Pastor Josh,
I am curious if you have ever read any of the gnostic gospels. Any thoughts as to whether they have any messages of value for Christian congregations today, and if you think the decisions in including and excluding various books of the New Testament still make sense in the present day? I suppose in a sense by focusing on certain aspects of the Bible and not others each minister/pastor/priest does their own unofficial editing. Is their ever room for adding/removing texts to the bible, or editing? In a somewhat related note do you personally see the Bible as a template/guide, or as infallible law? (fyi I am was raised very Catholic, so a lot of my questions have some basis in that - Catholicism is pretty hierarchical so wondering how some other Christians work)
Thanks for setting up this section - you answer each question with humility and humor and it was fun to find it and read it straight through.
Thanks for the kind words. I find the gnostics interesting, but there's a reason they were left out. It's actually a misconception to think that at some point some group of guys said, "this is scripture, and that isn't." It's just that these books were the most commonly read. Of course, it's more complicated than that, but the canon wasn't set by an authority. Authorities just recognized what was in common usage. So the gnostics and even the more orthodox gospels, epistles, acts, and revelations that aren't included today aren't included because people weren't really reading them by the early fourth century. (If you're interested,
http://www.earlychristianwritings.com/?adword ) I like Thomas a lot, and although I've never preached on it, I have used it in bible studies. And your insight about self-editing is absilutely correct. No one, and I mean no one, actually takes the whole of scripture as authoritative, no matter what they say. There are too many contradictions, not just in minor details but in broad theological themes. I would see no point in creating a new canon, but in most Protestant denominations there's no reason why that couldn't be done.