Moderate
to liberal scholars claim the Bible contains many pseudonymous writings, both
in the OT and NT. They claim Jews and Christians had lax standards of
canonicity, or were simply gullible about the claimants.
It’s instructive to compare
this claim with some testable examples. For instance, Joseph Smith and Brigham
Young claimed to rediscover long lost books of the Bible. Did Christian
denominations accept that claim? No. The Mormons “scriptures” have been
uniformly rejected outside their cult.
Only Mormons took seriously
the claim that he was merely recovering long-forgotten books of the Bible. And
even within Mormonism, you have liberal Mormons who reject the official
etiology. Even many cradle Mormons aren’t that credulous. Same thing with nominal
Muslims who are closet unbelievers.
You also have other would-be
prophets like Swedenborg, Sun Myung Moon, Ellen G. White, and Herbert W.
Armstrong who produce quasi-scriptures. But their “canon” is only honored
within their respective sects or cults.
Muhammad is yet another
example. The list is long.
Within Judaism, Menachem
Schneerson (the Lubavitcher Rebbe) is a handy example.
These examples illustrate the
implacable institutional resistance to the introduction of new books (sometimes
under the guise of pseudonymity) to the canon of Scripture.
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