Yes, Its True, There is No Bible in the Orthodox Church
“Strictly speaking, there never was a Bible
in the Orthodox Church, at least not as we commonly think of the Bible as a
single volume book we can hold in our hand. Since the beginning of the Church,
from the start of our liturgical tradition, there has never been a single book
in an Orthodox church we could point to as the Bible. Instead, the various Books
of the Bible are found scattered throughout several service books located either
on the Holy Altar itself, or at the chanter’s stand. The Gospels (or their
pericopes) are complied into a single volume — usually bound in precious
metal and richly decorated — placed on the Holy
Altar.The Epistles (or, again, their
pericopes) are bound together in another book, called the Apostolos, which is
normally found at the chanter’s stand. Usually located next to the
Apostolos on the chanter’s shelf are the twelve volumes of the Menaion, as
well as the books called the Triodion and Pentekostarion, containing various
segments of the Old and the New
Testaments.The fact that there is no
Bible in the church should not surprise us, since our liturgical tradition is a
continuation of the practices of the early Church, when the Gospels and the
letters from the Apostles (the Epistles) had been freshly written and copied for
distribution to the Christian communities. The Hebrew Scriptures (what we now
call the Old Testament, comprising the Law (the first five books) and the
Prophets, were likewise written on various scrolls, just as they were found in
the Jewish synagogues.The Church is
not based on the Bible. Rather, the Bible is a product of the Church. For the
first few centuries of the Christian era, no one could have put his hands on a
single volume called The Bible. In fact, there was no one put his hands on a
single volume called The Bible. In fact, there was no agreement regarding which
books of Scripture were to be considered accurate and correct, or canonical.
Looking back over history, there were various lists of the canonical books
comprising the Bible:The Muratorian
Canon (130 AD) cities all the books we considered as parts of the Bible today,
except for Hebrews, Jude, 2 Peter, 2 John, 3 John, and
Revelation/ApocalypseCanon 60 of the local
Council of Laodicea (364 AD) cited
Revelation/ApocalypseA festal Epistle by
Saint Athanasius (369 AD) lists all of
them.Even so, there was no official,
authoritative canon listing all the books until the Sixth Ecumenical Council, at
Constantinople in AD 680. Canon II of that Council ratifies the First through
the Fifth Ecumenical Councils, as well as the local councils at Carthage (AD
255), Ancyra (AD 315), Neocaesaria (AD 315), Gangra (AD 340), Antioch (AD 341),
Laodicea (AD 364), Sardica (AD 347), Constantinople (AD 394), and Carthage (AD
419). When the Council at Laodicea specified the content of the bible as we know
it — 39 years after the First Ecumenical Council (AD 325) and 17 years
before the second Ecumenical Council (AD 381) — the Liturgy was pretty
much well-defined and established and had been canonized by common usage —
the reading from these books. It was not until the invention of the printing
press in Western Europe, coinciding with the period of the Protestant
Reformation of Western Christianity that The Bible was widely disseminated as a
single volume.”Source: Greek
Orthodox Diocese of Denver Bulletin: March 1995, Volume 3, Number 3., pp. 14-17.
h/t to Orrologion
Posted: Sunday - February 24, 2008 at 03:42 PM
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Published On: Mar 11, 2009 11:48 AM
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