Why did the Early Church Accept the Four NT Gospels and Reject the Gnostic Gospels?

by Christ Alone 58 Replies latest watchtower bible

  • Christ Alone
    Christ Alone

    No problem. At least it isn't as long as most of templeijah's posts...

    In a nutshell I said that the early church writers only speak of the 4 gospels, not the gnostic gospels. Yet, they are arguing against much of what the gnostic gospels declare. The fact is that the 4 gospels came first, and the early church recognized that only the apostles and close associates of the apostles wrote scripture.

  • Pterist
    Pterist

    Thanks CA ...good research.

  • james_woods
    james_woods

    OK, I read it. None of your quotes show direct rejection of any other gospels, or the creation of a canon.

    The real truth is that early church history is very murky.

  • Christ Alone
    Christ Alone

    But they DO speak of the 4 gospels that we accept today. Matthew, Mark, Luke, and John. They also speak against many of the teachings that are found in the gnostic gospels, as taught by the gnostics at that time. Many of these Gnostic Gospels had probably not even been written yet. So the idea that there were many gospels that the church recognized, is false. It was clear that they only recognized the authority of the apostles, who were eyewitnesses.

  • james_woods
    james_woods

    How do you know that only these guys were representing the early church?

  • Christ Alone
    Christ Alone

    They are the earliest Christian writings that we have, closest to the apostles. There are several books I could recommend about the ante nicene fathers and the early church.

  • james_woods
    james_woods
    They are the earliest Christian writings that we have, closest to the apostles.

    Yes - the operative phrase being "we have".

    And we have no real proof that the four Gospels were really written by the apostles.

    It would (to me) be quite incredible that four of the twelve apostles were actually literate enough in that era to have produced them first hand.

  • jgnat
  • Terry
    Terry

    IMPORTANT: Nobody ever thought they were writing holy scripture!

    Any story about Jesus was just as "true" as any other.

    But, some groups were more successful at organizing than others.

    Think of a political primary with all those candidates pushing their own agenda forward into the public discourse looking for agreement.

    Is it always the BEST or the most correct candidate who is selected?

    The same process was in force when the necessity of creating an OFFICIAL bible canon emerged!

    Powerful lobbyists pushed an agenda forward fully convinced theirs was the best.

    The destruction of Jerusalem and diaspora of Jews left only the most rabid and stalwart messianic Jews to slug it out for turf and orthodoxy.

    Let's back up a bit.

    Get a larger view.

    Start at the beginning. Always a good place to start.

    There was Judaism before there was christianity. Right? Of course.

    The first christians were who? Jews. Messianic Jews. Right? Of course.

    That is step one.

    You have orthodox Judaism with the Priests, temple, sacrifices, purification rites, commandments, traditions, etc.

    Then, you have sects of Judaism.

    Why are there sects in Judaism? Different OPINIONS. Different TRADITIONS. Different political views. Different scriptures.

    Are you still with me?

    Each sect had different arguments and different writings.

    The book we now call a Bible was assembled at a point in time each step along the way historically.

    The Jews who came back from being captives in Babylon no longer had strict Judaism. Yet, they joined with those left behind and tried

    to reform a nation. That nation now had a completely AT-ODDS idea of its own history!

    The person(s) putting together an OFFICIAL history of Judaism did not want to further divide anybody. BOTH sets of differing ideas

    were put TOGETHER side by side.

    When Alexander the Great conquered the known world the Greek influence (and rulership by generals) swept away comfortable views, languages, traditions and self-awareness of tribal people.

    The Books of Maccabees make clear the chaos Judaism was plunged into and how it transformed the Jewish world view of itself.

    So?

    So, by the time the Jesus story started being told (word of mouth) there were hundreds (maybe thousands) of different versions.

    Each group, sect, political party would interpret their JESUS as seemed to fit their own viewpoint.

    The people who wrote these stories down were no different from any other person writing about God or history.

    For one thousand five hundred years there was mostly little effort to provide a readable BIBLE for christians. The CHURCH was more important.

    Only when Martin Luther broke with Church Authority was the bible catapulted into the extreme prominence we see today.

    Jewish Bible: traditionally 24 books, divided into the Torah (five books), Prophets (eight books), and Writings (eleven books).

    Christian Bibles are divided into two parts, the Old Testament and the New Testament.

    "Protestant" Bible: the Old Testament has the same books as the Jewish Bible, but numbered and arranged differently, to yield 39 Old Testament books. New Testaments contain 27 books. (66 total)

    Roman Catholic Bible: 73 books. Roman Catholic Old Testaments follow an ancient Christian Old Testament called the Septuagint, which includes all the same books as the Jewish Bible, plus seven more. Thus, Roman Catholic Old Testaments have 46 books. Roman Catholic New Testaments contain the same 27 books as Protestant New Testaments. (73 total)

    Greek/Eastern Orthodox Old Testaments are slightly longer than Roman Catholic Old Testaments. Syriac Old Testaments often have additional material in an appendix. Greek Orthodox and Syriac New Testaments have the same 27 books as Roman Catholic and Protestant New Testaments. (78 total)

    Ethiopian Orthodox Old Testaments are the longest in any branch of Christianity. The Ethiopian Orthodox "Narrow Canon" has the same 27 New Testament books as other branches of Christianity, but the Ethiopian Orthodox "Broad Canon" includes several additional books. (81 total)

  • botchtowersociety
    botchtowersociety
    And we have no real proof that the four Gospels were really written by the apostles.

    Do we have real proof that some of the ancient Latin and Greek writings are from the purported authors?

    In the case of the Gospels, we have early, subsequent writings of those who claim to have known the apostles.

    It would (to me) be quite incredible that four of the twelve apostles were actually literate enough in that era to have produced them first hand.

    They were observant Jews. These people have always been largely literate even in societies where general illiteracy was common.Their religion commanded them to read the Shema daily, to learn Torah and teach it in synagogue, and to write a personal Torah scroll (how else can you read it daily in an age before printing presses?). When a boy came of age he read from Torah before the congregation.

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