Difference between revisions of "The Bible/Open canon vs. closed canon"

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*Alan Denison & D.L. Barksdale, ''Gues Who Wants To Have You For Lunch?'', 2nd edition, (Redding, California: FAIR, 2002[1999]), 37–57. ISBN 1893036057.[http://www.fair-lds.org/Merchant2/merchant.mvc?page=FOS/PROD/A/FAIR-LCH-02 FAIR]
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*Alan Denison & D.L. Barksdale, ''Gues Who Wants To Have You For Lunch?'', 2nd edition, (Redding, California: FAIR, 2002[1999]), 37–57. ISBN 1893036057. [http://www.fair-lds.org/Merchant2/merchant.mvc?page=FOS/PROD/A/FAIR-LCH-02 FAIR]

Revision as of 23:21, 15 November 2005

This article is a draft. FairMormon editors are currently editing it. We welcome your suggestions on improving the content.

Criticism

Critics claim that the Church is in error because Christianity requires a "closed canon" (no more authoritative revelation) instead of the Church's "open canon" (potential for more binding revelation).

Source(s) of the Criticism

  • Luke P. Wilson, “Lost Books & Latter-Day Revelation: A Response to Mormon Views of the New Testament Canon,” Christian Research Journal (Fall 1996): 27–33.

Response

The response should be brief and summary in nature.

Conclusion

A summary of the argument against the criticism.

Further reading

FAIR wiki articles

FAIR web site

External links

  • John A. Tvdtnes and Matthew Roper, "'A Bible! A Bible!' The Canon and Ongoing Revelation (Review of Luke P. Wilson's "Lost Books & Latter-Day Revelation: A Response to Mormon Views of the New Testament Canon")*

Printed material

  • Alan Denison & D.L. Barksdale, Gues Who Wants To Have You For Lunch?, 2nd edition, (Redding, California: FAIR, 2002[1999]), 37–57. ISBN 1893036057. FAIR