Why do some scholars want to add more books to the New Testament?

Q. Recently, A New New Testament, published by Hal Taussig, has incorporated 10 new books into the New Testament.  Most of these texts are Gnostic.  Can you shed some light on the claims of the “Bible scholars” behind the project as to why these texts should be added to the canon?

Your specific question is why a group of scholars wants to add particular books to the New Testament when these books are “Gnostic,” that is, they “come from a different time period than any New Testament document, and they represent a fundamentally different worldview,” as one reviewer has observed.  I will answer that question first.  But this new publication also raises the issue of whether anyone can add any more books to the New Testament at this point, and if so, how and why might that be done?  I’ll respond to that question as well.

I have not seen a copy of A New New Testament, but in my doctoral studies I did read some of the extra books it contains, such as the Gospel of Thomas and the Acts of Paul and Thecla.

The publisher’s web site, in “A Conversation With Hal Taussig,” explains that the committee of scholars behind the edition wanted to include these books precisely because they represent a fundamentally different worldview.  Taussig says that the new books will show that “some of the narrow-minded doctrines of orthodox Christianity and the old-fashioned ideas of the traditional New Testament are not the only way that the early Christ movements expressed themselves.”  He says that the expanded collection “opens the door to a wider set of expressions, practices, stories, and teachings than [Christians] have previously known.”

In other words, the scholars on the committee behind this publication (a complete list of them can be found in this article) didn’t like traditional Christian beliefs and practices, they wanted to challenge them by adding other kinds books to the Bible, and they’re hoping this will attract  people to their own beliefs.

No one can do this.  No self-appointed, narrowly-defined committee (this one excluded any scholars who didn’t find orthodox Christianity narrow-minded and the ideas of the New Testament old-fashioned) can decide on its own what books should be in the Bible.  The canon of the New Testament was not established by a committee or council of church leaders.

Rather, as I explain in this post, “books that stood the test of time through continuous use in diverse Christian centers were eventually accepted by almost all believers.”  The formation of the canon was a process that unfolded over centuries.  I believe, by faith, that through this process the Holy Spirit was bearing witness to the church corporately about which books were Scriptural.  (For specifics about the virtual consensus among Christians regarding the canon of Scripture, see this post.)

If we were going to add any more books to the canon, the same process would have to unfold in the centuries ahead.  For example, suppose we discovered another letter by the apostle Paul—his letter to Laodicea, for instance, mentioned at the end of Colossians but not known now to survive in any copies.  This letter would have to stand the test of time and continual use in diverse Christian communities, as the other New Testament documents have, before it was accepted as part of the word of God.

And the individuals who contributed to this ultimate determination would all have to be active community followers of Jesus.  The committee behind A New New Testament included a Jewish rabbi and an “expert in yogic and Buddhist traditions.”  While such people may have an academic background in biblical studies, by their own admission they are not part of the living Christian community that is animated and directed by the Holy Spirit.

I can, however, think of one good use for the extra books in question.  Recognizing that “early Christ movements expressed themselves” in ways different from the ones we know today can help us appreciate the good reasons behind many of the beliefs and practices we have adopted.

For example, in the Acts of Paul and Thecla, Thecla, thinking she is about to be killed in the arena by wild beasts, baptizes herself.  Her life is miraculously preserved and when she finds Paul afterwards, she tells him, “I have received the baptism.”  Paul does not correct her, from which we understand that in the circles in which this work originated around AD 80-160, self-baptism was considered acceptable.  But over time, Jesus’ followers recognized that baptism had to be the community affirming the work of God’s Spirit in an individual’s life, and so the practice of self-baptism was abandoned.

Since there is value in seeing that our beliefs and practices are the result of careful deliberation over time among alternatives, I think it’s helpful for people to know about early books that describe some of these alternatives.  But if we’re going to put these books together with the New Testament documents, I would call the whole collection An Anthology of Early Christian Literature.  That’s the title that many universities now use for what used to be called courses in “New Testament.”  Saying “Early Christian Literature” gives assurances that the enterprise is secular and historical.  The title of the new publication, by contrast, is a bid to change what people believe and practice as Christians by changing their Scriptures, and we should rightfully be concerned about this.

Another response to this questioner is offered in this post on Stephen Miller’s blog.

How did the Bible come to contain the books it does?

Q. A student I know is exploring the different religions right now.  He recently asked me how the Bible came to contain the books it now has in it.  Why were these put in, and others left out?  And why does the Catholic Bible have more books than the Protestant Bible?  What would you recommend I tell him?

The formation of the biblical canon (the collection of the books in the Bible) is easier to see first in the case of the New Testament, because that process was witnessed by history.  No one person or group sat down and decided what books would be in the New Testament (despite what you or your friend may have heard people like Dan Brown claim about the Council of Nicea, which never actually discussed the canon).  Instead, books that stood the test of time through continuous use in diverse Christian centers were eventually accepted by almost all believers. Books that were judged inconsistent with the other approved books came to be recognized as edifying, but not scriptural. This process was basically complete by the time Athanasius of Alexandria wrote his festal letter for AD 367, which contains the first listing of the New Testament books as we know them today.  A few remaining differences among centers were ironed out in the years that followed.  We can infer that a similar process of community acceptance and use over time had earlier created the Old Testament canon.

This is the historical perspective.  But from a theological standpoint, as one of my seminary professors once put it, “The Holy Spirit bore witness to the church corporately about what books should be included.”  In other words, the contents of the Bible were ultimately determined not by human authority, not even by the authority of the worldwide community of Jesus’ followers, but by divine authority.  No sooner did the church recognize these books than it submitted itself to them.  The church does not say, “The Bible is our book, and we can do with it whatever we want” (including dropping or disregarding teachings or whole books that are no longer in favor).  Rather, the Bible is God’s book, and the church is responsible to understand and obey its message.

An icon of St. Athanasius, who did not determine the biblical canon, but who was the first to list the New Testament books as we know them today.

The Catholic Bible has some extra books because it includes several that were written within the Jewish community in Greek before the time of Jesus.  (The Old Testament books were written instead in Hebrew and Aramaic.)  Catholics describe these books, which Protestants call the Apocrypha, as deuterocanonical, meaning that they were first disputed before they were accepted.  Eastern Orthodox Christians use this same term to mean that these books are of secondary authority.  For fuller details about these extra books, see this post.

This is a short answer to a very involved question, but I hope this information is helpful.