Culture Are There Books Missing from the Bible? - The Truth About the "Lost Books"

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By Jacob Edson

I wrote in a recent post that most questions about the Bible have complicated answers. Well, here’s one that doesn’t: of course there are books missing from the Bible.

How do we know? The Bible itself mentions them, for one thing.

But here’s where it does get more complicated. Because when people ask this question, there are a number of things they might mean. Sometimes they’re simply looking for the Apocrypha, which is easy — those aren’t missing at all. Other times they’re curious about the so-called “Gnostic gospels,” which is another matter entirely.

Depending on which type of “missing” book you’re talking about, the real questions are why certain books were “left out” of the Bible, how close they came to being included, and ultimately how we ended up with the canonical list of 66 that make up today’s Protestant Bibles.


Types of Books Missing From the Bible​


Although there are many kinds of texts that are related to — but not included in — Biblical canon, the major categories include the Apocrypha, the Antilegomena, works mentioned or alluded to in the Bible, and “rediscovered” extra-Biblical books.

Apocryphal/Deuterocanonical Books​


This is an easy one: these books aren’t lost or missing at all.

The Apocrypha, also called the Deuterocanonical books, are a collection of writings from the Intertestamental Period — that is, the period between the finalizing of the Hebrew Old Testament and the New Testament. They were mostly written in Greek or Aramaic.

The Deuterocanonical books are included in Catholic Bibles (which adds seven whole books and some additional sections to others) and Orthodox Bibles (which add another three or four beyond that). But they are not in Jewish Bibles or Protestant Bibles.

Why?

Catholic and Orthodox Old Testaments use the Septuagint — a Greek translation of the Old Testament from a few hundred years before Christ. Jewish and Protestant Bibles, however, use the Masoretic Hebrew Old Testament, which contains only the earlier Hebrew books (and a few Aramaic passages).

Antilegomena: Disputed Books​


Antilegomena is a Greek word meaning “disputed” (literally, “spoken against”). These are books that were hotly debated in the early church, before New Testament canon was finalized in the late 4th century AD.

Some antilegomena were ultimately included in the Bible. These include the Epistles of James, Jude, and 2 Peter, and the book of Revelation. These books were ultimately deemed authentic revelation from God. Even today, though, some ambivalence remains: the Orthodox Church still does not permit Revelation to be used liturgically, and Martin Luther famously despised the book (and several others).

Other books were deemed inauthentic — though some of them were still considered spiritually edifying and worth reading outside of a church context. These include the Shepherd of Hermas, the Epistle of Barnabas, and the Acts of Paul, among others.

In the Old Testament, disputed books that narrowly made it into the canon include Ecclesiastes, Song of Songs, and Esther, while books that were considered but rejected include the book of Enoch and the Apocryphal books mentioned above.

Lost Books Mentioned in the Bible​


There are a great many books mentioned, referenced, or otherwise alluded to in the Bible that are not included in the canon, either because they have been lost to the sands of time, or because, even though they were highly influential, they were ultimately determined not to have been divinely inspired (or both).

Some of these books in the Old Testament include:

- Book of Jashar (Josh. 10:13, 2 Sam. 1:18)

- Annals of the Kings of Judah and Annals of the Kings of Israel, both mentioned frequently throughout the books of 1 & 2 Kings (cf. 1 Kings 14:19 and 14:29, etc.)

- Books of various prophets (e.g., Nathan, Gad, Ahijah, and Jehu) mentioned throughout 1 & 2 Chronicles

And in the New Testament:

- The Book of Enoch (Jude 1:14-15)

- Lost letters of Paul, including the Epistle to the Laodiceans (Col. 4:16), a previous letter to Corinth (1 Cor. 5:9), and a previous letter to Ephesus (Eph. 3:3)

Rediscovered Books​


Two major troves of ancient Biblical and extra-Biblical literature were discovered in the mid-20th century, one (the Dead Sea Scrolls) in Israel and one (the Nag Hammadi library) in Egypt.

- The Dead Sea Scrolls (ca. 300 BC to 100 AD) belonged to an extremist Jewish sect called the Essenes. They include many of the earliest existing Biblical scrolls (such as Isaiah) as well as a large number of noncanonical material. Among these were the book of Enoch, which describes the fall of the angels in the time of Genesis. Although Enoch was not determined to be canonical, it was immensely popular, and was quoted and referenced numerous times throughout the New Testament.

- The Nag Hammadi Library (ca. 400s AD) consists of a variety of documents that have come to be called “Gnostic,” including the so-called “Gnostic gospels.” A few of these (such as the Gospel of Thomas) seem to have been early, popular, and share overlapping material with canonical gospels. But most were probably later works and/or had a limited audience, and ultimately fell out of favor.


Why Are There Books Missing From the Bible?​


There are several reasons books might not have made it into the canonical Bible, including simple practical issues like space and time — but in most cases it comes down to careful selection by a range of ecclesial (or rabbinic) authorities.

Here’s a closer look at the reasons certain books didn’t make it into the Bible:

Mists of Time​


In the ancient world, when paper was expensive and literacy was rare, there were very few copies of even the most important texts. Sometimes they were transmitted orally and written down much later, as scholars believe was the case with many of the prophets.

But other times, they were sadly lost before they could be saved, and we can only speculate what they might have contained. Many of Paul’s letters suffered this fate.

Space Constraints​


Imagine you’re traveling somewhere for a long time — let’s say into 70 years of exile in a foreign country — and you have to choose what to bring. There’s only so much you can fit, and you might be forced to leave some favorites behind.

This point is closely related to the one above. If, for example, the “Annals of the Kings of Israel” was the massive government record it sounds like, it probably had to stay behind in Samaria instead of being carted into Babylonia — and there was probably only one copy. When the exiles returned decades later, it may have been lost. (Fortunately, the books of Kings and Chronicles retained the most important parts.)

Canonical Disagreements​


This gets to the heart of the matter.

For both the Old and New Testaments, it took a long time (we’re talking centuries) for the final canons to form. It was partly an organic process: these were the books that people were using liturgically in worship, so it was natural that they would be included.

But sometimes serious disagreements arose between different factions over whether something could or should be used in worship settings — and somebody had to make a call. Much like we do today in certain situations, they had to decide: Is this from God? Is it not from God, but still spiritually beneficial? Or is it neither, and perhaps even leading people astray?

- These were questions the rabbis asked when they finalized the books of the Hebrew Bible.

- When Greek rabbis compiled the Septuagint, they decided there were some other, newer books that warranted inclusion (now called the Apocryphal or Deuterocanonical books).

- By the time of the early church, the Old Testament (with Apocrypha) was formalized into tradition. But they had to make the same choices about the New Testament.

- And finally, when Protestants began translating the Bible into vernacular in the early modern period and rediscovered the Hebrew Old Testament, they had to decide whether or not those Greek OT (Septuagint) books belonged. (In most cases they concluded “no,” thus rebranding them “Apocrypha.”)

In every case, these choices were not made lightly, but were very carefully considered — and argued — by dozens of educated authorities. It was an enormous responsibility, and the stakes were astronomically high: after all, they were answering to a much higher Authority.

Out of Fashion​


Thanks to recent media like The Da Vinci Code, the Dead Sea and Nag Hammadi discoveries — particularly the “Gnostic gospels” — have taken on a legendary significance, not so much for their academic value (which is indisputable), but because they feed into fanciful notions of secret knowledge suppressed by conspiratorial church authorities.

Here’s the problem with that: the Gnostics weren’t really a thing.

“Gnostic” is simply a Greek word meaning “of knowledge” — and what we refer to as the Gnostics were really a scattered variety of groups and texts all promoting the acquisition of some kind of spiritual wisdom.

They disagreed on what this wisdom was, exactly, but it typically included that the God of the Old Testament was a different, inferior being to the God of the New Testament, and that only certain types of people were capable of being saved.

They also tended to invent elaborate cosmologies of many divine beings, which acolytes had to understand in order to progress spiritually. But the structure of these pantheons differed from group to group.

Because of this, they failed to unify into a comprehensible rival vision to mainstream Christianity. Though some of them were briefly popular in certain places, they were unable to justify the inclusion of their favorite books in Biblical canon. And most of them eventually fell apart as conciliar orthodoxy coalesced.


Conclusion: Are Books Missing From the Bible? Yes and No.​


I began this article saying there are obviously books missing from the Bible, and this is true. We know about them from the Bible itself, and from church and rabbinic authorities who talked about them.

But there’s a greater truth, too: God’s hand working in history, helping the humans responsible to shape his Word how he wants it to be.

Are we missing interesting details by not having access to the Annals of the Kings of Judah and Israel, or the lost letters of Paul? Almost certainly. Might we find things of interest — Biblical overlaps, or thought-provoking commentary — in books like Enoch, the Shepherd of Hermas, or the Gospel of Thomas? Sure.

But are we missing anything critical to our salvation? No.

And as for the lingering disagreements over the canonical status of the Apocrypha… well, as Max Lucado said in his recent, POWER-ful post on the end times, “We can be decisive but never divisive.”

Now, when it comes to the books that only barely did make it into the Bible… that’s another post entirely.
 
We asked some Christians on the street how many books of the Bible there are. Here were their responses.

Catholic
"73, obviously."
"Exactly 73."
"Why, is some gavon saying Maccabees isn't canon again?"

Protestant
"Sir, I'm going to need you to put on a mask before you talk to me."
"You sound like a fascist."
"Like ten, I think."

Orthodox
"Not enough."
"Have you found more? Because we'll add them."
"We're almost up to 80, but I'm holding out for three digits in my lifetime."
 
A lot of misinformation that I’ll try clear up:

The Old Testament was codified before Christ by ‘the seventy’, a group of Hellenistic Jewish priests who translated the (now lost) original Hebrew Old Testament into Greek. They also translated/compiled some material that was not written in Hebrew, but other languages. These books were thought to be so important that they were carefully translated and preserved. That fact alone is enough to support its holy significance. The Septuagint is what Jesus refers to as ‘the Scriptures’ in the Gospels, and none of the Jewish sects of that time argued differently.

The Septuagint would be reduced later, with skepticism of different parts according to different traditions. Later Jews rejected the non-Hebrew books, which resulted in a separation into what Protestants call ‘The Apocrypha’. Orthodox Christians omitted from copies ‘the Appendix’ which contains Macabees IV and Psalms of Solomon, because they were not used during services. Catholics omitted more books for similar reasons. Thus we have different degrees of what ‘the Apocrypha’ or ‘deuterocanonical books’ are. The Catholics and Orthodox still consider these books to be canon, but with limited use compared to the other books. There are also some additional books used by some Oriental (different from Eastern) Orthodox churches, like the Book of Enoch and the Book of Jubilees. These books were never in the Septuagint, but the Oriental Orthodox Church doesn’t reject these books as wrong or heretical.

Copying books is not free, and before printing it was a tremendous effort. Passages were more memorized than read. There was a practical component for reducing the burden put on scribes and priests.

For the Orthodox and Catholics, there is no debate or question as to what is canonical in the Old Testament. From their perspective, the Septuagint has always represented the complete and final Old Testament. There is also a lot more textual evidence for the canonical books than the noncanon ones. Whether that’s because of the canonization itself is a matter of debate.

The New Testament’s canonization is wel-documented and agreed upon by all major branches of Christianity. The value of noncanonical books depends on their origin. Some are simply the works of genuine Christians as their true selves or as a pseudonym but not considered ‘divinely inspired’ (like a priest writing a blog post today), whereas others are clearly heretical (there were many heretical branches of Christianity now lost to time).

The only edition of the Holy Bible in English I know of that contains the entirety of the Septuagint and New Testament is the New Oxford Annotated Bible with Apocrypha: Expanded Edition.

My opinion is that books like the Book of Enoch were loosely in the traditions of various Jews / followers of Abraham. The Hellenistic Jews decided not to include these books (not even in the appendix) for whatever reason. Communities like the Ethiopians never got the memo, and by the time Christianity came, that tradition was cemented.
 
. But in general the two forms of mainstream Bible flow down from the Latin Vulgate written by St Jerome from assembled Greek texts and from the Protestants which copied a Greek Bible from after the fall of Constantinople by Martin Luther.
Source on this? Would love to read more.
 
Source on this? Would love to read more.
I am not entirely sure how to provide you a source on well known historical facts here. You can read about Saint Jerome and you can read about Martin Luther. Which will go into varying details about this depending on what you are reading.

Luther, in his rejection of Rome, also rejected the Vulgate. Due to the proximity in history here to the fall of Constantinople many texts escaped the city and flowed into West Europe for the first time in many centuries.

For reasons we will never truly know Luther and the early Protestants believed that the Greek bible from the East would be more true than the Rome they were rejecting. With the German master of Greek Erasmus playing a key part of it. The result of this translation and research was Protestant Bible.

The Catholic Bible, originating in the Vulgate contains 76 books as part of the Canon. While the Protestant contains 66.
 
You're confusing a few things here.

Luther, in his rejection of Rome, also rejected the Vulgate. Due to the proximity in history here to the fall of Constantinople many texts escaped the city and flowed into West Europe for the first time in many centuries.
Luther rejected the Vulgate insofar as conservatives were representing it as the infallible Latin translation. Reformists in the church (and not just Protestants) recognised that it could be brushed up and was rough and inaccurate in places. Conservatives screamed about how sacred and holy the Vulgate is and the Tridentine Council basically canonized the text. The contemporary Roman Catholic position today is the reformists': they have a new Latin text based off the original Greek and Hebrew.

For reasons we will never truly know Luther and the early Protestants believed that the Greek bible from the East would be more true than the Rome they were rejecting.
The reformists, inclusive the Protestants, believed that they should return to the original text — ad fontes — instead of working off a translation.

With the German master of Greek Erasmus playing a key part of it. The result of this translation and research was Protestant Bible.
Erasmus did his work before and totally apart from Luther's endeavors. He attempted to recover the original Greek text, creating a new edition of the Greek New Testament and then create a new Latin translation to correct the Vulgate.

Other like-minded individuals also contributed and the Hebrew Old Testament is printed as well.

What Luther did was use the original Hebrew and Greek to create a new German translation in the vernacular.

Again, the reformists, inclusive the Protestants, supported translating the Bible so that the people could read and hear it in their mother tongue.

Unfortunately many conservatives didn't see much value in giving the people the Bible, especially with "heretics" like Martin "buying your way out of purgatory is fake and gay" Luther running around.

The Catholic Bible, originating in the Vulgate contains 76 books as part of the Canon. While the Protestant contains 66.
The difference is the Greek texts (the deuterocanon/apocrypha) that we don't have in the Hebrew and the Israelite Jews never believed were Scripture. Many in the church accepted them (e.g. Augustine), while others questioned them and/or assigned them a lower status (e.g. Jerome, Athanasius). The reformists generally fell on the side of the latter, while the conservatives, with more weighty authority sided with the former. This became a Protestant - Catholic divide after the Tridentine Council anathematized those who reject the deuterocanon/apocrypha.
 
Are there any books they likely would have put in if they’d had them? Missing letters from Paul seem like something that might have gotten through.
Enoch is interesting, and referenced in the Bible so it must have been known about and widely used.
Do the records of their deliberations eg nicea exist still? I bet they had some absolutely huge arguments.
Enoch was widely available in what would become the western/catholic and eastern/orthodox worlds when they were devising their canons. It wasn’t lost until after the western empires fall.

The ultimate reasons it wasn’t included was because
1) it’s quite obviously a false attribution, it claims to be written by the Enoch of Genesis but very clearly post dates him by millennia. And even that’s working off some big assumptions, since it’s near impossible to date antediluvian figures. And that’s also assuming we want to take that portion of Genesis as literal, historical truth. Which is a much bigger ask than someone Abraham where we have some archaeological records to back him up.
2) it also teaches somethings in conflict with the accepted teachings of the Western and Eastern traditions, and with other parts of the Bible.

Edit: I should note that in the early church, people cited Enoch with favor even if it wasn’t ever widely accepted as divinely inspired in the way the Bible is. Then around the 400s that stopped, but I’m not personally familiar with why that happened and what made it happen then (some heresy I’m sure, but idk what). After that it fell out of favor till it was eventually lost in Europe.
 
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2) it also teaches somethings in conflict with the accepted teachings of the Western and Eastern traditions, and with other parts of the Bible.
Having not read Enoch I'm curious what those contradictory teachings are.
 
Having not read Enoch I'm curious what those contradictory teachings are.
I’m not an expert on Enoch so I may miss some stuff, but the biggest contradiction to the Canonical books was placing the blame for sin entering the world on Azazel and the other watchers, rather than Adam and Eve. In particular the lines where the archangel accuse the watchers of “[revealing] to [mankind] all sins”
There’s also some astrology stuff which contradicts the prohibition on divination and sorcery from Leviticus 19:26

In terms of stuff which contradicts church theology, the biggest is that Enoch has the fallen angels fall after creation at a specific moment in time, and being led by Azazel. This contradicts the belief that the Fallen Angels fell before God created creation, and that they were led by Lucifer.
 
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I’m not an expert on Enoch so I may miss some stuff, but the biggest contradiction to the Canonical books was placing the blame for sin entering the world on Azazel and the other watchers, rather than Adam and Eve. In particular the lines where the archangel accuse the watchers of “[revealing] to [mankind] all sins”
There’s also some astrology stuff which contradicts the prohibition on divination and sorcery from Leviticus 19:26

In terms of stuff which contradicts church theology, the biggest is that Enoch has the fallen angels fall after creation at a specific moment in time, and being led by Azazel. This contradicts the belief that the Fallen Angels fell before God created creation, and that they were led by Lucifer.
Satan and his angels fell after creation in orthodox Christianity as well, being creatures. They had to, because if they didn't, they'd be uncreated and God would just be the chief of a pantheon of spiritual beings.

Traditionally they were understood to be created before the second day, based on Job 38:7. It gets very speculative beyond that.

Probably the biggest thing that contradicts church teaching on angels is their reproducing with humans.

Angels in most conceptions, including orthodox Christianity's, are pure spirit, totally incorporeal. The idea that they have sex, let alone can miscegenate, is antithetical to this idea. Jesus also appeals to the sexlessness of angels in Matt 22:30.

The only place you could find biblical support for that is Gen 6:4, but the above meant that the passage was not traditionally not interpreted as Enoch takes it.

On a broader level, Christianity has had a checkered history with angelology, producing a variety of errors and heresies where it became an unhealthy emphasis at several times.

The Bible simply doesn't lay out much on the nature of angels, and considering them in their own light very easily tends to diminishing the God whose messengers they are supposed to be.

Paul even warns against those who were worshiping angels in his time (Col 2:18 ), which can hardly said to be respected by those who attribute good providence and graces to their supposed guardian angel, or offer prayers to Michael or Gabriel.

These, among many good reasons, is why Enoch was disused by Christians (and Jews), forgotten for over a millennium.
 
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My favorite apocrypha book is the one where Judas is depicted as the good guy and he and Jesus fight in mid-air like Dragon Ball Z. I promise I'm not making this up.
 
The Book of Enoch is a very interesting piece of text, but it was discovered from some Ethiopian church if I’m correct. Not exactly too reliable.
I think some of the Dead Sea Scrolls were revealed to have passages from Enoch if I remember correctly.
 
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