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Pope Damasus in confirming the work of a synod at Carthage in 397 and a separate synod at Rome. This also closed the issue for Christianity until Luther reopened it and picked his own books and excluded James, Jude and Revelations along with the books now called the apocrypha by Protestants.

2006-10-24 16:23:06 · answer #1 · answered by OPM 7 · 0 0

No-one. Eusebius put together a canon in 325 that eventually became the official canon, except he left Revelation off the list. He considered it heresy. By the end of the 4th century, it had been added into Eusebius' list anyway.

2006-10-24 12:59:48 · answer #2 · answered by lenny 7 · 0 0

for there is only one christ and ond denomanation and that is under christ jesus 1st corinthians 1:13 well lets look at some things first matt mk luk were written aroun 60 ad jn was90 ad ,acts 65ad,romans 60ad,1st cor55ad,2nd cor 55ad, galatians 50ad,ephesians 60ad,philippans 60ad colossians 60ad,1st thessalonians 50ad,2nd thessalonians 50ad,1st and 2nd timothy 65ad, titus65ad,philemon 60,hebrews 70ad,james 50ad,1st and 2nd peter around 60 to 65ad1st 2nd 3rd john 90ad jude 90ad,rev 95ad,constantine founded orthodox around 330 ad so i guess it all depends who you ask i say god provided the bible not man cuz man cant make up his mind what he wants .

2006-10-24 13:23:57 · answer #3 · answered by Trace 2 · 0 0

http://www.bible-researcher.com/canon.html

gives all the history of the canons.

2006-10-24 13:01:55 · answer #4 · answered by Jay Z 6 · 0 0

read systematic pentocostal theology. or any book on church history

2006-10-24 13:01:01 · answer #5 · answered by gustvh2001 3 · 0 0

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