Development of the Canon
The authors of our New Testament books did not know that they were writing Scripture—our current books of the Bible. They did not know that a New Testament would ever exist, much less that their writings would be a part of it. Nevertheless, these writings owe their prominence and influence to the fact that they came to be included in that corpus.
To understand this significant point,
let us imagine for a moment that Paul’s
letter to the Romans had simply come down to us as an independent writing, a
document from antiquity presenting the thoughts of a Christian missionary at
the height of his career. Who would read it, and why? In all likelihood, it
would be an interesting work to scholars who wanted to reconstruct the early
history of one of the world’s major religions.
But elderly men and women would not
be reading it in nursing homes, business professionals would not gather weekly
to read it at prayer breakfasts, and teenagers would not memorize passages from
it at summer camps. It would no doubt be regarded as a classic of ancient
epistolary literature (like the letters of Cicero), and it might get quoted now
and then, but it probably would not have inspired hundreds of paintings, thousands
of hymns, and millions of sermons. The impact and significance of all New
Testament writings is owed in large part to their inclusion in the Christian
canon.
The word canon literally means
“rule” or “standard,” but it is used by religious groups to refer to a list of books
that are officially accepted as Scripture. In the early years Christians simply
gathered together writings that they found to be helpful and shared them with
one another. Paul encouraged the churches to which he wrote letters to exchange
those letters with one another so that they could read what he had written to
other congregations as well as to their own community (see Col. 4:16).
Likewise, we are reasonably sure that multiple copies of Mark’s Gospel were produced and distributed to different parts of
the Roman Empire a few years after it was written (both Matthew and Luke appear
to have had copies). Since there were no printing presses at that time, the
production of manuscripts was a costly and time-consuming process;
nevertheless, Christians throughout the world wanted copies of these documents,
and they seem to have done a remarkable job of making and sharing copies with
one another.
At first there was no need for
official agreement as to which books were to be read; for the most part, the
works that circulated were the writings produced by people who had founded or
led the earliest churches, people such as Paul and the original disciples of
Jesus, or at least people who had known Paul or those original disciples. This
chain of connection to Jesus and/or to Paul would come to be known as the “apostolic tradition,” and
as long as churches were copying and sharing writings that stood within this tradition,
there was little need to decide which of those writings was worthy of being
labeled “Scripture.”
Almost from the start, however, there
were voices within Christianity that were in tension with that developing
tradition. From many of Paul’s letters, we learn that there were
people arguing for versions of the Christian faith that Paul himself rejected;
these people were preaching a message that they thought was “the gospel” but that Paul claimed was a
perversion of the gospel (see Gal. 1:6– 9). Some of these
alternative voices in the Christian movement probably produced writings as well
(see 2 Thess. 2:2), but their works do not appear to have been preserved or
included in the New Testament. In one sense, then, the New Testament is not
just a collection of early Christian writings; rather, it is a selection
of those writings.
The New Testament contains those
works that were considered to be most representative of what became mainstream
and orthodox. The process through which such selections were made was complex,
and there is controversy among
modern scholars as to how the
judgments were made. By the second century, however, two developments made the
question of canon a pressing one for Christians.
First, there were now Christians who
wanted to exclude writings with ties to the apostolic tradition that were not
to their liking. The most prominent figure in this regard was the Christian
scholar and evangelist Marcion (ca. 110–60), who came to prominence in the first half of the second
century. Marcion appears to have been influenced by a movement called “gnosticism,” which valued what was spiritual but
despised anything material or. He also wanted to purge Christianity of Jewish
influences and make it into a more purely gentile religion. Marcion urged his
followers to reject writings that taught a version of the faith different from
what he was promoting. Eventually he came up with an approved list of writings
that he thought should be considered Scripture for Christians: ten letters
of Paul (all but 1 Timothy, 2
Timothy, and Titus) and a copy of the Gospel of Luke. He also edited these eleven
books to remove positive references to the Jewish God, or to the Jewish
Scriptures, or to other matters that did not fit with his anti-Jewish, hyperspiritual
version of the faith (he claimed that the writings had been previously modified
by heretics and that by editing them he was merely restoring them to their
original form).
In any case, many writings currently
in our New Testament were rejected by Marcion and his followers not because
they were considered to be out of step with the apostolic tradition but rather
because that tradition itself was considered to be corrupt (steeped in
Jewishness and overly concerned with physical life in a material world).
Second, there were Christians in the second
century who began producing new writings and attributing these to people who
had belonged to the original circle of apostolic witnesses. In virtually every
case these new writings were copycat versions of books that had been written in
the first century: someone would write a letter promoting gnostic ideas and
claim that it was a newly discovered letter of Paul; someone else would write a
gospel portraying Jesus as a major supporter of gnosticism and claim that it
was a newly discovered work by one of his twelve disciples. These books
continued to be produced well into the fourth century. Their anachronisms and
idiosyncrasies make the fictional attributions of authorship readily apparent
today, but the production of such writings did cause confusion among Christians
in the first few centuries.
Thus the twofold problem: on the one
hand, most Christian churches wanted to use only those writings that could be
reasonably connected to the apostolic tradition; on the other hand, they wanted
to use all the writings that were connected with that tradition, not just ones
that fit with some particular teacher’s ideological
preferences. Thus by the end of the second century lists began to appear
specifying which writings were thought to meet these criteria. From these lists
it becomes apparent that most of the writings now found in our New Testament
were universally accepted as reliable witnesses to the apostolic tradition.
Seven books, however, had a more difficult time gaining such acceptance:
Hebrews, James, 2 Peter, 2 John, 3 John, Jude, and Revelation. We have no
indication that these books were ever denounced or rejected outright, but the more
cautious church leaders seem to have been reluctant to regard them as being on
a par with the others (i.e., as being works that should be regarded as
Scripture). Eventually, however, a consensus emerged, and by the beginning of
the fifth century our current New Testament canon of twenty-seven books was
well established.
Two conclusions regarding the canon
of New Testament writings would be accepted by most scholars today. On the one
hand, all the books in our current New Testament are ones that were deemed
compatible with what came to be regarded as “apostolic Christianity”: there are certain, basic matters of faith on which they
seem to speak with unanimity. On the other hand, the selection of canonical
writings was not a narrow one that eliminated diversity of opinion: the
twenty-seven New Testament writings present a wide variety of viewpoints,
including positions that sometimes are difficult to reconcile. Indeed, if all
the authors of these writings had been gathered into a single room at a given
place and time, they almost certainly would have argued with one another over
many matters that have continued to be of interest to Christians throughout the
centuries. In short, the New Testament writings evince a basic unity but also
remarkable diversity.
From Jesus to Us: Six Stages in the Transmission of the Gospel Tradition
Stage One: Historical Jesus
Jesus says and does things that are
considered remarkable.
Stage Two: Early Tradition Oral and/or
Written
People remember what Jesus said and
did and share these memories with others.
People write down brief accounts of
things that Jesus said and did.
Stage Three: Composition of the
Gospels
The Gospel writers compile their
books, drawing on both oral tradition and early written sources to form
narratives of Jesus’s life and work.
Stage Four: Preservation of
Manuscripts
People make copies of the Gospel
narratives and distribute them.
Stage Five: Translation
Scholars translate copies of the
Gospel narratives into other languages, including, eventually, our own.
Stage Six: Reception
In modern editions of the Gospels we
hear or read about what Jesus said and did.