
thanks
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Lots of neat info on this thread! Thanks.
A couple of notes here:
1. Wikipedia says that 3Maccabees is in the Septuagint, but it is not in the Catholic bible. However, the list that Wikipedia provides from the Council of Carthage seems to be the current Catholic list. So, the council affirmed the modern Catholic bible in the 4th century, not the complete Septuagint, it would seem, if Wikipedia can be trusted (Which is an iffy proposition)
2. The diagrams are neat, but include the RSV Catholic Edition as Catholic and the NRSV Protestant Edition as Protestant, but don't list the NRSV Catholic Edition at all. That's an odd exclusion, since the chart sets the precedent of including an ecumenical translation in the very same line of bibles as Catholic.
Catholic versus Protestant Bibles
Bible translations developed for Catholic use are complete Bibles. This means that they contain the entire canonical text identified by Pope Damasus and the Synod of Rome (382) and the local Councils of Hippo (393) and Carthage (397), contained in St. Jerome's Latin Vulgate translation (420), and decreed infallibly by the Ecumenical Council of Trent (1570). This canonical text contains the same 27 NT Testament books which Protestant versions contain, but 46 Old Testament books, instead of 39. These 7 books, and parts of 2 others, are called Deuterocanonical by Catholics (2nd canon) and Apocrypha (false writings) by Protestants, who dropped them at the time of the Reformation. The Deuterocanonical texts are Tobias (Tobit), Judith, Baruch, Ecclesiasticus (Sirach), Wisdom, First and Second Maccabees and parts of Esther and Daniel. Some Protestant Bibles include the "Apocrypha" as pious reading.