Bad Advertisement? Are you a Christian? Online Store: | PREVIOUS SECTION - NEXT SECTION - HELP Excursus on the Use of the Word “Canon.” (Bright: Notes on the Canons, pp. 2 and 3.) Κανών, as an ecclesiastical
term, has a very interesting history. See Westcott’s
account of it, On the New Testament Canon, p. 498 ff. The
original sense, “a straight rod” or “line,”
determines all its religious applications, which begin with St.
Paul’s use of it for a prescribed sphere of apostolic work
(2 Cor. x. 13; 15), or a regulative principle of Christian
life (Gal. vi. 16). It represents the element of
definiteness in Christianity and in the order of the Christian
Church. Clement of Rome uses it for the measure of Christian
attainment (Ep. Cor. 7). Irenæus calls the baptismal creed
“the canon of truth” (i. 9, 4): Polycrates (Euseb. v.
24) and probably Hippolytus (ib. v. 28) calls it “the canon of
faith;” the Council of Antioch in a.d.
269, referring to the same standard of orthodox belief, speaks with
significant absoluteness of “the canon” (ib. vii.
30). Eusebius himself mentions “the canon of truth”
in iv. 23, and “the canon of the preaching” in iii. 32; and
so Basil speaks of “the transmitted canon of true religion”
(Epist. 204–6). Such language, like Tertullian’s
“regula fidei,” amounted to saying, “We Christians
know what we believe: it is not a vague ‘idea’
without substance or outline: it can be put into form, and by it
we ‘test the spirits whether they be of God.’”
Thus it was natural for Socrates to call the Nicene Creed itself a
“canon,” ii. 27. Clement of Alexandria uses the
phrase “canon of truth” for a standard of mystic
interpretation, but proceeds to call the harmony between the two
Testaments “a canon for the Church,” Strom. vi. 15,
124, 125. Eusebius speaks of “the ecclesiastical
canon” which recognized no other Gospels than the four (vi.
25). The use of the term and its cognates in reference to the
Scriptures is explained by Westcott in a passive sense so that
“canonized” books, as Athanasius calls them (Fest. In more recent times a tendency has appeared to restrict the term Canon to matters of discipline, but the Council of Treat continued the ancient use of the word, calling its doctrinal and disciplinary determinations alike “Canons.”
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