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=== Biblical canon === {{Main|Development of the Christian Biblical canon}} There is no record of any discussion of the [[biblical canon]] at the council.<ref>John Meade, "[https://ps.edu/council-nicaea-biblical-canon/ The Council of Nicaea and the Biblical Canon]" and {{harvnb|Ehrman|2004|pp=15β16, 23, 93}}</ref> The development of the biblical canon was nearly complete (with exceptions known as the [[Antilegomena]], written texts whose authenticity or value is disputed) by the time the [[Muratorian fragment]] was written.<ref>{{harvnb|McDonald & Sanders|2002|loc=Apendex D2, Note 19}}</ref> The main source of the idea that the canon was created at the Council of Nicaea seems to be [[Voltaire]], who popularised a story that the canon was determined by placing all the competing books on an altar during the council and then keeping the ones that did not fall off. The original source of this "fictitious anecdote" is the ''[[Synodicon Vetus]]'',<ref>{{cite book |title=Ecce homo!: An Eighteenth Century Life of Jesus |others=Critical Edition and Revision of George Houston's Translation from the French |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=ZrDnBQAAQBAJ |author=Paul T. d' Holbach |author-link=Baron d'Holbach |editor=Andrew Hunwick |year=1995 |location=Berlin, New York |publisher=Walter de Gruyter & Co. |isbn=978-3-11-081141-4 |pages=48β49}}</ref> a pseudo-historical account of early Church councils from 887.<ref>A summary of the case can be found at [http://www.tertullian.org/rpearse/nicaea.html The Council of Nicaea and the Bible].</ref> In 331, [[Fifty Bibles of Constantine|Constantine commissioned fifty Bibles]] for the use of the Bishop of Constantinople, but little else is known (in fact, it is not even certain whether his request was for fifty copies of the entire Old and New Testaments, only the New Testament, or merely the Gospels). Some scholars believe that this request provided motivation for canon lists. In [[Jerome]]'s ''Prologue to Judith'', he claims that the [[Book of Judith]] was "found by the Nicene Council to have been counted among the number of the Sacred Scriptures".<ref>{{harvnb|Preface to Tobit and Judith}}</ref> However, modern scholars such as Edmon Gallagher have doubted that this indicates any canon selection in the council.<ref>{{cite web |url=https://www.academia.edu/14345165 |title="Why Did Jerome Translate Tobit and Judith?" Harvard Theological Review 108 (2015): 356β75.|last=Gallagher |first=Edmon|date=2015 |website=academia.edu |pages=369β370|access-date= November 26, 2022}}</ref>
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