Tuesday, January 06, 2026
The Cumulative Effect Of The Pre-Irenaean Sources On Gospel Authorship
I've sometimes linked a collection of resources I put together on the best and earliest evidence for the authorship of the gospels. A mistake that can be made when evaluating that kind of evidence is to view the information in too isolated a manner. There's a cumulative effect to the evidence, and sometimes two or more things take on an added significance when considered together, a significance they wouldn't have if considered individually.
Labels:
Authorship,
Clement of Alexandria,
Gospels,
Irenaeus,
Jason Engwer,
John,
Justin Martyr,
Luke,
Marcionism,
Mark,
Matthew,
Papias
Sunday, January 04, 2026
The Maturing Of Matthew And John
I want to expand on some things I said in my last post. When somebody like Bart Ehrman refers to the unlikelihood that the average first-century Jew without much of an education, an ancient fisherman like John, etc. would compose a document like the gospel of Matthew or the gospel of John, there are other factors involved that are being neglected.
Labels:
Authorship,
Gospels,
Illiteracy,
Jason Engwer,
John,
Matthew,
Writing
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