

The Protestant Philosopher
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Building a Philosophical Defense of Protestantism | Dr. Christopher Cloos





Dear Protestants, Your Bible lacks 7 canonical books, removed by Martin Luther and John Calvin as “Apocrypha”. Protestants often quote Saint Jerome to justify this removal. Saint Jerome later changed his mind about the 7 deuterocanonical books in obedience to Pope Damasus. His famous quote from the Helemeted Preface (quoted daily by Protestants) doubting the 7 deuteros dates from 391. Nine years later he wrote that he had submitted to the Catholic position and rejected his private opinion. Can Protestants please drop their fan fiction that Jerome was a Proto-Protestant? Later in life (in Against Rufinus around 402 AD), he defended the Church's judgment on the 73-book canon saying, "What sin have I committed if I followed the judgment of the churches?"

























I feel like we've discussed this already, but let me explain it again. Let me first clarify that the whole thing isn't riding on Jerome, as you suggested. He's a key proponent of a tradition throughout your Church's history. It's one that views the deuterocanonicals as being non-canonical but edifying. This tradition pre-dates the councils in the late 300's. So, the whole thing isn't riding on Jerome. That said, let me mention the big picture. The big picture is that what you have are citations by Jerome. What I have are canonical judgments. These are different categories, as I explained in another reply. Top Jerome scholar Edmon Gallagher has concluded that you can't infer from Jerome citing them as Scripture to that being equal to, or a reliable guide to, how he views their canonical status. Why? Mainly because at the same time Jerome is citing them as Scripture he's declaring them non-canonical. For instance, Jerome cited Wisdom as "Divine Scripture" and then wrote "if one is pleased to receive this book" when citing the same book in his Commentary on Zechariah (406). He cited Sirach authoritatively and then wrote that the Church reads these books "not for the authoritative confirmation of ecclesiastical doctrines" (398). He "defended" the additions to Daniel as read in the Church and then wrote in the same commentary that they "exhibit no authority as Holy Scripture" (407). He quoted Baruch and then called it "totally unworthy of treatment" in his Commentary on Jeremiah (414-420). So, you're confusing citation practice with canonical judgment. The Fathers themselves distinguished these categories. Athanasius cited Wisdom as "Scripture" and the Shepherd of Hermas with "it is written" while excluding both from the canon. Jerome did the same thing. Your list shows he valued the books. His own formal statements, often in the same books you're citing, say the opposite.



Fr. Mike Schmitz says "one guy in Germany" took 7 books out of the Bible. Luther's 1534 Bible included them. Jerome denied their canonical authority in 391. Fr. Mike's fish story keeps getting bigger. New article: protestantreview.substack.com/p/did-luther-c…
