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protocanonical
protocanonical, a. (ˌprəʊtəʊkəˈnɒnɪkəl) [f. mod.L. prōtōcanonic-us (see proto- 1 + canon) + -al1.] See quots.: opp. to deuterocanonical.[1566 A. F. Sixtus Senensis Bibl. Sancta i. (1575) 13 Canonici primi ordinis, quos Protocanonicos appellare libet,..de quorum autoritate nulla vnquam in Ecclesia ca...
Oxford English Dictionary
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Protocanonical books
Early variants
Most of the protocanonical books were broadly accepted among early Christians. Some of the Antilegomena, such as the Book of Revelation, later joined the protocanonical books in the canon.
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deuterocanonical
deuterocanonical, a. (djuːtərəʊkəˈnɒnɪkəl) [f. mod.L. deutero-canonicus (used by Sixtus Senensis 1566: see quot.); see deutero- and canon, canonical.] Of, pertaining to, or constituting a second or secondary canon: opposed to protocanonical. Applied historically to those books of the Scripture Canon...
Oxford English Dictionary
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Patrick W. Skehan
Arbez, and his dissertation for his doctorate in Sacred Theology was entitled The Literary Relationship Between the Book of Wisdom and the Protocanonical
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Intertestamental period
The intertestamental period (Protestant) or deuterocanonical period (Catholic and Eastern Orthodox) is the period of time between the events of the protocanonical
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Protestant Bible
language, such Bibles comprise 39 books of the Old Testament (according to the Hebrew Bible canon, known especially to non-Protestant Christians as the protocanonical The division between protocanonical and deuterocanonical books is not accepted by all Protestants who simply view books as being canonical or not and therefore
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World English Bible
The WEB has two main versions of the Old Testament: one with Deuterocanonical books and the other limited to Protocanonical books. As noted in the second paragraph of the opening, the WEB has two main versions of the Old Testament: one limited to the Protocanonical books, while the
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Sixtus of Siena
had not been accepted as canonical by Jews and Protestants but which appeared in the Septuagint, and the definer for the Roman Catholics of the terms protocanonical
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Buddhist Hybrid Sanskrit
The language of these works is separate from the tradition of Brahmanical Sanskrit, and goes back ultimately to a semi-Sanskritized form of the protocanonical Pāli shares a large proportion of these words; in Edgerton's view, this seems to prove that most of them belong to the special vocabulary of the protocanonical
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Literal Standard Version
The Literal Standard Version (LSV) is a Modern English translation of the protocanonical books of the Bible with a number of distinctive features.
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Dating the Bible
Historical criticism
Historicity of the Bible
Jewish apocrypha
List of Old Testament pseudepigrapha
Mosaic authorship
New Testament apocrypha
Protocanonical
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Biblical apocrypha - Wikipedia
4 Esdras (2 Esdras in the King James Bible) The protocanonical and deuterocanonical books he placed in their traditional positions in the Old Testament. King James Version. The English-language King James Version (KJV) of 1611 followed the lead of the Luther Bible in using an inter-testamental section labelled "Books called Apocrypha", or just ...
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Biblical canon
It accepts the 39 protocanonical books along with the following books, called the "narrow canon". Eastern Orthodoxy uses the Septuagint (translated in the 3rd century BCE) as the textual basis for the entire Old Testament in both protocanonical and
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Abraham ibn Ezra
Baruch Spinoza, in concluding that Moses did not author the Torah, and that the Torah and other protocanonical books were written or redacted by somebody
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Development of the Old Testament canon
Reformers, the fourth session of the Catholic Council of Trent in 1546 confirmed that listed deuterocanonical books were equally authoritative as the protocanonical The protocanonical and deuterocanonical books
The Roman Catholic and Eastern Churches canons include books, called the deuterocanonical books, whose authority
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