Because Protestants are heretics and they removed books from the Bible that had things like prayer for the dead in Maccabees that ware contrary to their heretical theology.
Completely wrong. The Reformation had nothing to do with establishing Canon. That was done long ago by the earliest Christians and before that by ancient Hebrews.
The problem is letting a false Christ ("Vicar of Christ") add doctrines to support a Babylonian agenda.
Why did the "reformers" drop 7 books that had been part of the Bible since the Council of Nicaea in year 325?
Because they had aspects of all 7 conflicted with their heretical theology. Even Luthor just put them in the back of his Bible, even though he ADDED words to his German translation.
I get why people dislike, even hate, the Catholic Church, but lying about objective history is pathetic, even for you.
The Catholic Church added books to their canon AFTER the reformation began. They were long considered important writings containing some history but NOT INSPIRED. Rome deciding later on that they are inspired doesn't make them so.
Jerome was a church leader in the late 300’s. He was commissioned by the Bishop of Rome to create the Latin Vulgate. This was the “official” translation into Latin of whole Bible. Jerome did not believe the Apocrypha were inspired. He agreed that the Jewish people in Israel never treated them as Scripture. He acknowledged they had not changed that position.
[Jerome] included the Apocrypha in the Bible.. [but he] wrote introductions to each of them indicating they were helpful but not Scripture.
True Christians who left Rome can rely on 2000 years of scholarship (and prior to that Hebrew scholarship) regarding what is Scripture. We don't need pedophiles in robes telling us they got it wrong.
Because Protestants are heretics and they removed books from the Bible that had things like prayer for the dead in Maccabees that ware contrary to their heretical theology.
Everything else is pointless words on this issue.
Completely wrong. The Reformation had nothing to do with establishing Canon. That was done long ago by the earliest Christians and before that by ancient Hebrews.
The problem is letting a false Christ ("Vicar of Christ") add doctrines to support a Babylonian agenda.
Wormtongue.
Why did the "reformers" drop 7 books that had been part of the Bible since the Council of Nicaea in year 325?
Because they had aspects of all 7 conflicted with their heretical theology. Even Luthor just put them in the back of his Bible, even though he ADDED words to his German translation.
I get why people dislike, even hate, the Catholic Church, but lying about objective history is pathetic, even for you.
You need to repent of your lies.
The Council of Nicaea didn't determine canon, it was to discuss a specific theological problem. https://www.youtube.com/shorts/YgbbHzzOvk8
The Catholic Church added books to their canon AFTER the reformation began. They were long considered important writings containing some history but NOT INSPIRED. Rome deciding later on that they are inspired doesn't make them so.
If the ancient Hebrews didn't treat the Apocrypha as scripture, and most early Christians said they weren't,why would you then take 16th century Rome's word for it? That's silly. https://pastorunlikely.com/did-martin-luther-remove-books-from-the-bible-a-pastors-answer/
True Christians who left Rome can rely on 2000 years of scholarship (and prior to that Hebrew scholarship) regarding what is Scripture. We don't need pedophiles in robes telling us they got it wrong.
Dude, you ignorant heretic. You link to you YouTube short as evidence of what the Council of Nicaea did?
LMFAO
The Council affirmed the Canon because it promulgated canon law and the Nicaean Creed, and you can't do one with out the other being already set.
How's this, I'll give you a tiny silver bell ringing...the Bible canon was reaffirmed at a Council in Rome in 385 AD, just 60 years later.
The books of the Bible were set, until heretics such as yourself wanted to remove GOD'S WORD for man's theology.