Actually Christ closed their canon before the Jews did. The Law (5 books), the Prophets (8 books), and the Psalms or Writings (11 books) is all there is within the Hebrew canon (24 books).
The Septuagint and the Vulgate are not to be taken as authoritative when the words of Christ are before us. The additional books are NON-CANONICAL -- not inspired -- the writings of men, some even Pseudepigraphical. Giving them the false status of "Deutero-canonical" (second canon) was a ploy to deceive people.
The Septuagint and the Vulgate are not to be taken as authoritative when the words of Christ are before us. The additional books are NON-CANONICAL -- not inspired -- the writings of men, some even Pseudepigraphical. Giving them the false status of "Deutero-canonical" (second canon) was a ploy to deceive people.
The simple fact that he used threefold division of books (law, prophets and psalms/David) is not a list of which books belong to each section.
This was decided by Jews later, in the first or second century. Church continued with wider canon for more than thousand years.