Posted on 07/15/2008 4:35:15 PM PDT by Salvation
BOOKS OF THE OLD TESTAMENT |
BOOKS OF THE NEW TESTAMENT | |||
BOOK | PROBABLE DATE | BOOK | DATE |
Genesis | c.1250-1200 B.C. | Matthew | c.40-60 |
Exodus | c.1250-1200 B.C. | Mark | c.45-60 |
Leviticus | c.1250-1200 B.C. | Luke | 57-60 |
Numbers | c.1250-1200 B.C. | John | c.40-65 |
Deuteronomy | c.1250-1200 B.C. | Acts | 57-62 |
Joshua | c.1200 B.C. | Romans | 57 |
Judges | c.1200 B.C. | 1 Corinthians | 55 |
Ruth | c.1000 B.C. | 2 Corinthians | 56 |
1st Samuel | c.700 B.C. | Galatians | 56 |
2nd Samuel | c.700 B.C. | Ephesians | 58 |
1st Kings | c.600 B.C. | Philippians | 58 |
2nd Kings | c.600 B.C. | Colossians | 58 |
1st Chronicles | c.350 B.C. | 1 Thessalonians | early 50 |
2nd Chronicles | c.350 B.C. | 2 Thessalonians | 50-51 |
Ezra | c.400 B.C. | 1 Timothy | 55 |
Nehemiah | c.400 B.C. | 2 Timothy | 58 |
Tobit | c.200 B.C. | Titus | 57 |
Judith | c.150 B.C. | Philemon | 58 |
Esther | c.300 B.C. | Hebrews | c.67 |
1st Maccabees | c.100 B.C. | James | 40's |
2nd Maccabees | c.125 B.C. | 1 Peter | 65 |
Job | c.500 B.C. | 2 Peter | 61-62 |
Psalms | c.500 B.C. | 1 John | 57-62 |
Proverbs | c.450 B.C. | 2 John | 57-62 |
Ecclesiastes | c.300 B.C. | 3 John | 57-62 |
Song of Songs | c.450 B.C. | Jude | 61-62 |
Wisdom | c.100 B.C. | Revelation | 68-70 |
Sirach (Ecclesiasticus) | c.180 B.C. | ||
Isaiah | c.700 B.C. | ||
Jermiah | c.585 B.C. | ||
Lamentations | c.550 B.C. | ||
Baruch | c.550 B.C. | ||
Ezekiel | c.590 B.C. | ||
Daniel | c.165 B.C. | ||
Hosea | c.750 B.C. | ||
Joel | c.400 B.C. | ||
Amos | c.750 B.C. | ||
Obadiah | c.500 B.C. | ||
Jonah | c.450 B.C. | ||
Micah | c.740 B.C. | ||
Nahum | c.612 B.C. | ||
Habakkuk | c.600 B.C. | ||
Zephaniah | c.620 B.C. | ||
Haggai | c.520 B.C. | ||
Zechariah | c.520 B.C. | ||
Malachi | c.450 B.C. |
Source of dates of New Testament: John A. T. Robinson, "Redating The New Testament" 1976.
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Excellent! Bump!
When the Canonical books were chosen. I don’t know the date.
There will be someone who does know that.
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Just found the date of the Council of Trent in a CUF article about the Canon of the Bible.
I’m 65 and have been a practicing Catholic all my life. I admit that I am no biblical scholar. My brother-in-law was visiting with us for ten days earlier this month. He is a strict fundamentalist and is a total bible scholar. He is convinced that the universe is only 6,000 years old. I asked him what he thought of all the carbon dating, and of scientists saying that the earth was 4.5 billion years old (I got that from a geology course in college). He said that’s now how the bible counts time. His mother was in my living room while I was showing her some photos from a DVD on my TV. She asked me about one picture of Victoria Falls and I said that it had been doing that for millions of years. My B-i-L interjected, and said that no, it’s only been there for 6,000 years. Can anyone here shed some light on where he comes up with that number?
There are several schools to Young Earth Creatinism, they added the generations of all the people named in the Bible in the geneologies, add 2000 years and you get a number.
It’s based upon a reading, a myopic reading in my opinion, of Genesis 5 and 11. If you add up all the generations and carry them forward until modernity, 6,000 is a close approximation.
There are a few complications: The Pentatuch (Genesis through Deuteronomy) are actually a combination of writings from two eras, the latter contemporaneous with the Exile and return (appx 590 BC). So the table perhaps oversimplifies by listing only the earliest date. Another slight problem is that Isaiah is believed to be both pre-and post exilic (Chs 1-39 pre-Exile), Chs 40 - during Exile.
Regarding the New Testament, in the first table in the opening post I like the “early Aramaic version of Matthew” much better than what the scholars simply call “Q”. This would really be much of the material common to Matthew and Luke but not found in Mark.
I saw different references for the Old Testament too. Very interesting to me. And I think it had those two eras separated. I think it was on wiki
I’m not sure of what was in your brother-in-law’s mind.
I’ve heard some say the entire universe was created in six 24 hour days and calculating back through Bible chronology and time periods they arrive at 6,000 years or so to the creation of Adam.
The belief is that the “days” of creation of Genesis can only mean days of 24 hours.
The poster ist a preterist?
Why do you figure it was a preterist? (Many Catholics are partial preterists: they believe that there is a sense in which a prophesy is describing current conditions... but usually to demonstrate a larger theme which will come to full fruition at a future date. For instance: the Beast of Revelations is Nero, whose Hebrew name (QSR NRN) adds up to 666. BUT Nero serves merely as a fore-runner for an apocalyptic repression.)
James Usshershalom b'SHEM Yah'shua HaMashiach Adonai
My figuring was based on the observation that the chart shows all NT books being completed prior to the destruction of Jerusalem in AD 70. Many futurists date many of John's books later than that (but still 1st century).
(P.S. I'm not Catholic, so I'm not familiar with the RCC take on this)
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