When we discuss the makeup of the
Bible, the New Testament is usually the center of discussion. Given the
discoveries of various 2nd and 3rd century gnostic writings at Nag Hammadi, the
success of
The Da Vinci Code, and recent manuscript claims such as the Jesus'
Wife fragment one can easily see why the question of which books belong in the
Bible would center on the New Testament. However, people will question the
legitimacy of the Old Testament canon as well.
The accumulation of books in
the Old Testament is a much longer one than that of the New. The canon begins
right where the Jewish faith begins, with the first five books of Moses. These
books were called collectively the Laws of Moses or simply the Law. There are
books by various prophets, such as Isaiah, Ezekiel, Jeremiah and so on that hold
the definitive "Thus saith the Lord" pronouncements. They also provide the
validation of predictive prophecy. We also have several books are historical in
nature, such as Joshua, Judges, and the sets of 1 & 2 Samuel and 1 & 2 Kings.
Because these documented God's dealing with the nation and they held stories
about the various prophets interacting with the nation, they too were classified
by the Jewish priests as part of the writings of the Prophets. Lastly there are
the literary books, such as Psalms, Proverbs, Song of Solomon and Ecclesiastes
that were used in worship services. As well as other historical books like
Daniel, the books of Ezra-Nehemiah and the two books of Chronicles. These were
classified as the "Writings".
According to Norman Geisler and William Nix,
"Philo the Jewish philosopher of Alexandria, alluded to a threefold
classification of the Old Testament, and Flavius Josephus arraigned the
twenty-two books of the Hebrew Scriptures into three sections, saying that the
twenty-two books ‘retains the record of all the past;… five belong to Moses, …
the prophets who were after Moses, wrote down what was done in their time in
thirteen books. The remaining four books contain the hymns to God and precepts
for the conduct of human life."
1 There is evidence of a
more ancient two-fold division, which would fold the writings into the prophetic
section. This is used in the writings found in the Dead Sea Scrolls as well as
throught the New Testment writers.
2
Jesus' Validation of the Old Testament
Jesus never provided a
book by book list of the Old Testament canon. It simply wasn't necessary as the
Jews of that day all knew what was meant by Scripture. He did refer to the
Scripture as authoritative, though and we can see what He meant whenever he
talked about them. First, Jesus would quote passages from various
Scriptures and refer to them as such. He quoted multiple times from each of the
books of Moses, and from Isaiah, Jeremiah, Zecharaiah, Hosea, Micah and Malachi.
3
He also quoted from the Psalms calling them scripture (John 10:24, John 15:25)
and called Daniel a prophet of God (Matthew 24:15). So Jesus quotes from each of
these three divisions in a way that recognized those books as authoritative
scripture.
Further, Jesus referred to the collection of books
several times. He talked of "the Law and the Prophets" in Matthew 7:12,
11:13, 22:40, Luke 16:16, and John 1:45. In Luke 24:44, He refers to the
Scriptures in the threefold context, saying "These are my words that I spoke to
you while I was still with you, that everything written about me in the Law of
Moses and the Prophets and the Psalms must be fulfilled."
In Luke 11:50-51,
Jesus rebuked one of the experts of Scripture by saying, "the blood of all the
prophets, shed from the foundation of the world, may be charged against this
generation, from the blood of Abel to the blood of Zechariah, who perished
between the altar and the sanctuary." Abel is the first person to die in the
Hebrew Bible and Zechariah is the last. This reference would be obvious to such
an expert, but it also confirms the canon of the Old Testament was accepted as
authentic.
So, while Jesus did not explicitly list the books of the Old
Testament, He pointed to the Old Testament as the authoritative word of God and
said that all written in "the Law and the Prophets and the Psalms" must be
fulfilled. Therefore, we can hold a high level of confidence that the Old
Testament is truly the word of God.
References