Apocrifos Del Antiguo Testamento [new] Info
To read them is to enter a forgotten world—the world that shaped the Pharisees, the Essenes, and the first followers of Jesus. And in that world, the line between canonical and apocryphal is not a wall, but a window.
| | Read… | |-------------------|------------| | A gripping short story | Tobit or Judith | | Ancient history & war | 1 Maccabees | | Philosophy & poetry | Wisdom of Solomon | | Practical proverbs | Sirach (Ecclesiasticus) | | Apocalyptic visions | 1 Enoch (online only) | | The story of Hanukkah | 2 Maccabees | apocrifos del antiguo testamento
But what exactly are these books? Why are they not in every Bible? And what hidden treasures—or dangerous heresies—do they contain? The word "Apocrypha" comes from the Greek apokryphos , meaning "hidden" or "concealed." Early church fathers like Jerome used the term to describe books that were "hidden away" from public reading in churches because their origins and teachings were disputed. Over time, the term took on a pejorative tone: "non-canonical," "uninspired," or even "fictitious." To read them is to enter a forgotten