Did any Jews have the same canon as Jesus during the time of Christ and did the early church ever quote from it?

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About 3 Maccabees in particular, here is what I have learned and assume applies to other books as well:

The book was not included in the Hebrew scriptures, but was included in the greek Septuagint. The Septuagint ended up being the basis for the Old Testament of Christians.

This leads me to the conclusion that probably, in Judea, Jews did for the most part not use 3 Maccabees or see it as authoritative, but hellenistic Jews might have.

Given all that, it seems unlikely the apostles would have cited it, but somewhat more likely for early church leaders using the Septuagint.

However, Wikipedia has this to say about 3 Maccabees:

3 Maccabees was not influential. No Jewish writers of the ancient era appear to reference it or be familiar with it, even those who wrote in Greek. The book was not translated into the Latin Vulgate, hence the Western Church's rejection of including it even as a member of the deuterocanonical books. While the book was kept in the Greek-speaking Eastern Church's scripture, it is only very rarely referenced or alluded to.[22][3] Theodoret briefly summarizes 3 Maccabees in one of his writings, but this is the rare exception; the work had little influence on Christianity.[3] 3 Maccabees is included in the deuterocanon of the Eastern Orthodox Church and some Oriental Orthodox Churches: the Armenian Apostolic Church, the Syriac Orthodox Church, and the Assyrian Church of the East. The Apostolic Canons approved by the Eastern Church's Council in Trullo in 692 verified 1, 2, and 3 Maccabees were deuterocanonical, but the Council was rejected by the Western Church's Pope Sergius I.

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