JXL said:
Waco1947 said:
Which gospel is historical?
"The most ubiquitous Christian book was the Four Gospels, either preserving the distinct sequence of each text or comprising selected passages re-ordered in line with the readings employed in the Church year to form a lectionary. The popularity of the Gospels is attested by the large number that survive to this day there are over two thousand copies of the Greek Gospels alone. The Four Gospels were also combined into a single narrative in what are known as Gospel Harmonies. Although suppressed as heretical in the 2nd century, harmonised versions of the Gospels circulated throughout the medieval period. Also particularly numerous were psalters, copies of the Psalms structured to mirror their daily use in monastic liturgy. The Book of Revelation, or Apocalypse, appeared in separate volumes or combined with various biblical or non-biblical texts. Of the three hundred or so surviving copies of the Greek text of Revelation over forty appear in otherwise non-biblical compilations. In the West the Book of Revelation was most often copied together with a commentary explaining it when not part of the Vulgate; most surviving Greek copies of Revelation include or relate to a commentary. Moreover, in the West many copies of an individual book or groups of books of the Bible, such as the Psalms, Gospels or Pauline Epistles, included commentaries." British Library
Historicity is very hard to prove with this history of the gospels
Why don't the Gospels meet the "standard of historicity" (whatever that may be)?
n the study of
history as an academic discipline, a
primary source (also called an
original source) is an
artifact, document, diary,
manuscript,
autobiography, recording, or any other source of
information that was created at the time under study. It serves as an original source of information about the topic.
History begins with an event and is history when we can attest to an event "actually happened."
Let take the Gospel of Luke
When Luke sat down to write his gospel and put to paper what were his sources?
What were Luke's sources for the historicity or what actually happened at feeding of the 5 thousand?
I will start. He had a copy of Mark.
What else? Take a shot at it JXL
Waco1947 ,la