In the final video in this 5-part series, Lee Martin McDonald and Mike Licona discuss whether the canon of the Bible is closed. Would McDonald add a book to the Bible not presently in it or omit some literature many believe are pseudepigraphal? If someone discovered a letter the apostle Paul wrote that had been lost until now, should we consider including it in the Bible? Were the biblical authors aware that they were writing Scripture? What is 3 Corinthians and the Diatessaron?
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Mike Licona is associate professor of theology at Houston Baptist University. HBU offers a fully accredited Master of Arts degree in apologetics that may be completed entirely online or on the HBU campus in Houston. For more information, visit [ Ссылка ].
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#canon
Is the Biblical Canon Closed (and other related questions)?
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3 corinthiansdiatessaronis the canon closedodes of solomondid the biblical authors know they were writing scripturehow the biblical canon was formedhow the canon of the bible was formedlee mcdonald canonmike licona canonlee mcdonald mike licona canonthe canonthe canon of scripturethe canon of the biblecanonisation of the biblecanonisation processcanonisationcanonization of the biblebible canonization processbiblical canonization process