Apocrypha - ορισμός. Τι είναι το Apocrypha
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Τι (ποιος) είναι Apocrypha - ορισμός

WORKS OF UNKNOWN AUTHORSHIP OR OF DOUBTFUL ORIGIN
Apocryphal; Apocryphe; Apocryphy; Apocryphal literature; Apocryphal story; List of apocrypha; Apocryphia; Apocrapha; Apocryphal Literature; Apochrypha
  • The contents page in a complete 80 book [[King James Bible]], listing "The Books of the Old Testament", "The Books called Apocrypha", and "The Books of the New Testament".
  • Notes et extraits pour servir à l'histoire des croisades au XVe siècle}}), published by [[Nicolas Jorga]]. Series 4: 1453–1476, Paris; Bucarest, 1915, pages 126–127

Apocrypha         
·noun ·pl Something, as a writing, that is of doubtful authorship or authority;
- formerly used also adjectively.
II. Apocrypha ·noun ·pl Specif.: Certain writings which are received by some Christians as an authentic part of the Holy Scriptures, but are rejected by others.
Apocrypha         
[?'p?kr?f?]
¦ plural noun [treated as sing. or plural]
1. (the Apocrypha) biblical or related writings appended to the Old Testament in the Septuagint and Vulgate versions, not forming part of the accepted canon of Scripture.
2. (apocrypha) writings or reports not considered genuine.
Origin
ME: from eccles. L. apocrypha (scripta) 'hidden (writings)', from Gk apokruphos, from apokruptein 'hide away'.
Apocrypha         
Apocrypha (, 'the hidden [things]') are the biblical books received by the early Church as part of the Greek version of the Old Testament, but not included in the modern Hebrew Bible. They were excluded from their canon by the non-Hellenistic Jews, centuries after the Christian scriptures were compiled.

Βικιπαίδεια

Apocrypha

Apocrypha are written works, often of unknown authorship or doubtful origin. In Christianity, the word apocryphal (ἀπόκρυφος) was first applied to writings which were to be read privately rather than in the public context of church services -- edifying Christian works which were not considered canonical Scripture. In the wake of the Protestant Reformation, the word apocrypha came to mean "false, spurious, bad, or heretical".

From a Protestant point of view, Biblical apocrypha are a set of texts included in the Septuagint and the Latin Vulgate, but not in the Hebrew Bible. While Catholic tradition considers some of these texts to be deuterocanonical, and the Orthodox Churches consider them all to be canonical, Protestants consider them apocryphal, that is, non-canonical books that are useful for instruction. Luther's Bible placed them in a separate section in between the Old Testament and New Testament called the Apocrypha, a convention followed by subsequent Protestant Bibles. Other non-canonical apocryphal texts are generally called pseudepigrapha, a term that means "false attribution".

Παραδείγματα από το σώμα κειμένου για Apocrypha
1. Of particular note was The Tale of Tobias, illustrated by Rachel Merriman (1''3), a retelling by the heros dog of the story of Tobias and the Angel from the Apocrypha.
2. And he was being droll when he said –– if he said it; apocrypha collect around legends –– that "if I have made myself clear I have misspoken." His achievements speak clearly for him. http://georgewill@washpost.com
3. McMurtry has long made deconstruction of the Western myth a major theme of his works and he does it again here, reiterating the senseless spontaneous violence, relentless daily trials and, yes, the constant crafting of apocrypha for commercial consumption.
4. Hanukah is a minor Jewish festival: it is not mentioned in the Torah (Five Books of Moses), and the historical account of it, contained in the Books of Maccabees, does not even find a place in the Hebrew Bible and is relegated to the Apocrypha.
5. It may have started out possessing a certain virility, but, like being between a rock and a hard place (which I claim to have quarried from the Apocrypha circa 1'80) its long since lost any cutting edge and deserves to be given its quietus.