Canonization of OT Chapter 3
Canonization of OT Chapter 3
Canonization of OT Chapter 3
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The Canonization
of the Old Testament
As the Scriptures themselves reveal, the Old Testament is essentially a Levitical
document—canonized under the authority of the Aaronic priesthood.
Canonization—as it is called from the Greek kanon, meaning “rule or measuring rod”—is a
process by which a collection of writings come to be considered authoritative, definitive and fixed by a
particular religious authority. A canonical book, therefore, is one that conforms to the “canon”—that is,
passes the test of authenticity.
Because the sacred books of Israel were inspired by God—or, as the apostle Paul says, were
“God-breathed”—it was imperative that the texts remain distinctly separate from secular or pagan writ-
ings. Numerous texts were known historically to exist alongside the Scriptures—and many were pur-
ported to be sacred. Thus, the texts which make up the Old Testament were canonized in order to assure
their singular position as the inspired Word of God. Contrary to what many of today’s “scholars” teach,
this all-important task of canonization was not left in the hands of the so-called “fathers” of Judaism—
but was carried out under the authority of the Aaronic/Levitical priesthood. As we will see, the book that
we call the Old Testament is a thoroughly Aaronic/Levitical document.
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Chapter Three
In order to preserve the true worship of God, it was essential to differentiate between the sacred
Hebrew texts of the Jerusalem Jews and the Hebrew writings utilized by the apostate Samaritan Jews.
The key step was to organize the sacred Levitical documents into a final, closed canon of Scripture.
Then, accurate copies of the entire canonized text were made and distributed to Jewish synagogues
throughout the Persian empire. Once canonized, the Scriptures could be preserved without fear of cor-
ruption.
Ezra’s work—a monumental step in the development and preservation of the Hebrew Bible for
Jews and the Old Testament for Christians—is summarized in these five areas: “According to Jewish
tradition, five great works are ascribed to him [Ezra]: (1) the foundation of the ‘Great Synagogue’ [the
Great Assembly], (2) the settlement of the canon of Scripture, with the threefold division into Law,
Prophets, and Hagiographa [the Psalms and other Writings], (3) the substitution of the square Chaldee
characters for the old Hebrew and Samaritan [script], (4) the compilation of Chronicles, possibly of
Esther, with the addition of Nehemiah’s history to his own, and (5) the establishment of syna-
gogues” (Angus, The Bible Handbook, p. 542, emphasis added).
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The Canonization of the Old Testament
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Chapter Three
It was only after this vast restoration that Hezekiah began to see the need to add to the Jews’
library of authoritative literature. His canonical contribution (723-695 BC) is partly hinted at in Proverbs
25:1: “These are also proverbs of Solomon which the men of Hezekiah king of Judah copied out.”
Working closely with Azariah the priest and Isaiah the prophet, Hezekiah apparently ordained that cer-
tain proverbs of Solomon—previously excluded from the canon—be counted among the Sacred Texts.
Clearly, Proverbs 25 to 29 represent an addition to the Old Testament canon. According to Martin, the
Talmud attributes the canonization of Isaiah, some of the Minor Prophets, the Song of Songs and Eccle-
siastes to Hezekiah (Restoring The Original Bible, ch. 12). Still, such preliminary canonization efforts
were carried out under the authority of the Aaronic priesthood.
The prophet Isaiah indicates that Hezekiah also wrote completely new psalms that were included
in temple services. “The writing of Hezekiah king of Judah, when he had been sick and had recovered
from his sickness” (Isaiah 38:9). Verses 10-21 compose the full psalm. Some scholars believe that Heze-
kiah composed the enigmatic “Degree Psalms” which today comprise Psalms 120–134 (The Companion
Bible, by Dr. E. W. Bullinger, appendix 67). Isaiah and Hezekiah apparently contributed to the growing
Old Testament canon under the authority of Uriah the priest as well (Isa. 8:2).
In stark contrast to the reigns of David and Solomon, King Hezekiah’s time was one of great
distress—an Assyrian invasion threatened the existence of the Jewish nation. No doubt Hezekiah was
concerned about the preservation of the Sacred Texts. This may have prompted him—again, under the
Aaronic leadership—to place a special seal of authority on those documents already established as
canonical, perhaps to reaffirm their place in the growing Hebrew canon and protect them from corruption.
Apparently, Hezekiah placed a type of seal or signature—consisting of the three Hebrew letters
he, zain and koph—at the end of each canonical book. The seal appears in the Hebrew manuscripts of all
the Old Testament books except the Megillot—the five festival scrolls (Song of Songs, Ruth, Lamenta-
tions, Ecclesiastes and Esther). Oddly, however, the signature has never been translated in any English
version of the Bible. Martin explains that the seal was omitted from the five festival scrolls because they
were regularly read by the priests in the temple. They were canonized by the fact that Ezra associated
each book with a particular festival (from Passover to Purim), thus securing their sacredness without the
application of the seal (Restoring the Original Bible, ch. 12).
Interestingly, the three Hebrew letters spell the root form of Hezekiah’s name. What’s more,
they also carry the meaning “to be confirmed” or “to be bound.” Thus, the seal “HZK” constituted the
confirmation and binding of the canonical texts under the authority of King Hezekiah. This action of
itself contributed to the canonization of the sacred Old Testament Scriptures.
This seal of canonization continued to be used in a slightly different manner after the time of
Hezekiah. Bullinger explains: “The use of this tri-grammaton [seal] is uniform and continuous at the end
of each book, until we come to the death of Hezekiah. Not until after that, at the end of the Book of
Kings, do we meet with any departure from the addition of these three letters. There, for the first time,
we find a different formula. Instead of the simple sign (HZK), we find two words, making a sentence—
instead of forming the initials.
“At the end of Kings, we have ‘Be bound, and we will bind.’ This looks as though the subse-
quent editors, whether Josiah, Ezra, or others, understood the tri-grammaton as a solemn injunction
transmitted to them, and they took up the work and carried it out in the same spirit in which it had come
down…” (Martin, Restoring the Original Bible, ch. 12; quoted from Bullinger’s “Songs of Degrees” in
Things to Come, XIII, p. 112).
This same two-word seal of canonicity is likewise used at the end of Ezekiel, the Minor Proph-
ets, Psalms, Proverbs, Job, Daniel, Ezra-Nehemiah (as one book) and Chronicles. As part of the final
canonization, Ezra undoubtedly placed the seal on all the texts which he and the Great Assembly recog-
nized as canonical.
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The Canonization of the Old Testament
Nebuchadnezzar. The high priest Hilkiah (II Kings 22:4) undoubtedly authorized additions to the
cannon during this time (625-584 BC).
Martin writes that the canonization efforts that began in the time of King Josiah continued “in
Babylon after the Jews had been taken captive. Jeremiah had first gone to Egypt, but he [may have] re-
turned to be with the Jews in Babylon…. Jeremiah was then able to hand over to Daniel, the Jewish
prince in Babylon, any remaining prophecies which he had written (or other documents which he may
have rescued from the Temple)” (Restoring the Original Bible, ch. 12). Thus, Daniel was familiar with
the writings of “Jeremiah the prophet,” other prophetic “books” and “the law of Moses” (Dan. 9:2, 11).
Interestingly, it was those of the priestly line in Babylon who were careful to preserve the
Sacred Texts while in exile—thus making them available for Ezra the priest as he set out to restore the
proper worship of God in post-exilic Jerusalem.
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Chapter Three
Concerning the legitimacy of Ezra’s edits, Ernst Würthwein—one of the best-known experts on
the Old Testament—writes: “In evaluating these alterations, we must avoid thinking of them as
‘corruptions.’ They were made in good faith, with no intention of introducing a foreign element into the
text, but rather with the aim of restoring the true text and (from the copyist’s view) preventing misunder-
standings.
“It is quite natural that a text which was … intended to be read constantly by the whole of the
Jewish community would [need to] be adapted to the linguistic needs of the community…” (The Text
of The Old Testament, p. 108, emphasis added).
Although a few alterations—such as genealogical updates—were made to the text by the Great
Assembly after its canonization, there is no question that Ezra was the one who compiled, edited and can-
onized the books. Another important task Ezra undertook was to change all the Hebrew letters in the Scrip-
tures from the ancient cursive script to the square, block-style Chaldee script. The block-style lettering
was commonly used in the sixth century BC in Babylon and elsewhere in the Persian Empire. Martin
explained that the use of the block style script was not done “simply to facilitate the reading of the Bible
but, more importantly, Ezra was able to establish at one fell swoop an official canon of the Scriptures
which was now (by the use of the new letter configurations) able to be distinguished from heretical
Samaritan manuscripts which were written in the old Hebrew script” (The Original Bible Restored, p. 63).
Shortly after Ezra’s time, the book of Malachi was added to the official canon under the author-
ity of the Great Assembly of priests—set up by Ezra for that purpose. Though not the final book in the
order of the Old Testament, Malachi was the final text to be added to the canon—and for good reason.
As we will see, Malachi’s prophecies deal not only with the coming of the Messiah, but also with the
messenger who would announce His first coming to establish the New Covenant. That messenger was
John the Baptist, whose ministry formed a kind of “bridge” between the Old and New Covenants. John
also served as a “sign” of what was to come—a completely new way of worshiping and relating to God
the Father through the work of Jesus Christ.
It is interesting to note that Ezra, as an Aaronic priest, and Nehemiah, as governor of Judah,
worked in close harmony—much like the team formed by Joshua and Zerubbabel of the early post-exilic
period. In fact, the priest-ruler pairings in both cases picture the coming reign of Jesus Christ—Who will
perfectly combine the roles of both King and Priest into one (see Heb. 7:1).
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The Canonization of the Old Testament
of a priest was to represent God to the people—and under the Old Covenant access to God was gener-
ally only possible through the Aaronic priesthood. This was about to change, however, under the New
Covenant, which would include an entirely new kind of Priest to mediate between man and God—Jesus
Christ. In fact, under the New Covenant, almost everything would be different—and it all began with the
work of John the Baptist.
Of key importance is that John was of the Aaronic line—his father Zacharias was a serving
priest, and his mother was of the “daughters of Aaron” (Luke 1:5). John could have become a
“practicing” priest as well—but God had other plans for this “greatest” of the prophets (Matt. 11:11).
There is no evidence that John ever trained as a priest. Rather, he remained “in the wilderness until the
day of his appearing” to the Jewish community (Luke 1:80).
When John did appear—not as a priest, but as a prophet—he took the Jewish leadership some-
what by surprise. John had captivated the interest of the people—with a message and manner that was,
to say the least, different. The Jewish leadership knew full well that John was of the Aaronic line—and
they were more than curious. Investigating, they asked John if he was the expected Messiah—or, per-
haps, Elijah or “the Prophet” to come. John denied that he was any of them, claiming simply to be “a
voice crying in the wilderness”—per Isaiah 40:3—preparing the way for the Messiah’s coming (John
1:19-23). Indeed, the prophet Malachi had announced as well that God would send a special messenger
to “prepare the way” for Christ’s first coming (Mal. 3:1).
In a manner of speaking, John the Baptist was a “signal” to the Jews of coming change—
monumental change—in which true worshipers shall “...worship the Father in spirit and in truth” (John
4:23). His message of genuine repentance for the remission of sin was unique; he baptized in the running
water of the Jordan—in contrast to the ritual baths of the Temple. John boldly pointed to Christ as the
“Lamb of God” destined to “take away the sin of the world” (John 1:29).
Essentially, John was preparing the way for the soon-coming shift away from physical, ritual
sacrifices; away from the physical temple in Jerusalem; away from the Aaronic priesthood; and, most
importantly, away from the mere physical letter of the Law. The spiritual would fully supersede the
physical—for under the New Covenant Jesus’ ultimate sacrifice as the “Lamb of God” would negate all
the physical temple rituals (Heb. 8-9); the temple would be replaced by a spiritual body of believers in
which Christ would dwell (II Cor. 6:16); Jesus would fully replace the Aaronic priesthood as the sole
Mediator between man and God (I Tim. 2:5) through His eternal priesthood after the order of Melchis-
edec (Heb. 5:1-10; 6:20); and, Christ Himself, as the “living Word of God,” would “magnify the Law
and make it glorious” (Isa. 42:21) by revealing its true, spiritual intent (Matt. 5).
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