- Joined
- Jun 12, 2015
- Messages
- 13,927
- Gender
- Male
- Religious Affiliation
- Lutheran
- Political Affiliation
- Conservative
- Marital Status
- Married
- Acceptance of the Trinity & Nicene Creed
- Yes
.
This is in 6 parts:
How We Got the New Testament
It’s an important question but one very few Christians ask.
There are two common MYTHS:
Roman Catholic: Jesus told Peter that these 27 books (and only these) are canonical, Peter told the Catholic Church, and eventually (it took many centuries) the Roman Catholic Church told the world.
Evangelical: God sent out a mass-email to all Christians telling everyone that these 27 books (and only these) are Scripture. It’s just that no one has found this email.
Both are wonderful myths, it would be nice if they were true, but they aren’t. What we have is… well…. TRADITION. A growing, evolving TRADITION. And a fairly messy one at that.
+ The Early Years (30-45 AD)
The Kerygma (“Proclaimation”). Jesus lived! Jesus acted! Jesus taught! Many were eye witnesses! And doubtless, they reported what they saw and heard. 1 Corinthians 15:1-7. 1 Thessalonians 2:4,9, 14-15. Acts 20:35 all seem to allude to this “kerygma”. Some of the writings of the earliest Church Fathers do, as well (1 Clement, for example). As long as the Apostles themselves and the hundreds (probably thousands) of eye-witnesses were still proclaiming, it seems there was little interest (or need) for written records. People heard it – from eyewitnesses.
But some have theorized that even at this time of the living witnesses, there were some written records made. It has long been suggested that there was at least one Gospel written in this period (in Aramaic) but NOTHING of such has ever been found; there is zero evidence of this. The theory nonetheless persists.
More have theorized that there was SOME writing (or maybe writings) that come from this period that were incorporated into Matthew, Mark and Luke. Called the “Quilla” (or “Q” – it means Source), this theory comes from remarkable similarities in these 3 Gospels. Some theorize the authors of these are heavily dependent on this pre-existing book (or books), this “Q.” But here, too – NOTHING has been found to support the theory. We have hundreds and hundreds of very early fragments of Matthew, Mark and Luke – but nothing from any “Q” (in Greek or Aramaic). An interesting (maybe even likely) theory without any substantiation.
Continues in part 2 below...
.
This is in 6 parts:
How We Got the New Testament
It’s an important question but one very few Christians ask.
There are two common MYTHS:
Roman Catholic: Jesus told Peter that these 27 books (and only these) are canonical, Peter told the Catholic Church, and eventually (it took many centuries) the Roman Catholic Church told the world.
Evangelical: God sent out a mass-email to all Christians telling everyone that these 27 books (and only these) are Scripture. It’s just that no one has found this email.
Both are wonderful myths, it would be nice if they were true, but they aren’t. What we have is… well…. TRADITION. A growing, evolving TRADITION. And a fairly messy one at that.
+ The Early Years (30-45 AD)
The Kerygma (“Proclaimation”). Jesus lived! Jesus acted! Jesus taught! Many were eye witnesses! And doubtless, they reported what they saw and heard. 1 Corinthians 15:1-7. 1 Thessalonians 2:4,9, 14-15. Acts 20:35 all seem to allude to this “kerygma”. Some of the writings of the earliest Church Fathers do, as well (1 Clement, for example). As long as the Apostles themselves and the hundreds (probably thousands) of eye-witnesses were still proclaiming, it seems there was little interest (or need) for written records. People heard it – from eyewitnesses.
But some have theorized that even at this time of the living witnesses, there were some written records made. It has long been suggested that there was at least one Gospel written in this period (in Aramaic) but NOTHING of such has ever been found; there is zero evidence of this. The theory nonetheless persists.
More have theorized that there was SOME writing (or maybe writings) that come from this period that were incorporated into Matthew, Mark and Luke. Called the “Quilla” (or “Q” – it means Source), this theory comes from remarkable similarities in these 3 Gospels. Some theorize the authors of these are heavily dependent on this pre-existing book (or books), this “Q.” But here, too – NOTHING has been found to support the theory. We have hundreds and hundreds of very early fragments of Matthew, Mark and Luke – but nothing from any “Q” (in Greek or Aramaic). An interesting (maybe even likely) theory without any substantiation.
Continues in part 2 below...
.
Last edited: