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'''Canon''' names the scope of authority a text is granted within a community.
'''Canon''' names the scope of authority a text is granted within a community.
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<center>ἀποκάλυψις · ἀφαίρεσις</center>
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=== The Galatian Bible ===
Having named the limits of authority and the bounds of canon, the Church of Humans now names the writings it receives as its shared public witness.
These writings are received for recognition, memory, and faithful practice. They are not treated as law, nor are they used to extend authority beyond what was given. They are sufficient for Gentile Christianity among the nations, and no more is claimed of them than this.
The tenfold canon received here is presented in four parts.


== The Witness Received ==
==== Gospel ====


The [[Church of Humans]] receives a bounded set of writings as its shared public witness. These writings are read for recognition, memory, and faithful practice. They are not treated as law, nor are they used to claim authority beyond the [[New Covenant|Covenant]] freely undertaken in this church.
The Gospels of John, Mark, and Luke bear witness to the life, teaching, death, and resurrection of Christ. They are received as the primary public testimony by which Christ is known. The narrative Gospels proclaim the good news of Christ in story and testimony.


The collection is presented in three parts:
* Gospel of John
* Gospel of Mark
* Gospel of Luke


=== Gospel ===
==== History ====


Gospel bears witness to the life, teaching, death, and resurrection of [[Christ]]. These are received as the primary public testimony by which Christ is known.
* Acts of the Apostles


* [https://openenglishbible.org/oeb/2025.6/read/b043.html John]
Acts is received as historical witness to the earliest communities following Christ, with particular attention to the entry of Gentiles and the apostles’ refusal to impose the [[Law]] upon them. It is read as memory and narrative, not as law or institutional template.
* [https://openenglishbible.org/oeb/2025.6/read/b041.html Mark]
* [https://openenglishbible.org/oeb/2025.6/read/b042.html Luke]


The Gospels proclaim the good news of Christ in narrative form. ''[[The Witness of Thomas]]'' is received alongside them as a collection of sayings that train [[recognition]] rather than command conduct. Together, these writings shape encounter with Christ and the call to faithful life.
==== Letters ====


=== History ===
The letters are received as writings addressed to identifiable communities and persons concerning life in common, suffering, conscience, humility, freedom, endurance, and love. They are read as exhortation, wisdom, and counsel within the life of the church.


* [https://openenglishbible.org/oeb/2025.6/read/b044.html Acts]
* Epistle to the Galatians
* Wisdom of James
* First Counsel of John
* Second Counsel of John
* Third Counsel of John


Acts is received as the historical witness to the early community following Christ, especially the entry of Gentiles and the life of the church after the resurrection. It is read as memory and narrative, not as law or institutional template.
These writings guide faithful practice while restraining claims of authority. They address encouragement, suffering, conscience, humility, freedom, endurance, and hope within Christian communities.


=== Letters ===
==== Revelation ====


The letters are received as situational counsel addressed to identifiable communities. They speak to life in common, conscience, suffering, freedom, and love, without constituting a legal code or universal system.
* [[The Witness of Thomas]]


* James
Thomas is received as contemplative witness to the hidden and present [[Kingdom of God]]. Its sayings concern perception, inward reconciliation, hidden light, and the unveiling of what already spreads throughout the world unseen. It is read not as law, prophecy, or secret doctrine, but as revelation through parable, inversion, and reflection.
* 1 John
* 2 John
* 3 John


These writings are read for guidance in faithful practice, restraint of authority, and life shaped by love. The letters received here address encouragement, suffering, conscience, and hope within Christian communities.
In receiving these texts, the Church of Humans does not claim completeness, universality, or finality. It claims only sufficiency for faithful life among the nations within the authority that was given.


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== See also==
== See also==
* [[Curated Collections]]
* [[Glossary]]
* [[Glossary]]

Latest revision as of 17:39, 11 July 2026

Canon names the scope of authority a text is granted within a community.


ἀποκάλυψις · ἀφαίρεσις

The Galatian Bible

Having named the limits of authority and the bounds of canon, the Church of Humans now names the writings it receives as its shared public witness.

These writings are received for recognition, memory, and faithful practice. They are not treated as law, nor are they used to extend authority beyond what was given. They are sufficient for Gentile Christianity among the nations, and no more is claimed of them than this.

The tenfold canon received here is presented in four parts.

Gospel

The Gospels of John, Mark, and Luke bear witness to the life, teaching, death, and resurrection of Christ. They are received as the primary public testimony by which Christ is known. The narrative Gospels proclaim the good news of Christ in story and testimony.

  • Gospel of John
  • Gospel of Mark
  • Gospel of Luke

History

  • Acts of the Apostles

Acts is received as historical witness to the earliest communities following Christ, with particular attention to the entry of Gentiles and the apostles’ refusal to impose the Law upon them. It is read as memory and narrative, not as law or institutional template.

Letters

The letters are received as writings addressed to identifiable communities and persons concerning life in common, suffering, conscience, humility, freedom, endurance, and love. They are read as exhortation, wisdom, and counsel within the life of the church.

  • Epistle to the Galatians
  • Wisdom of James
  • First Counsel of John
  • Second Counsel of John
  • Third Counsel of John

These writings guide faithful practice while restraining claims of authority. They address encouragement, suffering, conscience, humility, freedom, endurance, and hope within Christian communities.

Revelation

Thomas is received as contemplative witness to the hidden and present Kingdom of God. Its sayings concern perception, inward reconciliation, hidden light, and the unveiling of what already spreads throughout the world unseen. It is read not as law, prophecy, or secret doctrine, but as revelation through parable, inversion, and reflection.

In receiving these texts, the Church of Humans does not claim completeness, universality, or finality. It claims only sufficiency for faithful life among the nations within the authority that was given.


ἀποκάλυψις · ἀφαίρεσις

See also