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  1. Sep 20, 2017 · For three main reasons, almost all scholars believe the Gospel of Luke was written by the same person who wrote Acts: Luke and Acts were written in the same style and express the same theology. Both books are addressed to the same person—a man named Theophilus. Acts 1:1–2 appears to tie the two books to the same author.

  2. Sep 8, 2016 · Trent Horn • 9/8/2016. Listen to the audio version of this content. Critics of the New Testament often claim that the names of the authors of the Gospels were added after they had already been in circulation in the early Church. Instead of Matthew, Mark, Luke, and John, they say, the real authors were anonymous Christians who relied on ...

  3. A Study of Traditional Authorship” in How the New Testament Came to Be: The Thirty-fifth Annual Sidney B. Sperry Symposium, ed. Kent P. Jackson and Frank F. Judd Jr. (Provo, UT: Religious Studies Center, Brigham Young University; Salt Lake City: Deseret Book, 2006), 123-140. Frank F. Judd Jr. was an assistant professor of ancient scripture at ...

  4. Feb 26, 2021 · The gospels were produced from c. 70 CE to perhaps 100 CE. Their portraits of Jesus, who he was, and why he was here, differ in relation to both later reflections and changes in the demographics of the earliest Christian communities over time. The four gospels vary in some of the details of Jesus.

    • Rebecca Denova
  5. The Origins of the Gospels. We should not take anything for granted when investigating the beginnings of early Christian history. This includes our best source of information on Jesus’s life and teachings—the Gospels themselves. 1. Traditional academic approaches to the canonical Gospels—the New Testament books of Matthew, Mark, Luke, and ...

  6. Mar 24, 2024 · March 24, 2024 9:39 AM EDT. Moss, the Edward Cadbury Chair of Theology at the University of Birmingham and regular commentator on CBS and other networks, is the author of God's Ghostwriters ...

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  8. Aug 13, 2024 · The Gospels, the first four books of the New Testament, tell the story of the life of Jesus.Yet only one—the Gospel of John—claims to be an eyewitness account, the testimony of the unnamed “disciple whom Jesus loved.” (“This is the disciple who is testifying to these things and wrote these things, and we know that his testimony is true” [John 21:24]).

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