A Review Article: "Canon Revisited: Establishing The Origins And Authority Of The New Testament Books" -- By: Jonathan R. Pratt

Journal: Detroit Baptist Seminary Journal
Volume: DBSJ 19:1 (NA 2014)
Article: A Review Article: "Canon Revisited: Establishing The Origins And Authority Of The New Testament Books"
Author: Jonathan R. Pratt


A Review Article:
Canon Revisited: Establishing The Origins And Authority Of The New Testament Books

Jon Pratt

Reviewed by Jon Pratt1

Canon Revisited: Establishing the Origins and Authority of the New Testament Books, by Michael J. Kruger. Wheaton: Crossway, 2012. 362 pp. $30.00.

Ever since German liberalism began to infect the world of New Testament studies in the latter part of the eighteenth century, conservative scholarship has fought valiantly to defend the authority, historicity, and inerrancy of the Scriptures. This battle has been waged on many fronts including textual criticism, biblical theology, and introduction. In the field of introduction, particularly, conservative scholars have defended first century dates for all of the NT books, and they have argued for the authenticity of the authors of those books while denying the possibility of pseudonymous interlopers. Conservatives have fit themselves well in this skirmish with regard to the dating and authorship of the NT books. But another field related to introduction that has not received as much attention is that of the canon. Michael J. Kruger, President and Professor of New Testament and Early Christianity at Reformed Theological Seminary in Charlotte, NC, is seeking to remedy this dearth in canon studies. While he has written a number of books and articles, Canon Revisited is his most important contribution to date.

In Kruger’s introductory chapter (15-24) he cites three factors that indicate why a study of the canon should rank high on any pastor’s list. First, “modern critical scholarship has continued to raise doubt about the authorship and date of numerous New Testament books” (17). The point, of course, is that if a book is deemed as a forgery, why would it have been included in an authoritative canon? Second, over the last 150 years many apocryphal materials have been discovered such as the Gospel of Peter and the Gospel of Thomas that have raised questions about the books that should be included in the canon. Third, the continued influence of Walter Bauer’s book

Orthodoxy and Heresy in Earliest Christianity brings into question the legitimacy and authority of the books currently found in our NT canon.

This third point requires a little more explanation for it stands as the basis for why point two has become an issue in modern discussions about the canon. Though many know the name Walter Bauer because of the lexicon he produced (Greek-English Lexicon of the New Testament and Other Early Christian Literature), his most significant scholarly contribution was his book...

You must have a subscription and be logged in to read the entire article.
Click here to subscribe
visitor : : uid: ()