Where We Got the Bible: Our Debt to the Catholic Church by The Right Rev. HENRY G. GRAHAM Booklet
'In which are certain things hard to be understood, which the unlearned and unstable wrest, as they do also the other scriptures, to their own destruction.' 2 Peter iii. 16
'I would not believe the Gospel unless moved thereto by the authority of the Church.' - St. Augustine (Contra Epis. Manich., Fund., n. 6.)
PREFACE TO THE FIRST EDITION
This little book about the Bible grew out of lectures which the writer delivered on the subject to mixed audiences. The lectures were afterwards expanded, and appeared in a series of articles in the Catholic press 1908-9, and are now with slight alterations reprinted. Their origin will sufficiently account for the colloquial style employed throughout.
There is, therefore, no pretence either of profound scholarship or of eloquent language; all that is attempted is a popular and, as far as possible, accurate exposition along familiar lines of the Catholic claim historically in regard to the Bible. It is candidly controversial without, however, let us hope, being uncharitable or unfair.
Friends had more than once suggested the reissue of the articles; and it appeared to the writer that at last the proper moment for it had come when the Protestant world is jubilating over the Tercentenary of the Authorised Version. Amidst the flood of literature on the subject of the Bible, it seemed but right that some statement, however plain and simple, should be set forth from the Catholic side, with the object of bringing home to the average mind the debt that Britain, in common with the rest of Christendom, owes to the Catholic Church in this connection. Probably the motive of the present publication will be best understood by a perusal of the following letter from the writer which appeared in the Glasgow Herald, 18th March, 1911:—
- CHAPTER II. The Making of the Old Testament
- CHAPTER VI. The Originals, and their Disappearance
- CHAPTER XVI. Envoi
- CHAPTER XII. Why Wycliff was Condemned
- INTRODUCTION
- CHAPTER I. Some Errors Removed
- CHAPTER X. Where then are all the Medieval Bibles?
- CHAPTER III. The Church Precedes the New Testament
- CHAPTER V. Deficiencies of the Protestant Bible
- CHAPTER IX. Bible-reading in the ‘Dark Ages’
- THE BIBLE CENTENARY AND THE CATHOLIC CHURCH.
- CHAPTER VII. Variations in Text Fatal to Protestant Theory.
- CHAPTER XIV. A Deluge of Erroneous Versions
- CHAPTER XV. The Catholic’s Bible
- CHAPTER IV. Catholic Church Compiles the New Testament
- CHAPTER XI. Abundance of Vernacular Scriptures before Wycliff
- CHAPTER VIII. Our Debt to the Monks
- CHAPTER XIII. Tyndale’s Condemnation Vindicated by Posterity.
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