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  2. Apocrypha - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Apocrypha

    The word apocrypha has undergone a major change in meaning throughout the centuries. The word apocrypha in its ancient Christian usage originally meant a text read in private, rather than in public church settings. In English, it later came to have a sense of the esoteric, suspicious, or heretical, largely because of the Protestant ...

  3. Gospel of Basilides - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gospel_of_Basilides

    The Gospel of Basilides is the title given to a reputed text within the New Testament apocrypha, which is reported in the middle of the 3rd century as then circulating amongst the followers of Basilides (Βασιλείδης), a leading theologian of Gnostic tendencies, who had taught in Alexandria in the second quarter of the 2nd century.

  4. Investiture of Abbaton - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Investiture_of_Abbaton

    After an introduction by Timothy of Alexandria, six pages of which have been lost, [12] the text describes the creation of Adam (including Jesus defending Adam to God, and his contribution to Adam's creation alongside the Holy Spirit and God), the fall of Satan (precipitated by a cherub), and the angel Muriel becoming Abbaton, the angel of ...

  5. Acts of John - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Acts_of_John

    The Acts of John are generally classified as New Testament apocrypha. ... Origen, a third century Christian scholar from Alexandria, ...

  6. Deuterocanonical books - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Deuterocanonical_books

    The deuterocanonical books, [a] meaning 'of, pertaining to, or constituting a second canon', [1] collectively known as the Deuterocanon (DC), [2] are certain books and passages considered to be canonical books of the Old Testament by the Catholic Church, the Eastern Orthodox Church, the Oriental Orthodox Church, and the Church of the East.

  7. Easter letter - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Easter_letter

    The council chose Alexandria because of its famous school of astronomy, [1] and the date of Easter depends on the spring equinox and the phases of the moon. The most famous of those letters are those authored by Athanasius , a collection of which was rediscovered in a Syriac translation in 1842. [ 2 ]

  8. Biblical apocrypha - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Biblical_apocrypha

    The Anglican Communion accepts "the Apocrypha for instruction in life and manners, but not for the establishment of doctrine (Article VI in the Thirty-Nine Articles)", [13] and many "lectionary readings in The Book of Common Prayer are taken from the Apocrypha", with these lessons being "read in the same ways as those from the Old Testament". [14]

  9. Secret Gospel of Mark - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Secret_Gospel_of_Mark

    In 1966 he had basically completed his study, but the result in the form of the scholarly book Clement of Alexandria and a Secret Gospel of Mark [63] was not published until 1973 due to seven years of delay "in the production stage". [10] [64] In the book, Smith published a set of black-and-white photographs of the text. [65]