Four Stages - 1) preaching of Jesus, 2) preaching of early Christian leaders on death and resurrection of Christ, 3) combined 1 & 2, and 4) Matthew, Mark, Luke, John
Anonymous - text does not identify who wrote them
Compilation - many writers wrote with sources all compiled in one
Jewish - all writers were Jews and had Jewish perspectives
Ancient Biographies - Greco-Roman types of biographies were often slanted and very biased; sometimes things are made up or change chronologies
Narrative - told as a story and meant to be entertaining
Evangelistic - wanted to convince the reader to believe in Jesus
Inspiration
Dictation Theory - word for word what God dictated the writers to write
Inerrancy - the Bible is without error in the original text (which we don’t have any of)
Dynamic Theory - mix of divine and human effort; shows human bias with God’s intention coming through too
Trustworthy - trustworthiness does not equal perfect
Sources of Truth
Oral Tradition - scripture being passed down generation by generation orally
Scripture - Septuagint
“Word of God” in New Testament
Not the Bible as we have it today
Jesus
Oral Tradition
Preaching
Stages of the Gospel
Life setting of Jesus - what Jesus said and did
Period of Oral Tradition and Early Written Sources - compiling these to help create the Gospel’s
Evangelists Interpret - Their own opinion added to the Gospel’s
Four Witnesses
Matthew - Depicted as a man
Mark - Depicted as a lion
Luke - Depicted as an ox
John - Depicted as an eagle
Synoptic Gospels - Matthew, Mark, Luke; “seem to hold together”
Chronology - Mark was first, then probably a decade later Matthew and Luke, THEN John
Why not just one gospel? - Four witnesses, no one of them is perfect
Marcion - wanted onlyLuke as the Gospel
Synoptic puzzle - why are the details of the Gospel’s different
Two-Source Hypothesis
Q - Sayings of Jesus; Material found in Matthew and Luke but not in Mark
M - Matthew’s other sources
L - Luke’s other sources
Criticism
Source Criticism - discern the sources a writer used
Textual Criticism - find the closest to what could be what the author meant
Literacy Criticism - study the text’s form and style
Historical Criticism - reconstruct what happened in the world at that time to understand the people and agendas at that time