Month: August 2024

  • Gospel of John: Dating, Authorship (Esler/Piper)

    Many scholars have concluded that the Fourth Gospel has been composed in a series of stages. Raymond Brown, for example, developed an elaborate theory correlating different compositional layers with the different historical phases of the ‘Johannine community’ (See Brown 1979), a theory that to some scholars seems to push the evidence too far. Debates about…

  • Gospel of John: Dating, Dependence on Acts/Synoptics (Bartosz Adamczewski)

    Literary dependence of the Fourth Gospel on the Synoptic Gospels The hypothesis of the literary dependence of the Fourth Gospel on the Synoptic Gospels has recently become persuasive to a significant number of scholars. They point to evident similarities between numerous fragments of the Fourth Gospel and the Synoptic Gospels. Moreover, they usually argue that…

  • Are the explicit divinity claims in gJohn historical?

    From The Five Gospels (Funk, Hoover, 1993, Harper Collins): These sayings fail the the major criteria, as outlined by Dale Martin, used to determine if something was likely historical (https://youtu.be/d_dOhg-Fpu0?si=guAXsSrRg4LJtJRi): Ehrman in Jesus also claims that the historical Jesus likely viewed himself as the messiah in a future, temporal kingdom ushered in by God, but…

  • John 21

    For any book of the Bible, but especially the New Testament, there are many conservative scholars whose audience is primarily devotional or pastoral and would prefer to understand the scriptures as discrete, synchronic works—each written by the person whose name appears in the title if at all possible, although that ship has long sailed for…

  • The Fourth Gospel and Euripides

    “Those who eat my flesh and drink my blood abide in me, and I in them.” Dennis R. MacDonald offers a provocative explanation of those scandalous words of Christ from the Fourth Gospelan explanation that he argues would hardly have surprised some of the Gospel’s early readers. John sounds themes that would have instantly been…

  • Martha was added to John 11

    https://www.cambridge.org/core/journals/harvard-theological-review/article/abs/was-martha-of-bethany-added-to-the-fourth-gospel-in-the-second-century/6CBD2C9576A583DD02987FE836C427B7 This study examines the text transmission of the figure of Martha of Bethany throughout the Fourth Gospel in over one hundred of our oldest extant Greek and Vetus Latina witnesses. The starting point for this study is instability around Martha in our most ancient witness of John 11–12, Papyrus 66. By looking at P66’s…

  • Johannine Community and Essenes

  • More on Gospel of John Authorship

    The internal evidence for Lazarus as the “beloved disciple” is so strong that even conservative New Testament scholar Ben Witherington supports this interpretation of the figure’s identity. In “Was Lazarus the Beloved Disciple?,” Witherington explains:It has been common in Johannine commentaries to suggest that the Beloved Disciple as a figure in the narrative does not…

  • Did Lazarus Exist?

    Luke 16.39-31 mentions ‘Lazarus’ in a parable. This is discussed in a new article by Reuben Bredenhof (NTS, 2020): The unique name Lazarus in Luke 16.19-31 has prompted interpreters to posit an association with the Lazarus raised from the dead by Jesus in John 11, a proposal that has a long pedigree (Origen, Fr. Jo.…

  • Pool of Bethesda

    Introduction: (twin pools) there used to be a pool we do not know what ‘sheep’ refers to the gate is not known The New Testament gives no information of this Sheep Pool. Birket Israil? 6 sites for this pool There was no pool and that the 5 porticeos symbolize the 5 books of Moses For…