Abstract:
There never existed only one form of the biblical canon. This can be seen in the versions as well
as editions of the Hebrew and Greek Bibles. History and circumstances played a central role
in the gradual growth of eventually different forms of the biblical canon. This process can be
studied using the discipline of intertextuality. There always was a movement from traditum to
traditio in the growth of these variant forms of biblical canon. This can be seen in an analysis
of the intertextuality in Jubilees 23:8–32. The available canon of the day was interpreted there,
not according to a specific demarcated volume of canonical scriptures, but in line with the
theology presented in those materials, especially that of Psalm 90.