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1 - The Interaction of Canon and History: Some Assumptions

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  25 November 2020

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Summary

Abstract

In his chapter, Tobias Nicklas focuses on the dynamic interconnections between what became the early Christian canon of the Holy Writings of the Bible and the identities resulting from the history of various Christian groups. The development of the canon was decisive for the beliefs of the Christians and their identity, but changes in the group identities led to changes of perspectives on the canon in various contexts. Thus, the ‘canonical process’ did not come to its end with the discontinuity of the closure especially of the canon. As a matter of fact, other writings that do not claim to be part of the canon, fulfil a function analogous to canonical writings, as the reception history of several so-called apocryphal writings and martyrdom passages imply. Building on Maurice Hallbwachs’ concepts of ‘social memories’ (Les cadres sociaux de la mémoire), and ‘collective memory’ (La mémoire collective), Nicklas critically analyses the relationship between memory and martyrdom and argues that while most of the canonical texts have been largely forgotten the landscapes of memory which were created by these texts still exist. This argument highlights the contestation but also the non-fixation and exclusivity of canons.

Keywords: biblical canon, contestation, rituals, identity, canonisation and landscapes of memory

How is it possible that at least some of us understand the Biblical canon as a group of Scriptures inspired by the word of God? And how is it possible that this group of inspired Scriptures developed and was collected in concrete historical circumstances? The problem of the relation of Biblical Canon and History is by no means new – it has been debated for more than 200 years. How is it possible that texts, which are at least by Jews and Christians understood as (being, being related to or mirroring) ‘the word of God’ originated in complex historical processes and circumstances? And what does it mean that the canon of these texts developed in several steps? A classical answer goes back to one of the most important evangelical theologians of the Enlightenment period, Johann Salomo Semler (1725-1791). In his Abhandlung von freier Untersuchung des Canon, which appeared between 1771 and 1775 in four volumes, Semler developed the basic idea that one has to distinguish between Scripture and word of God. In its substance, this thesis is still valid.

Type
Chapter
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Martyrdom
Canonisation, Contestation and Afterlives
, pp. 33 - 54
Publisher: Amsterdam University Press
Print publication year: 2020

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