Those other books about Judas for example are just as unreliable as the current books in the Bible. Theres not really a reason why to deny 1 unreliable book and accept another unreliable one.
Well I am not about to fully explain WHY and HOW the Bible is more relevant than the unreliable Apocrypha. If this seriously interests someone the information is there. I am not really inspired to write 3 to 4 pages of writing trying to introduce the subject. This is not a matter of belief or faith or anything else you all try to encourage.
Although I am very sure that most of you have no idea how to do this and yet are so confident that when I say, "The bible is more reliable than the Apocrypha." that I am wrong or being selective.
I wish it was my own ideas that I had come to this conclusion. In fact when I first heard about the Apocrypha I thought, wow finally we get to see books that where banned. As I studied them however, although they do reflect similar ideas of the Bible, they often reflect offshoot perspectives. I really don't want to debate this because this is clear and theologically accepted. Anyone who denies this is in the minority and or hasn't even thought about how to measure historical worth of ancient texts. It is not a matter of faith, it is a matter of research.
How you compare evidence for Caesar with evidence for Jesus doesnt make sense either.
It doesn't make sense at all that SOME people believe in Caesar (for example) but on the other hand do not believe in Jesus. Some even push it so far as to say Jesus is make believe! Thankfully you do not deny Christ lived.
...nobody with at least some brains denies that Jesus or Caesar did exist, or where they traveled/conquered to. Jesus though claimed he was the son of god (those people go into mental hospitals these days) and his followers claimed he did miracles. And THAT is the the part we're doubting.
And of course it is fine to doubt. But some people push this doubt so far as to say it is as fantastic as believing in Santa Clause. The only miracle that you have to believe in is the Resurrection, the rest are unimportant by comparison. Otherwise the rest that builds the bible is not about miracles it is about a way you live your life now. That is the greatest part of the Bible.
Why would you assume that? And you would be quite wrong, of course. The apocrypha are books that were accepted at the Council of Nicaea as part of the canon, but later (much later) rejected by some denominations. Jesus read and quoted some of those that you reject, by the way. (Jesus had only the OT, in the form of the Septuagint.)
No, we're talking about various gospels that did not become part of the canon but were widely used by various early Christian congregations in the first century. More reliable copies of these and the synoptic gospels have turned up and are available. I recommend a book called The Complete Gospels which includes 20, the 4 we normally read but with far better preserved text, and 16 additional ones that the early Christians used.
I've made this suggestion several times; I suspect you will never dare to open that or similar books. If you do I have lots more suggested texts.
Again it is a marginalized perspective that the Apocrypha are a reliable source that is on par with the Bible. This is not to say that the Apocrypha is at odds with the Bible on all Christian points.
https://www.bibletopics.com/biblestudy/23.htmThere are many valid reasons why the Apocrypha cannot bear acceptance as "Holy Scripture."
1. These books were never included in the Hebrew canon of the Old Testament. Josephus (A reliable ancient historian who was orthodox Jew and NOT a Christian apologist), it will be recalled, expressly limited the Hebrew canon to twenty-two books, which are the exact equivalent of the thirty-nine books of our Old Testament. Josephus knew of other Jewish writings down to his time, but he did not regard them as having equal authority with the canonical works. 1 So the Apocrypha were never received by the Jews as God-given Scripture. This takes on its full significance when it is remembered that the Old Testament is a Jewish collection of Jewish history and law - and there is no evidence that these books were ever accepted by any Jewish community, either in or outside of the land of Palestine.
2. These books, as far as the evidence goes, were never accepted as canonical by Jesus and His apostles. In the previous chapter it was learned that the Old Testament which Jesus knew is our Old Testament today. Jesus' Old Testament was the Hebrew Old Testament, and the Hebrew Old Testament has never numbered these apocryphal writings. The apostles in their preaching mention many Old Testament events, but they never refer to any incidents or characters of the Apocrypha. The New Testament writers quote from practically all of the Old Testament books, but nowhere quote from the Apocrypha as "Scripture." The canon of the Old Testament accepted by Jesus and His apostles should be sufficient for the Christian today.
3. These books were not accepted as Scripture by such Jewish writers of the first century as Philo and Josephus; the Jewish council at Jamnia (c. 90 A.D.); and by such eminent Christian writers as Origen and Jerome. About 400 A.D. the great Christian scholar Jerome, whose translation of the Latin Vulgate remains the basis of the official Roman Catholic Bible, strongly maintained that these books were "apocryphal" and were not to be included in the canon of Scripture.
4. These books do not evidence intrinsic qualities of inspiration. Great portions of these books are obviously legendary and fictitious. Often they contain historical, chronological and geographical errors. In Judith, for example, Holofernes is described as being the general of "Nebuchadnezzar who ruled over the Assyrians in the great city of Ninevah" (1:1). Actually Holofernes was a Persian general, and, of course, Nebuchadnezzar was king of the Babylonians in Babylon. Some of these books contradict themselves and contradict the canonical Scriptures. It is said in Baruch that God hears the prayers of the dead (3:4).
5. These books have been shrouded with continual uncertainty. Since they were not regarded as authoritative by the Jews, they had to gain their recognition elsewhere. This recognition came from some segments of the Greek-speaking church, with the result that eventually these books became incorporated into the Greek and Latin Bibles. But there is no evidence that the Septuagint (the Greek translation of the Old Testament) ever had a fixed or closed canon of books. No two early Greek manuscripts agree as to which books are to be included in the Septuagint, and not all of those included in the Septuagint are accepted even by the Roman Catholic Church. The Septuagint itself is a witness against one book of the Apocrypha (II Esdras) since it is found in no manuscript of the Septuagint.
6. These books cannot be maintained on a compromise basis. The Church of England gives to the Apocrypha a semi-canonical status: they may be read in public worship "for example of life and instruction of manners" but not in order "to establish any doctrine." This position assumes that the Apocrypha at times may add to or conflict with the established teachings of the canonical Scriptures. If this is true, then the Apocrypha should not be read in public worship, for what is read regularly in public worship tends to be authoritative for the congregation. To allow the Apocrypha to be read in public worship is a strange way to show their inferior rank.
7. Objections to these books cannot be overruled by dictatorial authority. On April 8, 1546, in the Fourth Session of the Council of Trent, the Roman Catholic Church pronounced the Old Testament Apocrypha (except I and II Esdras and the Prayer of Manasseh) as authoritative and canonical Scripture. This was done even though in different periods of its own history officials of the Roman Church had been out-spoken against the Apocrypha as Scripture. But this action was not unnatural for a religious body whose whole structure is framed according to traditions and whose faith is derived equally as much from the "fathers" and "popes" as from the Scriptures. It appears that the Apocrypha would never have posed a serious problem were it not for the usurped power of Rome over Scripture. Yet Rome with all of its "infallibility" cannot make the fallible Apocrypha infallible.