I'm not aware of any sects off the top of my head (aside from mormonism), i'm guessing these come from the early church era?
Nnoooo...? Roman Catholic. Baptist. Methodist. Eastern Orthodox. Etc., so forth so on. These are all christian sects. Denomination is more or less a synonym for the word.
Okay, what I meant was a denomination/sect that had differences in religious text, but we're a bit past that now I guess
I don't really understand the point here. If any sect were to take a scripture aside from the bible (and honor it the same as the bible), then they aren't christians, how recent they are doesn't play into it.
... well, congratulations, you've just labeled both protestantism and catholicism "aren't christian". Actually, I think you just managed to paint the whole religion as not the religion -- pretty much every christian sect takes texts outside the bible (which, itself, is just what the original catholic church(es) decided it was) as equally or near-equally important. And even then you've got ones that argue the canonicity of things like Revelations, and all the other doctrinal and so forth conflicts. Christian belief pulls whole hosts of junk from extra-biblical sources, pretty much unilaterally across the various groups.
Am I missing something here? Because i'm super confused by this and it's pretty embarrassing that I am. Well, I might as well start with what I know and see where I end up.
Like, I get what you're saying about the canonicity of certain books (i.e. Revelations). However, most of the differences between Christian denominations come from differing interpretations of what the bible says, not from arguments over what is and is not part of the bible (at least after the era of the early catholic churches).
Christian belief pulls whole hosts of junk from extra-biblical sources, pretty much unilaterally across the various groups.
Okay seriously colour me confused because I have no idea what you're talking about. Either i'm ignorant (a very real possibility, mind you), or you're mixing up the idea of pulling interpretations of the bible from extra-biblical sources with holding texts on the same level
as the bible.
As well they should. It seems awfully self-destructive to hold the pretense that your religion is so completely maladaptive that it cannot even incorporate new events past the first book. Despite all its other quibbles, this is one thing Catholicism got right: not only do they have extra books of the Bible, they also document their history, both the good and the bad, across multiple cultures and countries. Going in the other direction means freezing Christianity in place (hence all this "all you need is the Bible" doctrine that Protestant fundamentalists have taken up).
okay now I know I fucked up somewhere. This would be the first time i've heard anything about Catholicism accepting other books outside the bible as canonical.
EDIT: I edited out my response to the last part because i don't really know what i'm talking about.