OT Apocrypha Studies|Home]]
 
'''[[Timeline|General]]''' : [[2020s]] -- [[2010s]] -- [[2000s]] -- [[1990s]] -- [[1980s]] -- [[1970s]] -- [[1960s]] -- [[1950s]] -- [[1940s]] -- [[1930s]] -- [[1920s]] -- [[1910s]] -- [[1900s]] -- [[1850s]] -- [[1800s]] -- [[1700s]] -- [[1600s]] -- [[1500s]] -- [[1450s]] -- [[Medieval]] -- [[Timeline|Home]]
 
}}
 
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'''[[OT Apocrypha Studies]]''' : [[:Category:OT Apocrypha Studies--English language|English]] -- [[:Category:OT Apocrypha--French Apocrypha|French]] -- [[:Category:OT  Apocrypha Studies--German language|German]] -- [[:Category:OT Apocrypha Studies--Italian language|Italian]] -- [[:Category:OT Apocrypha Studies--Latin language|Latin]] -- [[:Category:OT Apocrypha Studies--Spanish language|Spanish]]
}}
 
 
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== Highlights ==
 
* [[The Apocrypha and Pseudepigrapha of the Old Testament (1913 Charles), edited volume]]
 
* [[The Uncanonical Jewish Books (1918 Ferrar), book]]
 
* [[The Story of the Apocrypha (1939 Goodspeed), book]]
 
* [[The Apocryphal Literature: A Brief Introduction (1945 Torrey), book]]
 
* [[The Apocrypha: Bridge of the Testaments (1954 Dentan), book]]
 
* [[An Introduction to the Apocrypha (1957 Metzger), book]]
 
* [[The Origin and Significance of the Apocrypha (1967 Rowley), book]]
 
* [[Invitation to the Apocrypha (1999 Harrington), book]]
 
* [[Introducing the Apocrypha: Message, Context, and Significance (2002 DeSilva), book]]
 
* [[Introduction to the Apocrypha: Jewish Books in Christian Bibles (2021 Wills), book]]
 
* [[The Jewish Annotated Apocrypha (2021 Klawans, Wills), edited volume]]
 
* [[The Oxford Handbook of the Apocrypha (2021 Oegema), edited volume]]
 
== History of research ==
 
The corpus of the OT Apocrypha or Deuterocanici owes its existence to the polemics of the Reformation era and was sanctioned by the Council of Trent in 1546.
The corpus of the OT Apocrypha or Deuterocanici owes its existence to the polemics of the Reformation era and was sanctioned by the Council of Trent in 1546.


The Protestant reformers acknowledged only the books also found in the Rabbinic Canon or [[Hebrew Bible]] as inspired scripture in the Old Testament. The Council of Trent reacted by affirming the larger canon of the traditional Roman Catholic Church, based on the Latin [[Vulgate]]: “If any one receive not, as sacred and canonical, the said books entire with all their parts, as they have been used to be read in the Catholic Church and as they are contained in the old Latin Vulgate . . . let him be anathema.”  
The Protestant reformers acknowledged only the books also found in the Rabbinic Canon or [[Hebrew Bible]] as inspired scripture in the Old Testament. The Council of Trent reacted by affirming the larger canon of the traditional Roman Catholic Church, based on the Latin [[Vulgate]]: “If any one receive not, as sacred and canonical, the said books entire with all their parts, as they have been used to be read in the Catholic Church and as they are contained in the old Latin Vulgate . . . let him be anathema.”  


''The development of the corpus''
'''The development of the corpus'''


This different approach resulted in a different treatment of the material  within the Protestant and the Catholic tradition.
This different approach resulted in a different treatment of the material  within the Protestant and the Catholic tradition.


The first Protestant collection of '''OT Apocrypha''' by Taverner in 1549 published as a separated corpus texts originally printed as part of the Old Testament (from the 1939 [[Taverner's Bible]]) and included the apocalyptic [[4 Ezra]]  
The first Protestant collection of '''OT Apocrypha''' by Taverner in 1549 published as a separated corpus texts originally printed as part of the Old Testament (from the 1939 [[Taverner's Bible]], where they were still calle "Hagiographa") and included the apocalyptic [[4 Ezra]]  


On the other hand, the major Roman Catholic commentary of the 16th century, the [[Biblioteca Magna]] by [[Sisto of Siena|Sixtus of Siena]] in 1566 included these texts (with the exception of [[4 Ezra]]) in the Old Testament, only by giving them the label of ''deuterocanonici'' in recognition of the fact that their canonicity had been disputed.
On the other hand, the major Roman Catholic commentary of the 16th century, the [[Biblioteca Magna]] by [[Sisto of Siena|Sixtus of Siena]] in 1566 included these texts (with the exception of [[4 Ezra]]) in the Old Testament, only by giving them the label of ''deuterocanonici'' in recognition of the fact that their canonicity had been disputed.
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Likewise, general Introductions to the OT Apocrypha are found in many commentaries or introductions to either the Bible or the [[Old Testament]].  
Likewise, general Introductions to the OT Apocrypha are found in many commentaries or introductions to either the Bible or the [[Old Testament]].  


''The Prehistory of the corpus (4th-16th centuries)''
'''The Prehistory of the corpus (4th-16th centuries)'''


Both Catholics and Protestants could claim the authority of [[Jerome]] who in 390-405 had translated into Latin all the OT books listed by the the Councils of Hippo (339 CE) and Carthage (397 CE). Following the principle of [[Hebraica veritas]], however, Jerome had expressed his personal uneasiness in considering canonical those texts which he labeled "apocryphal" since they were not included in the Rabbinic Canon or [[Hebrew Bible]]. As he wrote in the ''Preface to the Books of Samuel and Kings'', "This preface to the Scriptures may serve as a 'helmeted' introduction to all the books which we turn from Hebrew into Latin, so that we may be assured that what is not found in our list must be placed amongst the Apocryphal writings. Wisdom, therefore, which generally bears the name of Solomon, and the book of Jesus, the Son of Sirach, and Judith, and Tobias, and the Shepherd are not in the canon. The first book of Maccabees I have found to be Hebrew, the second is Greek, as can be proved from the very style."
Both Catholics and Protestants could claim the authority of [[Jerome]] who in 390-405 had translated into Latin all the OT books listed by the the Councils of Hippo (339 CE) and Carthage (397 CE). Following the principle of [[Hebraica veritas]], however, Jerome had expressed his personal uneasiness in considering canonical those texts which he labeled "apocryphal" since they were not included in the Rabbinic Canon or [[Hebrew Bible]]. As he wrote in the ''Preface to the Books of Samuel and Kings'', "This preface to the Scriptures may serve as a 'helmeted' introduction to all the books which we turn from Hebrew into Latin, so that we may be assured that what is not found in our list must be placed amongst the Apocryphal writings. Wisdom, therefore, which generally bears the name of Solomon, and the book of Jesus, the Son of Sirach, and Judith, and Tobias, and the Shepherd are not in the canon. The first book of Maccabees I have found to be Hebrew, the second is Greek, as can be proved from the very style."
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The Protestant interpreted strictly the principle of ''Hebraica veritas'' enunciated by Jerome. The Tridentine Fathers instead relied on a long if not entirely consistent tradition of interpreters, including Augustine, who considered "canonical" all books in the [[Vulgate]] including Jerome's "apocryphal" books--a tradition supported at the end of the 5th century by the Gelasian Decree and reiterated at the Council of Florence in 1442. The Tridentine canon was thus identical to the list issued by the Council of Hippo (339 CE), except that the Council Fathers appear to have misunderstood the meaning of 1 and 2 Esdras, which they identified as the proto-canonical books of Ezra and Nehemiah with the exclusion of 2 Esdras (=4 Ezra).
The Protestant interpreted strictly the principle of ''Hebraica veritas'' enunciated by Jerome. The Tridentine Fathers instead relied on a long if not entirely consistent tradition of interpreters, including Augustine, who considered "canonical" all books in the [[Vulgate]] including Jerome's "apocryphal" books--a tradition supported at the end of the 5th century by the Gelasian Decree and reiterated at the Council of Florence in 1442. The Tridentine canon was thus identical to the list issued by the Council of Hippo (339 CE), except that the Council Fathers appear to have misunderstood the meaning of 1 and 2 Esdras, which they identified as the proto-canonical books of Ezra and Nehemiah with the exclusion of 2 Esdras (=4 Ezra).


''The Canonical Status of "OT Apocryphal" Texts before the 4th century''
'''The Canonical Status of "OT Apocryphal" Texts before the 4th century'''


Before the 16th century and even more so before Jerome's [[Vulgate]], the OT Apocrypha or Deutocanonici did not exist as a distinctive corpus, but were part of the "gray area" made of a larger amount of books that were more or less authoritative, or authoritative for some Christians but not for others, and already in the Second Temple period were disputed among different Jewish groups. As no identifiable groups of [[OT Apocrypha]] existed before Jerome's embryonal collection of "apocryphal texts", any discussion about the presence of the [[OT Apocrypha]] corpus in earliest Christian and Second Temple Jewish "canons" should be avoided as anachronistic and the analysis should be strictly limited to the "canonical status" of each of the individual texts eventually accepted in the [[OT Apocrypha]].
Before the 16th century and even more so before Jerome's [[Vulgate]], the OT Apocrypha or Deutocanonici did not exist as a distinctive corpus, but were part of the "gray area" made of a larger amount of books that were more or less authoritative, or authoritative for some Christians but not for others, and already in the Second Temple period were disputed among different Jewish groups. As no identifiable groups of [[OT Apocrypha]] existed before Jerome's embryonal collection of "apocryphal texts", any discussion about the presence of the [[OT Apocrypha]] corpus in earliest Christian and Second Temple Jewish "canons" should be avoided as anachronistic and the analysis should be strictly limited to the "canonical status" of each of the individual texts eventually accepted in the [[OT Apocrypha]].


''The Texts now labeled as [[OT Apocrypha]] in their original setting''
'''The Texts now labeled as [[OT Apocrypha]] in their original setting'''


The books now in the [[OT Apocrypha]] have very little in common, except the fact that they all come from the Second Temple Period. They do not share the same theology, worldview or literary genre, and originated in different times and places. They are the product of different varieties of Second Temple Judaism. Ultimately, it was only chance which made them part of this special corpus and not "canonical" or ''pseudepigraphical."
The books now in the [[OT Apocrypha]] have very little in common, except the fact that they all come from the Second Temple Period. They do not share the same theology, worldview or literary genre, and originated in different times and places. They are the product of different varieties of Second Temple Judaism. Ultimately, it was only chance which made them part of this special corpus and not "canonical" or ''pseudepigraphical."
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'''External links'''
'''External links'''
*[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Deuterocanonical_books Wikipedia]
*[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Deuterocanonical_books Wikipedia]
}}
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[[:Category:OT Pseudepigrapha Studies--English|English]] -- [[:Category:OT Pseudepigrapha--French|French]] -- [[:Category:OT Pseudepigrapha Studies--German|German]] -- [[:Category:OT Pseudepigrapha Studies--Italian|Italian]] -- [[:Category:OT Pseudepigrapha Studies--Latin|Latin]] -- [[:Category:OT Pseudepigrapha Studies--Spanish|Spanish]] >
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[[:Category:OT Apocrypha Studies--American Scholarship|American Scholarship]] -- [[:Category:OT Apocrypha Studies--Argentine Scholarship|Argentine Scholarship]] -- [[:Category:OT Apocrypha Studies--Australian Scholarship|Australian Scholarship]] -- [[:Category:OT Apocrypha Studies--British Scholarship|British Scholarship]] -- [[:Category:OT Apocrypha Studies--Canadian Scholarship|Canadian Scholarship]] -- [[:Category:OT Apocrypha Studies--Dutch Scholarship|Dutch Scholarship]] -- [[:Category:OT Apocrypha Studies--French Scholarship|French Scholarship]] -- [[:Category:OT Apocrypha Studies--Greek Scholarship|Greek Scholarship]] -- [[:Category:OT Apocrypha Studies--German Scholarship|German Scholarship]] -- [[:Category:OT Apocrypha Studies--Hungarian Scholarship|Hungarian Scholarship]] -- [[:Category:OT Apocrypha Studies--Israeli Scholarship|Israeli Scholarship]] -- [[:Category:OT Apocrypha Studies--Italian Scholarship|Italian Scholarship]] -- [[:Category:OT Apocrypha Studies--Jewish Scholarship|Jewish Scholarship]] -- [[:Category:OT Apocrypha Studies--Korean Scholarship|Korean Scholarship]] -- [[:Category:OT Apocrypha Studies--Norwegian Scholarship|Norwegian Scholarship]]-- [[:Category:OT Apocrypha Studies--Polish Scholarship|Polish Scholarship]]-- [[:Category:OT Apocrypha Studies--Portuguese Scholarship|Portuguese Scholarship]]-- [[:Category:OT Apocrypha Studies--Romanian Scholarship|Romanian Scholarship]] -- [[:Category:OT Apocrypha Studies--Spanish Scholarship|Spanish Scholarship]] -- [[:Category:OT Apocrypha Studies--Swiss Scholarship|Swiss Scholarship]]
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[[OT Apocrypha Studies in Austria|Austria]] --[[OT Apocrypha Studies in Denmark|Denmark]] -- [[OT Apocrypha Studies in Finland|Finland]] -- [[OT Apocrypha Studies in France|France]] -- [[OT Apocrypha Studies in Germany|Germany]] -- [[OT Apocrypha Studies in Hungary|Hungary]] -- [[OT Apocrypha Studies in Israel|Israel]] -- [[OT Apocrypha Studies in Italy|Italy]] -- [[OT Apocrypha Studies in Latvia|Latvia]] -- [[OT Apocrypha Studies in Lithuania|Lithuania]] -- [[OT Apocrypha Studies in the Netherlands|Netherlands]] -- [[OT Apocrypha Studies in Poland|Poland]] -- [[OT Apocrypha Studies in South Korea|South Korea]] -- [[OT Apocrypha Studies in Spain|Spain]] --  [[OT Apocrypha Studies in the United Kingdom|United Kingdom]] -- [[OT Apocrypha Studies in the United States|United States]]
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*[[OT Apocrypha Intro]]
*[[OT Apocrypha Editions]]
*[[OT Apocrypha Translations]] 
*[[OT Apocrypha Bibliographies]]
*[[Bible, with OT Apocrypha]]
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* [[Book of Tobit]] --  [[Book of Judith]]
* [[Esther Additions]] -- [[Wisdom of Solomon]]
* [[Book of Sirach]] -- [[1 Baruch]] and the [[Letter of Jeremiah]] --
* [[Daniel Additions]] ([[Prayer of Azariah and Song of the Children]]
* [[Susanna]]; [[Bel and the Dragon]])
* [[1 Maccabees]] -- [[2 Maccabees]]
* [[3 Ezra|3 Ezra (1 Esdras)]] -- [[Prayer of Manasseh]]
* [[Psalm 151]] -- [[3 Maccabees]]
* [[4 Ezra|4 Ezra (2 Esdras)]]}}
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*[[:Category:OT Apocrypha Studies--Top 1700s|Top 1700s]] -- [[:Category:OT Apocrypha Studies--Top 1800s|Top 1800s]] -- [[:Category:OT Apocrypha Studies--Top 1850s|Top 1850s]] 
*[[:Category:OT Apocrypha Studies--Top 1900s|Top 1900s]] -- [[:Category:OT Apocrypha Studies--Top 1910s|Top 1910s]] -- [[:Category:OT Apocrypha Studies--Top 1920s|Top 1920s]]
*[[:Category:OT Apocrypha Studies--Top 1930s|Top 1930s]] -- [[:Category:OT Apocrypha Studies--Top 1940s|Top 1940s]] -- [[:Category:OT Apocrypha Studies--Top 1950s|Top 1950s]]
*[[:Category:OT Apocrypha Studies--Top 1960s|Top 1960s]] -- [[:Category:OT Apocrypha Studies--Top 1970s|Top 1970s]] -- [[:Category:OT Apocrypha Studies--Top 1980s|Top 1980s]]
*[[:Category:OT Apocrypha Studies--Top 1990s|Top 1990s]] -- [[:Category:OT Apocrypha Studies--Top 2000s|Top 2000s]] -- [[:Category:OT Apocrypha Studies--Top 2010s|Top 2010s]]
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|title= Cognate Studies
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|logo= contents.png
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* [[Hebrew Bible Studies]]
* [[OT Pseudepigrapha Studies]]
* [[Hellenistic-Jewish Studies]]
* [[Apocalyptic Studies]]
* [[Qumran Studies]]
}}
|}
|}

Latest revision as of 12:24, 26 August 2023

OT Apocrypha Studies (Home Page)
OT Apocrypha Studies (Home Page)

OT Apocrypha.jpg


OT Apocrypha Studies / Studies in the OT Apocrypha is a field of research in Second Temple Judaism, that specializes in the study of the OT Apocrypha.


Timeline.jpg

OT Apocrypha Studies : 2020s -- 2010s -- 2000s -- 1990s -- 1980s -- 1970s -- 1960s -- 1950s -- 1940s -- 1930s -- 1920s -- 1910s -- 1900s -- 1850s -- 1800s -- 1700s -- 1600s -- 1500s -- Home

General : 2020s -- 2010s -- 2000s -- 1990s -- 1980s -- 1970s -- 1960s -- 1950s -- 1940s -- 1930s -- 1920s -- 1910s -- 1900s -- 1850s -- 1800s -- 1700s -- 1600s -- 1500s -- 1450s -- Medieval -- Home




Highlights

History of research

The corpus of the OT Apocrypha or Deuterocanici owes its existence to the polemics of the Reformation era and was sanctioned by the Council of Trent in 1546.

The Protestant reformers acknowledged only the books also found in the Rabbinic Canon or Hebrew Bible as inspired scripture in the Old Testament. The Council of Trent reacted by affirming the larger canon of the traditional Roman Catholic Church, based on the Latin Vulgate: “If any one receive not, as sacred and canonical, the said books entire with all their parts, as they have been used to be read in the Catholic Church and as they are contained in the old Latin Vulgate . . . let him be anathema.”

The development of the corpus

This different approach resulted in a different treatment of the material within the Protestant and the Catholic tradition.

The first Protestant collection of OT Apocrypha by Taverner in 1549 published as a separated corpus texts originally printed as part of the Old Testament (from the 1939 Taverner's Bible, where they were still calle "Hagiographa") and included the apocalyptic 4 Ezra

On the other hand, the major Roman Catholic commentary of the 16th century, the Biblioteca Magna by Sixtus of Siena in 1566 included these texts (with the exception of 4 Ezra) in the Old Testament, only by giving them the label of deuterocanonici in recognition of the fact that their canonicity had been disputed.

While the Protestant tradition downplayed the religious authority of the OT Apocrypha, the Catholic tradition saw in them the canonical foundation of some distinctive Catholic doctrines such as the legitimacy of Church's property (see Expulsion of Heliodorus from the Temple) or the practice of intercession for the dead (see Judas' Prayer for the Dead).

This distinction in the treatment of the material within the Protestant and Catholic traditions has shaped the foundations of modern research; see OT Apocrypha Studies.

One of the first major consequences of the birth of the corpus of the OT Apocrypha / Deuterocanonici was the gradual emergence (since the beginning of the 18th century) of the companion corpus of the OT Pseudepigrapha (which Catholics called OT Apocrypha) to collect all the many other ancient books that before the 16th century had shared with the OT Apocryphal texts the same destiny of being at the fringes of the ancient Jewish and Christian canons.

The publication in 1795 of Eichhorn's Einleitung mark the beginning of modern research in the OT Apocrypha. Ever since introductions to and edition of OT Apocrypha have been frequently published as parts of the Old Testament in the Catholic world and in the Protestant world, sometimes as autonomous works, sometimes as an appendix to the Old Testament, sometimes in association with the OT Pseudepigrapha and more recently as part of Second Temple Literature; see OT Apocrypha Intro.

The Old Testament Apocrypha have been published (in the original language or in translation) in many editions of both the Bible and the Old Testament or as a separate corpus or sometimes, together with the OT Pseudepigrapha.

Likewise, general Introductions to the OT Apocrypha are found in many commentaries or introductions to either the Bible or the Old Testament.

The Prehistory of the corpus (4th-16th centuries)

Both Catholics and Protestants could claim the authority of Jerome who in 390-405 had translated into Latin all the OT books listed by the the Councils of Hippo (339 CE) and Carthage (397 CE). Following the principle of Hebraica veritas, however, Jerome had expressed his personal uneasiness in considering canonical those texts which he labeled "apocryphal" since they were not included in the Rabbinic Canon or Hebrew Bible. As he wrote in the Preface to the Books of Samuel and Kings, "This preface to the Scriptures may serve as a 'helmeted' introduction to all the books which we turn from Hebrew into Latin, so that we may be assured that what is not found in our list must be placed amongst the Apocryphal writings. Wisdom, therefore, which generally bears the name of Solomon, and the book of Jesus, the Son of Sirach, and Judith, and Tobias, and the Shepherd are not in the canon. The first book of Maccabees I have found to be Hebrew, the second is Greek, as can be proved from the very style."

The Protestant interpreted strictly the principle of Hebraica veritas enunciated by Jerome. The Tridentine Fathers instead relied on a long if not entirely consistent tradition of interpreters, including Augustine, who considered "canonical" all books in the Vulgate including Jerome's "apocryphal" books--a tradition supported at the end of the 5th century by the Gelasian Decree and reiterated at the Council of Florence in 1442. The Tridentine canon was thus identical to the list issued by the Council of Hippo (339 CE), except that the Council Fathers appear to have misunderstood the meaning of 1 and 2 Esdras, which they identified as the proto-canonical books of Ezra and Nehemiah with the exclusion of 2 Esdras (=4 Ezra).

The Canonical Status of "OT Apocryphal" Texts before the 4th century

Before the 16th century and even more so before Jerome's Vulgate, the OT Apocrypha or Deutocanonici did not exist as a distinctive corpus, but were part of the "gray area" made of a larger amount of books that were more or less authoritative, or authoritative for some Christians but not for others, and already in the Second Temple period were disputed among different Jewish groups. As no identifiable groups of OT Apocrypha existed before Jerome's embryonal collection of "apocryphal texts", any discussion about the presence of the OT Apocrypha corpus in earliest Christian and Second Temple Jewish "canons" should be avoided as anachronistic and the analysis should be strictly limited to the "canonical status" of each of the individual texts eventually accepted in the OT Apocrypha.

The Texts now labeled as OT Apocrypha in their original setting

The books now in the OT Apocrypha have very little in common, except the fact that they all come from the Second Temple Period. They do not share the same theology, worldview or literary genre, and originated in different times and places. They are the product of different varieties of Second Temple Judaism. Ultimately, it was only chance which made them part of this special corpus and not "canonical" or pseudepigraphical."

References

External links

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