This video is 1.5 hours in length.Banned from the Bible is a
documentary television series produced by
FilmRoos in
2003 for the
A&E Network that originally aired on the
History Channel as
Time Machine: Banned from the Bible in 2003.
[1] [2] It aired as a series from late
November 2005 through
May 2006.
Narrated by
Christopher Nissley [3],
James Karen, and
Maggie Soboil,
Banned from the Bible tells the stories of the ancient books that have been prohibited from becoming part of
Bible canon. The scholarly term for this is
Apocrypha. The series was continued with
Banned from the Bible II in
2007.
I noted some of the books were considered too recent to be considered actual revelation. I would love to know how the council of Nicaea was able to determine the etymology of these stories.
Overall, there's an emergent theme here that intrigues me. I would love to study it deeper.
You said "I would love to know how the council of Nicaea was able to determine the etymology of these stories."
One word: Eusebius. While Constantine's council at Nicaea did not have a stated objective of forming the Christian canon, that's (in effect) what happened thanks to the work that Eusebius had already put into investigating the epistles and gospels then in circulation. He published his findings in his book "Ecclesiastical History". Eusebius had a number of criteria by which to judge the "authenticity" of the documents, one of which was by vote among the (orthodox) bishops. Basically, all of the documents that were unanimously voted as "authentic" found their way into the NT, plus a few more. What "authentic" meant to the bishops was that it was traceable back to the apostles. How they determined this in the 4th century is unclear to me (hence, such a vote seems highly dubious to me).
Constantine's Bible by David Dungan is an excellent source to learn more about this. I just read it and it's quite fascinating.