GENERAL INTRODUCTION TO THE GOSPELS

                  (c) Copyright, 1992 by William G.Most

l.What is a Gospel?  This question really asks what sort of
literature a Gospel is. In other words, what is the literary
genre of a Gospel?

    To see what that word genre means, we think of a modern
historical novel about the Civil War. Since we are natives of
this culture, we instinctively know how to take it - we know it
should include both history and fiction. The mainline will be
history; but we expect the author to fill in with things that are
at best guesses or pure fiction, but which fit in well. For
example,he may give us word for word discussions between Lincoln
and Grant. This makes it more realistic and interesting.

    The key word here is assert or claim.  The writer asserts
the main line is history. He does not assert the fill-ins are
historical or real. So we do not say he is in error or is
falsifying in these fill-ins.

    Now we have in English many genres or patterns, mostly
inherited from those of Greece and Rome, with rather little
change. Hence as long as we do our reading in that great culture
stream, our instinctive or automatic adjustments, which we make
as natives, serve us well.  For we do need to make adjustments or
follow rules in understanding, as we did with the historical
novel - each genre has as it were its own rules.

    But, obviously, as soon as we begin to read works from a
very different culture stream, it would be foolish to suppose
those writers wrote just the way modern Americans do. Scripture
belongs to the ancient Semitic culture. The patterns there are
rather different. DV 12 explicitly tells us that and says we
must study to see what patterns were in use in those times.

    The pattern most like the Gospels, though not identical, is
that of history. We know what the Greek and Roman writers
intended to do when they wrote history, for they themselves tell
us.  For example,the earliest Greek historian, Herodotus, says in
his opening lines that he wrote, "in the hope of...preserving
from decay the remembrance of what men have done."  But he wanted
to sift truth from falsehood too. So (7.152):"... my duty is to
report all that is said, but I am not obliged to believe it all
alike."  He meant that things very far back from his times, such
as the Trojan War, were lost in the mists. But the events of his
own day, the two Persian invasions of Greece - these he could and
did record rather well.  Similarly Thucydides, greatest of the
Greek historians, in late 5th century B.C. said (1.22):
"I have not ventured to speak from any chance information.... I
have described nothing but what I either saw myself or learned
from others from whom I made the most careful and specific
inquiry."

    So these Greek and Roman historians wanted to record things
that really happened, facts. So did the Gospel writers,
obviously, for the Hebrew tradition also included such works. And
much more important, the writers of the Gospels knew that their
eternal fate depended on getting the truth about Jesus and His
teachings. So they would obviously be very careful. Later on we
will see what opportunities they had to get at the facts.

    The Greek and Roman writers also wanted to give
interpretations, to learn from history. For example, Diodorus
(1.1) wrote: "It is a blessing to be given a chance to improve
ourselves by taking a warning from the mistakes of others."
History does not produce complete duplicates, of course. But the
ways of men are psychologically much the same in all times. So we
can and should profit from hearing.

2.Can we trust the Gospels? (apologetics):   Some today foolishly
say we cannot separate the two things, facts and interpretations.
All we need to do is to observe a few instances. For example,
Tacitus, the greatest Roman historian, tells us that when
Tiberius first came into the senate after the death of Augustus,
he said he wanted only to arrange the funeral of Augustus.
Clearly, that was an example of a  fact: anyone present could see
and observe it. But Tacitus also said that Tiberius had in mind
that up north with a great army was Germanicus, who had a claim
at the throne. Tiberius felt he must be careful to avoid
provoking trouble. Clearly, in saying that, Tacitus was trying to
read the mind of Tiberius: it was an interpretation - very likely
a true one.

    Some also say: "There is no such a thing as an uninterpreted
report." They mean that our subjectivity gets into the telling of
things. Is this true?  Very often yes, but not always. For
example if a leper stands before Jesus saying he wants to be
healed, and Jesus says: "I will it. Be healed," anyone present
can report it simply, and there is no room for subjectivity to
get into the report - the structure of the case is too simple for
that.

    Before long we will see that just six things of that simple
structure are all we need to prove that the Church has a
commission to teach, from a messenger sent by God, who also
promised God's protection.

    We had asked: Did the Gospel writers have a chance to get
the facts - for it is not  enough to be sincere and well-
intentioned if they could not get the facts. We reply: they
surely did have an excellent chance. Here are a few of the
openings: 1)Pope St.Clement became Pope around 88 AD. We have his
letter to Corinth, written probably around 95 AD. In it he says
that Peter and Paul were of his own  generation. A quick look at
the numbers makes that obvious. They died around 66 AD. From
there to around 88 is not long - so Clement  must have heard them
preach in Rome - the prime witnesses! 2)St.Ignatius of Antioch
was shipped to Rome to be eaten alive by the animals c.107 AD. He
was eaten. On the way he wrote seven letters, which we have. In
the one to Rome, he tells the Christians there: In case some of
you have influence and might get me off - please do not. I want
to die for Christ, to be more like him.  Some today foolishly -
without offering any shred of evidence, claim the early
Christians were "creative", they just made things up. These same
writers are immeasurably demanding of proof for other things -
but for this claim of fakery, they offer no shred, as we said.
But if one thinks they might be right, let him take a copy of the
letter of Ignatius to Rome to the zoo, and read it by the lions'
den. Will such a man just make up things? Of course not. And he
came from Antioch where Peter and Paul first functioned as the
authorities, where information on them was still alive and well.
3)We could give many more sources, but one alone will suffice,
even without those just given: Think of someone aged 15 at the
tie of the public life of Jesus. Fifty years later he would be
aged 65, and then at about the year 80. The most radical writers
say that Matthew and Luke wrote between 80 and 90 - and the same
authors admit Mark wrote before 70. So there would be many on
hand who would know things about Jesus.

    Was life expectancy then too short for people to reach age
65?  Many did not. But quite a few did. Anna in Luke 2:37 was 84
years old when Jesus was presented in the Temple. And Quadratus
the first Greek apologist, writing around 123 AD, said that in
his day some were still alive who had been healed by Christ or
raised from the dead by Him. Not strange that a person repaired
by His Maker should last a while!  That need not reach to 123,
but it would surely reach to the period 80-90 in which the
leftist critics claim Matthew and Luke were written.

    So our Gospel writers could easily get the essential facts,
and their motive was most powerful: the care for their own
eternal fate.

    What things do we need to get from the Gospels to prove
there is a Church with a commission to teach from a messenger
sent by God? Just six - and please notice they all are of such
very simple structure that there is no room for subjectivity to
get into the reports: 1)There was a man named Jesus; 2) He said
He was sent by God - obvious all over the Gospels; 3) He did
enough to prove that, not just by miracles, but by miracles done
in a framework in which there was a tie made between the miracle
and the claim,e.g., Jesus told the paralytic let down through the
roof: "Your sins are forgiven". When the scribes growled
interiorly, He called them on it: "What is easier to say: Your
sins are forgiven - or, take your bed and go". He did the one to
prove He had done the other. God,the ultimate source of such
power, will not furnish it to prove a lie Really,all over the
Gospels He called for faith to give a miracle. 4 and 5) As we
would expect, He had a smaller group within the crowds - the
apostles - to whom He spoke more, and whom He told to continue
His teaching. 6)Finally, once we have seen what a messenger He
was, who not only worked miracles - not even His enemies in His
own day denied that - but who proved He could even forgive sins -
it is not surprising if such a messenger asserts "He who hears
you hears me."

    If we have followed this careful reasoning,what do we see
before us? We see a group, or church, commissioned to teach by a
Messenger sent for God,and promised God's protection on that
teaching. Then it is not only intellectually possible, but
inevitable to believe what they teach, even if the later
inheritors of that commission may not be the best sort of
persons. We can ask that group or church:  Is this Messenger
divine? Yes. These ancient documents we looked at, were they
inspired? Yes. If there a Pope? Yes. What can He do? They can and
do answer.

    Let us realize what we have just done. We have  given in
brief form -  a tightly reasoned proof that we have a group or
church commissioned to teach by someone sent from God, and given
a promise of God's protection. There is not today, there never
has been, any religion, sect,or whatever that can give such a
proof.

    This also gives us a bypass around the quibbles of extreme
and unsound writers who put their finger down on so many Gospel
passages and ask what proof there is that this really happened.
We need only six things, so very simple in structure. Then this
Church can answer what questions we need.

    This process is called apologetics.

3.Inerrancy: Vatican II, in the Constitution on Divine Revelation
(hereinafter = DV) 11 said: "Since everything which the inspired
authors...assert, should be held to asserted by the Holy Spirit,
hence the books of Scripture are to be professed to teach firmly,
faithfully and without error that truth which God wanted
entrusted to the Sacred Letters for our salvation."

    We need to notice two things here: 1) Whatever the human
inspired writer asserts is asserted by the Holy Spirit. For as
the same paragraph said earlier, these books "have God as their
author".  God, being all powerful, could use the human writer as
a free instrument, leaving him his own style of writing, and yet
cause him to write all that God willed,and only that, and to do
so without error. If there were any error, God Himself would be
the author of error! Therefore those writers today who say that
only those things needed for salvation are protected by
inspiration, are saying God could be the author of error!


4.Who were these Gospel writers? There are traditions,and we will
review them. But we really have no need. All we need is what we
already have -  we have writers who (a) could get at the facts;
(b)who were in most deadly earnest, knowing their eternal fate
depended on the truth about Jesus.

    Here are some of the chief traditions. Papias, Bishop of
Hierapolis in Phrygia around 130 AD wrote the Exegesis of the
Lord's Sayings. Papias tells us he diligently collected whatever
he could learn from those who had heard the Apostles. He tell us
about Mark: "Mark became the interpreter of Peter, and wrote
accurately the doings and sayings of the Lord, not in sequence,
but all that he remembered. For he [Mark] had not heard the Lord,
or followed Him, but as I said, followed Peter later on, who, as
needed, gave teaching, but did not make an arrangement of the
sayings of the Lord.... He gave heed to one thing, to leave out
nothing of what he had heard, and to make no false statements
about them."

    Papias also said: Matthew collected the sayings [of the
Lord] in the Hebrew language, and each interpreted them as he
could." Of course we cannot tell what relation this work had to
our present Greek Matthew.

    Some object to Papias, saying that Eusebius, the first
Church historian, called Papias "a man of very small
intelligence." But those who object do not notice in what respect
Eusebius said this. He said it in view of the fact that Papias
accepted the millennium theory, misunderstanding Revelation 20:4-
6. But that passage is very easy to misunderstand. Today even the
New Jerome Biblical Commentary looks with some favor on that
interpretation! And really, how much intelligence would be needed
to report what others told him about the authorship of the
Gospels? Not much.

    Further,we have other ancient testimonies.The Anti-
Marcionite Prologues to the Gospels, in the part on Mark, dating
from perhaps around 180 A.D. give us a fascinating testimony
"Mark, who was called stumpfingered, was the interpreter of
Peter." The remark that Mark was "stumpfingered" is intriguing. A
late forger would be unlikely to know such an uncomplimentary
detail about an Evangelist, nor is it likely anyone would just
invent such an odd and unusual point. Papias,in what we have of
him,does not seem to know this item.So the Prologue did not just
copy from Papias.

    St.Irenaeus (died c.200 A.D.), who had heard St.Polycarp
tell what he remembered of the preaching of the Apostle St.John,
tells us:"Matthew among the Hebrews brought forth in their own
language, a written Gospel, while Peter and Paul at Rome were
preaching and laying the foundations of the Church. After their
departure, Mark, the disciple and interpreter of Peter, himself
handed down in writing the things preached by Peter. And Luke,the
follower of Paul, set down in a book the Gospel preached by him."

    So we have three sources -- Papias, the AntiMarcionite
Prologue to Mark,and St.Irenaeus, all saying Mark wrote from the
preaching of St.Peter. A prominent modern scholar, Martin Hengel,
at the hardly conservative University of T�bingen, agrees that
Mark did write from the preaching of Peter.

    However, as we said earlier, we do not need any of these
testimonies. All we need to know is that the writers were sincere
- obvious, from their concern for their own eternity -and that
they had the means to get at the facts, as we showed above.

5.The Synoptic Problem: There are some considerable similarities
in many lines in the Synoptics, Matthew, Mark and Luke. This can
be seen by looking at Alan Kurt, Synopsis of the Four Gospels.
Greek-English Edition of Synopsis Quattuor Evangeliorum, with the
text of the Revised Standard Version, London, United Bible
Societies,1979.  In it we can see the similarities at a glance,
but we can also not that there is little word for word
correspondence. The most favored theory is called the Two Source
Theory. It holds that Mark wrote first, then Matthew and Luke
used Mark extensively, but not all the time. Part of the time
Matthew and Luke used another source a hypothetical one, called Q
(for German Quelle, source). But some respectable scholars deny
that Mark wrote first. Some think all three had independent
sources, and  attribute the similarities to accurate memories in
the sources.

6.Marcan Priority: The reasons given for saying Mark wrote first
are these:  a)Mark 13:14, they claim, is not clear, would not
have been clear before the event. So if the event had happened,
Mark would have made it clearer. -  But Jesus who foreknew all
could have described it thus even though the original readers
might not have understood.  b)The prophecy of the fall of
Jerusalem is too clear in Luke, who speaks of an army surrounding
Jerusalem. But:The objectors have become dull. In all ancient
sieges there was an army surrounding the city.  c) Matthew shows
no awareness of the bitter strife over the law which we find in
Paul. So Matthew must have written later, when the trouble had
settled. But: We could equally argue on the same basis that
Matthew wrote before the trouble arose in 49 AD. Further, Matthew
had a different scope in mind: to give a basic account of the
life and teaching of Jesus. Nor does the saying that He has come
not to destroy but to fulfill the Law clash with Paul's words
about freedom from the Law. Paul merely meant that our keeping
the law does not earn salvation. He insists many times if we
break the law we will lose our inheritance: 1 Cor 6:9-10; Gal
5:19-21; Eph 5:5;Rom 3:31. We note Paul speaks much on our
inheriting the kingdom. Children do not earn their inheritance,
though they could earn to lose it. Cf.Rom 6:23: "For the wages of
sin [what we earn] is death; but the free gift of  God is life
everlasting." This is the same thought as that of Jesus: Unless
you b come like little children...."

    So the arguments for Marcan priority and a late date for
Matthew and Luke do not hold.

    On the contrary, my article, "Did St.Luke Imitate the
Septuagint": (Journal for the  Study of the New
Testament,15,1982,pp.40-41 shows Luke was meticulous in his
translating of Hebrew originals, but only at some points was he
using them.  So if Luke copied Mark, why would he have added
Semitisms that Mark, a real Semite, did not use? Again,in Mk
12:1-12,the parable of the wicked husbandmen, Mark reports that
the master "sent another" and then "he sent another". But Luke
adds a Semitism there (20:9-19):"And he added to send another
servant...And he added to send a third." On the other hand Mark
sometimes has Hebraisms that Luke does not copy: 6:39 and 8:12.
Further, as M.Zerwick shows (Graecitas Biblica,ed 4,Rome,1960, 
361). Luke often uses an Aramaic pattern of a form of the verb to
be plus a participle instead of an imperfect indicative. Luke has
50% of all such cases in the entire New Testament. Yet where Mark
does have this structure, Luke usually avoids it, though he uses
it in places that are parallel to Mark, but in which Mark does
not have it.

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