Aristotle Smith wrote:Fence Sitter wrote:When was the New Testament written? Before or after the apostasy?
It depends on where you set up the arbitrary demarcation line.
If you say after the death of the original apostles, then I would say that at least some of the books of the New Testament were written after the apostasy.
If you give the arbitrary date of 100 A.D., then there is still a chance that a couple of the smaller books in the New Testament were written after the apostasy, 2 Peter would be a good candidate. Even more troubling would be the Didache, which most scholars would put between 90-100 A.D. and which teaches what Mormons would consider apostate views on baptism.
However, the New Testament canonical list of 27 books was put forward in 367 A.D. by Athanasius and was later accepted as the official canonical list at the Council of Carthage in 397 A.D. Not only would this put the definition of the New Testament squarely in apostate hands, Athanasius was the most ardent proponent of Trinitarian Theology in the fourth century and would never have chosen those 27 books if he felt they contradicted the Council of Nicea. In other words, the New Testament was defined by a man who believed in "abominable creeds" and was by LDS standards as apostate as you can get.
I guess what I am asking is how can you claim an apostasy if the original records were written after the apostasy occurred? It may be too simplistic a view but how can you trust them to be accurate about their history and at the same time believe they were in some sort of apostasy?
Regarding the John Taylor revelation of 1886. When the younger Taylor presented it to the Church (he had found it while going through his deceased father's belongings) the response was that it was unsigned, had not been authenticated and had not been accepted by the Church as required by Mormon procedure. It is my understanding it has disappeared into the vaults of the Church.