More Books, More Holiness?
A Serious (and Slightly Humorous) Defense of the 66-Book Bible
Because Truth Is Not Improved by Page Count
Introduction: When the Bible Becomes a Library
Some Christians measure spirituality the way people measure wealth:
The more, the better.
More fasting days.
More titles.
More candles.
More books.
So when someone says, “My Bible has 81 books”, the unspoken implication is:
“Yours must be missing something.”
But here is a quiet truth that refuses to go away:
📌 Truth is not validated by quantity.
📌 Authority is not multiplied by addition.
If holiness increased with page numbers, the phone book would be sacred.
Let’s talk seriously—and honestly—about the Bible.
- The Numbers Game: 66, 73, 76, 81 — What Changed?
Let us name the facts plainly:
Tradition
Number of Books
Protestant
66
Catholic
73
Greek Orthodox
76
Ethiopian Orthodox
81
Now pause.
If God revealed Scripture once, why does revelation change when you cross a border?
Did heaven issue regional editions?
“This version for Rome”
“Extended edition for Ethiopia”
“Collector’s version for Greece”
That may work for smartphones—but not for divine revelation. - The Core Question Everyone Avoids
The real debate is not about respect or heritage. It is about authority.
Here is the uncomfortable question:
Who decides what Scripture is—God, or tradition?
Because once tradition becomes the final authority, Scripture stops being Lord and becomes supported evidence.
And Scripture never volunteered for that role. - Jesus Had a Bible — And It Was Not 81 Books
This is where the discussion becomes unavoidable.
Jesus consistently affirmed:
The Law
The Prophets
The Psalms
This threefold division corresponds exactly to the Hebrew Scriptures—the same content as the 39 Old Testament books in the 66-book Bible.
Jesus never said:
“As it is written in Tobit…”
“According to Maccabees…”
“Let us consult the expanded canon…”
If Jesus did not expand the canon, on what authority did others do so?
If Christ is Lord, His Bible defines ours. - Ethiopia’s Strength — and Its Blind Spot
Let us be fair and respectful.
Ethiopia’s strength:
Ancient Christianity
Early manuscripts
Faith preserved without colonization
Deep reverence for Scripture
These are real achievements.
But here is the blind spot:
Preservation is not the same as inspiration.
Owning a book does not make it Scripture. Keeping a tradition does not make it revelation. Age does not turn tradition into prophecy.
Ancient does not automatically mean authoritative. Otherwise, Pharaoh would be a theologian. - The Fallacy of “We Have Always Had It”
One of the most common arguments sounds like this:
“We have always had these books.”
So? People have always had cultural practices that needed correction.
Christianity itself was God’s interruption of long-standing religious systems.
Truth is not validated by habit. It is validated by divine origin. - When Canon Expands to Support Doctrine
Here is a pattern history cannot hide:
Doctrine develops
Doctrine needs support
Supporting books gain authority
Canon quietly expands
This is not revelation. This is retroactive justification.
The 66-book Bible does the opposite:
Doctrine flows from the text
Not the text from doctrine
That is how authority works. - A Simple Philosophical Test (No Seminary Required)
Ask this question:
If all books outside the 66 were removed tomorrow, would the gospel collapse?
No. Christ remains. Salvation remains. Grace remains. Hope remains.
Now reverse it:
If Christ is removed, does any canon—81, 76, or 73—save anyone?
Also no.
That tells you everything you need to know. - Revelation Must Have Closure
A coherent revelation must:
Begin clearly
Progress purposefully
End decisively
The 66-book Bible:
Begins with creation
Climaxes in Christ
Ends with new creation
Warns against adding to revelation
A revelation that never closes is not revelation—it is religious inflation.
And inflation always devalues the currency. - Humor Break (Because Even Theology Needs Oxygen)
Let’s be honest:
If spiritual maturity were measured by book count:
Librarians would be apostles
Storage rooms would be seminaries
The longest Bible would win heaven
Thankfully, salvation is not by canon size, but by Christ’s sacrifice.
Grace is not printed per page.
Conclusion: The 66-Book Bible Is Not Smaller — It Is Sufficient
The 66 books are not missing anything. They are missing nothing.
They are:
Apostolic
Christ-centered
Historically grounded
Doctrinally coherent
Spiritually sufficient
Tradition may surround Scripture. Culture may celebrate Scripture. But Scripture alone governs faith.
Final Challenge
The issue is not:
“How many books do you have?”
The issue is:
“Who has authority over your faith—Christ or tradition?”
Because when Christ speaks,
Scripture stands.
And when Scripture stands,
numbers fall silent.
Thank you for reading.