The New Testament did not fall from the sky complete and bound. It was the early Church—bishops, councils, and communities guided by apostolic tradition—that discerned, debated, and ultimately canonized the books we now call Scripture. This process wasn't driven by individual interpretation, but by a consensus of the unified Church, centuries after Christ's resurrection.
So the question is:
- Who gave them the authority to determine which texts were divinely inspired?
- Why trust their discernment on the canon, but reject their teachings on things like the Eucharist, apostolic succession, or the veneration of saints?
To accept the canon of Scripture is to implicitly trust the Church that gave it to you. But if that Church was fallible or "corrupted" by tradition, how can you trust the canon itself?
If the early Church was reliable enough to determine the boundaries of divine revelation, perhaps it is also worth considering their broader doctrinal framework.
Is it consistent to trust their table of contents, but not their theology?
The Church did not create the canon—it recognized it.
The early Christians did not “determine” which books were Scripture by some kind of institutional authority. They received these writings as authoritative because of their apostolic origin, widespread use among the churches, and internal consistency with the gospel already proclaimed. The canon was not imposed by the Church—it emerged within it. As F.F. Bruce rightly said:
“The Church did not create the canon; it did not confer authority upon the books that make up the New Testament. It recognized the authority that was already there.”
(The Canon of Scripture, F.F. Bruce, p. 27)
So, we are not trusting in the infallibility of later bishops or councils, but in the authenticity and preservation of apostolic teaching, which was evident long before official canon lists were drawn up.
2. The books of the New Testament were already functioning as Scripture well before any Church council.
Paul’s letters were being circulated and read publicly in churches as early as the first century (cf. Colossians 4:16; 1 Thessalonians 5:27). Peter refers to Paul’s writings as “Scripture” (2 Peter 3:16), showing recognition even within the apostolic age. The four Gospels were already being quoted and used authoritatively in the second century by men like Justin Martyr, Irenaeus, and Clement of Alexandria—long before any official canon list.
So, the canon was discerned by usage, not dictated by hierarchical decree. The Holy Spirit preserved the Word among the body of believers, just as Jesus said:
“My sheep hear my voice, and I know them, and they follow me.” (John 10:27)
3. The early Church’s discernment about the canon does not require us to accept all of their developing traditions.
There is a difference between the early Church’s recognition of inspired Scripture and the later development of doctrines like transubstantiation, purgatory, indulgences, or Marian mediation. These did not exist in the apostolic age and are not found in the inspired texts themselves. Trusting the early Church’s recognition of Scripture is not the same as endorsing every theological opinion that developed afterward.
→ To illustrate: A scientist might correctly recognize the laws of physics, but later draw wrong conclusions in their application. Likewise, the Church rightly recognized the Scriptures—but that does not grant infallibility to every subsequent theological development.
4. The Bereans are praised for testing even apostolic teaching against Scripture.
Acts 17:11 commends the Bereans for not taking Paul’s word at face value, but for examining the Scriptures daily to see if what he said was true. If even an apostle could be tested against Scripture, how much more should later Church leaders and councils be measured by the same standard?
→ Sola Scriptura is not individualism, but humility—submitting every teaching to the only infallible rule God has given.
5. Trust in God’s providence, not in Church infallibility.
The process of canon recognition was not perfect, but God’s providence is. Just as He used fallible men to write inspired Scripture (Moses, David, Paul), He also used fallible men to recognize and preserve it. The authority of Scripture does not rest on the Church’s perfection, but on God’s faithful work through history to guide His people into truth (cf. John 16:13).
6. The early Church was not doctrinally monolithic.
There was no single "unified Church" with universal doctrinal consensus in the early centuries. Even within the Church Fathers, you’ll find vigorous disagreement on the Eucharist, baptism, millennialism, Mary, and more. To claim we must accept all their theology if we accept the canon is historically inaccurate.
In summary:
The canon was recognized, not created, by the Church.
Its authority derives from God’s inspiration, not the Church’s sanction.
The Bereans are our model: test all things by the Scriptures (Acts 17:11).
Trusting the canon does not mean accepting later doctrinal developments.
God used imperfect people to preserve perfect truth.
The apostles gave us the faith “once for all delivered to the saints” (Jude 3), and the Spirit bears witness to that Word in every generation—not by ecclesiastical decree, but by the power of God.
Grace and peace to you.
J.