See Part 1 General Comments
The
Gospels referred to as Matthew, Mark, Luke, and John do not actual claim to be
written by Matthew, Mark, Luke or John.
Nowhere inside any of the Gospels, or anywhere else in the bible, is any
sort of author for the Gospels identified—they were written as anonymous
documents.
The
designation of the authors Matthew, Mark, Luke and John come not from the
Gospels themselves, but from Church tradition dating from the 2nd Century A.D,
about a century after the apostles were dead.
Modern
scholarship has established, for a variety of reasons, that it was extremely
unlikely the apostles could have written the Gospels of Matthew, Mark, Luke or
John. This is so well established now
that it is currently being taught in both conservative protestant and catholic
colleges.
[I
personally attended Calvin College which
is not a liberal institution—to put it mildly.
(The faculty are currently prevented from writing anything on the issue
of homosexuality, and the ordination of woman is still regarded as controversial—to
give you some idea.) Our religion
professors taught us what is commonly regarded as the scholarly consensus—that
the Gospels could not have been actually written by the apostles. I recently compared notes with a friend who
grew up in a conservative catholic high school, and he told me the priests
there had also taught them that the Gospels were not written by Matthew, Mark,
Luke and John.]
This
is one of those things that is widely known in Christian seminaries and
colleges, but never gets communicated to the people who attend Church every
week. (You could write a whole book
about the Christian scholarship that never gets communicated to the regular
church-goers, but that’s another topic.)
The
only people who currently believe that the Gospels were written by the Apostles
are the extreme fundamentalists, or people who are ignorant of any modern
scholarship. (The latter category
overlaps heavily with the former.)
Lee
Strobel himself appears to be aware that the evidence against apostolic
authorship is too overwhelming, which I suspect is why he only makes a half-hearted
attempt to defend it, and then quickly switches gears and goes instead into his
defense of how the Gospels came from well preserved oral traditions. (But then once he’s tried to cover his bases
on both sides, he will go back and forth between them, and throughout the book
he will continually cite the eyewitness testimony of the apostles as proof of
the Gospels).
In
the next several posts, I’ll try to lay out the reasons why scholars are pretty
much unanimous in agreeing that the Gospels couldn’t have been written by the
apostles. Then, once I’ve established
what is currently the scholarly consensus, I’ll return to look at how Lee Strobel deals with the issue.
In the next several sections I’ll be
showing that the Gospels couldn’t have been written by the apostles for the
following reasons.
VI.
The Q Hypothesis
and, as a bonus, I’ll put in my own
thoughts on
In
tomorrow’s post, I’ll deal with the first of these points: the absence of any internal evidence inside the Gospels:
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