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An Introduction
The Church View:
In the Catholic Church, the Bible is the Douay Bible
consisting of 73 books. In the Protestant church only the 66 books
that were approved by the Synod of Dordrecht in 1618 are in what is
known as the Authorized King James Bible.
The Bible View:
Though there is no specific list or accounting of all the
books that made up the complete Bible in scripture, there are over
20 books mentioned in the Bible, but not found there. This is proof
that many have been removed and there is evidence that many more
fell under the same fate.
An Introduction
Human history has allowed precious few ancient religious
writings to survive the onslaught of the more aggressive and
powerful religious forces, which seek only to gain territory and
wealth. Genocide and cultural eradication always go hand in hand
with missionary zeal. In many cases every trace of the conquered
society's religious writings, practices, icons, and even buildings
were destroyed in the name of conversion from worship of gods
considered evil, and religious customs labeled as heresies. What
generally results from past crusades is the conqueror's religion
replacing or predominantly blending with the conquered culture's
former religious practice, making its religion almost
unrecognizable. Christianity falls into the latter category, having
been the victim of the Roman Empire, under the Emperor Constantine,
who blended the Christian Church with the institutionalized "pagan"
practices of Rome and eliminated any semblance of either the Jewish
religious influence or the first church Jesus established during his
ministry.
The First Reformation
After solidifying his position to gain complete control of
the western portion of the empire in 312, the Emperor Constantine
instituted the Edict of Milan, a "Magna Carta of religious liberty,"
which eventually changed the Empire’s religion and put Christianity
on an equal footing with paganism. Almost overnight the position of
the Christian Church was reversed from persecuted to legal and
accepted. Constantine began to rely on the church for support, and
it on him for protection. The Church and the Empire formed an
alliance, which remains to this day. Very rapidly, the laws and
policies of the Empire and the doctrine of the Church became one
with Constantine as the interpreter of both law and policy. This was
accomplished by eliminating hundreds of books thought to be against
"Church" doctrine and watering down what remained by blending
Christian beliefs and practice with long established Roman
sanctioned pagan worship.
Constantine believed that the Church and the State should be
as close as possible. Constantine tolerated pagan practices, keeping
pagan gods on coins and retaining his pagan high priest title "Pontifex
Maximus" in order to maintain popularity with his former subjects.
In 330 he began an assault on paganism, but used a clever method of
persuasion to force people to follow the laws by combining pagan
worship with Christianity. He made December 25th, the birthday of
the pagan Unconquered Sun god, the official holiday now celebrated
as the birthday of Jesus. He also replaced the weekly day of worship
by making rest on Saturday unlawful and forcing the new religion to
honor the first, not the seventh day, as a day of rest. As a way of
defining his concept of the new universal religion, he simply
classified everything "Jewish" to be an abomination. Considering
almost every aspect of the Bible is "Jewish" by association, every
doctrinal biblical principle was changed or eliminated. After 337
Constantine increased his purging of the more obvious aspects of
paganism.
Through a series of Universal
Councils, he and his successors completely altered doctrine without
regard to biblical edict, set up a church hierarchy of his own
design, and established a set of beliefs and practices, which are
the basis
for all mainstream Bible-based churches. The separation of the
Protestants and the Roman Church caused a physical split, but the
beliefs and practices established by Constantine remained almost
identical. Very little has changed since the 4th century Councils
changed the face of Christianity. An effective practice instituted
was the purging of any book in the formerly accepted biblical works,
over 80% of the total, that church leaders felt did not fit within
their new concept of Christianity. The doctrines and practices
remaining in the surviving books were effectively eradicated by
simply changing them by replacing clear scripture with
Church-sanctioned doctrine.
Forbidden, Not Lost
Constantine began what was to become a century’s long effort
to eliminate any book in the original Bible that was considered
unacceptable to the new doctrine of the church. At that time, it is
believed there were up to 600 books, which comprised the work we now
know as the Bible. Through a series of decisions made by the early
church leadership, all but 80 of those books, known as the King
James Translation of 1611, were purged from the work, with a further
reduction by the Protestant Reformation bringing the number to 66 in
the "Authorized" King James Bible.
What we now have in Bible-based religion, whether labeled as
"Catholic", or Protesting Catholic, known as “Protestant", is
unrecognizable from either the Hebrew religion, now known as the
Jewish religion, or the church established at Jerusalem by the
Apostles and disciples of Jesus. The practices of this first church
are not practiced by any major religion and they are almost unknown,
despite being clearly outlined in the existing New Testament. In its
place are doctrines and practices first established in the first
"true" Reformation of Christianity, which was begun by Constantine.
There is much controversy over how many books the Bible should
actually contain, but considering the depth and scope of those few
works remaining in the "accepted" Bible, we see but a fragment of
incredible wisdom and history. A study of the Lost Books of the
Bible is incomplete without a clear understanding that this is not a
matter of simple loss, but a campaign by the Roman Catholic Church
to purge books variously classified as heretical, dangerous, and
corruptive. To the public they are “lost”; to the Church they are
“forbidden”. Although the exact number of books purged is known only
to the Church, and not shared knowledge, some can be determined by
the discovery of their presence in the church prior to the
reformation resulting in what became known as the Roman "Universal"
Church.
One of the more obvious forms of discovery comes from the
surviving books themselves, which cite works not present in the
existing collection. Also, many do not know that the Apocryphal
books were actually included in the King James translation until the
Synod of Dordrecht removed them in 1618. And, other writings connect
many books to the first church. Whatever the number before the purge
by the formation of Catholicism by Constantine; even one lost book
is a great loss indeed.
We claim no expertise concerning the authenticity of any of
the lost books and leave this judgment to the reader. We do,
however, strongly reject the self-proclaimed authority of any
dogmatically motivated and church-controlled mortals who think
themselves qualified to make such decisions. One of the most
logical and realistic concepts in the Bible is the caution that one
should prove all things. We believe that proving the veracity of a
given thing is an individual responsibility, which must not, and
should not be the duty of those who think themselves better judges.
Old Testament Apocryphal Writings
The term "apocrypha" comes from a Greek word meaning
"hidden" or "secret" and the books were originally considered by the
early church as too exalted to be available to the general public.
As time progressed, the exalted nature of the books was lost and the
books were deemed by some as false. Between the Book of Malachi and
Matthew there is a gap of approximately 450 years. It is these books
that fill that gap and in the time of Christ, these books formed
part of the Septuagint Greek Bible that was in circulation at that
time.
What is missing from most Bibles, and our understanding of it,
is what happened in that 450-year gap. Prophets were still writing
and reflecting on life in the Holy Land right up until the Romans
destroyed the temple of Jerusalem in 70 AD. The world that Jesus
entered in 4 BC is not the world that Daniel and Malachi
experienced. One of the values of these books is how they reflect
the mindset of Judaism and a Roman world that the New Testament
writers faced. Malachi and Daniel leave us in Persia; Matthew brings
us into a Roman world. The Apocrypha bridges that gap and gently
nudges us into the reality of Roman Palestine. It was only in the
fourth century AD that Christians first started to question the
“canonicity” of the works, although most survived to be included in
the King James translation of the Bible in 1611.
Part 2
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