<P> It is said that the Coptic translation and some Arabic version include Revelation . </P> <P> Bishop Amphilochius of Iconium, in his poem Iambics for Seleucus written some time after 394, discusses debate over the inclusion of a number of books that should be received, and seems uncertain about the later Epistles of Peter and John, Jude, and Revelation . </P> <P> Pope Damasus's commissioning of the Latin Vulgate edition of the Bible to Jerome, c. 383, was instrumental in the fixation of the canon in the West . Pope Damasus I is often considered to be the father of the Catholic canon, since what is thought as his list corresponds to the current Catholic canon . Purporting to date from a "Council of Rome" under Pope Damasus I in 382, the so - called "Damasian list" which some attributed to the Decretum Gelasianum gives a list identical to what would be the Canon of Trent, and, though the text may in fact not be Damasian, it is at least a valuable 6th century compilation . </P> <P> This list, given below, was purportedly endorsed by Pope Damasus I: </P>

Letters adopted as books of the new testament