- Apr 5, 2014
- 25,906
The earliest fragments from biblical manuscripts come from the second century (minimum 80 years after the event), and there's not a great deal of details. This does present an authority issue as well as an authorship issue. Peter has always given me a problem. He was a fisherman from a Galilee. I find it very hard to believe he could have written an articulate letter in full Greek.You've got that a bit wrong. The gospels were all completed by the year 90AD. Not 300 years after.
Paul's first letter to the Corinthians was written around the year 53AD.
New Testament - Wikipedia
en.wikipedia.org
There are certain writing styles though. You can tell John straight away, a very endearing writer. Paul always seems a bit cross about something. But did they actually write this stuff ? We are so far moved from the originals that we cannot be sure.
I often wonder about all the stuff that wasn't included. And what happened to it. The New Testament certainly tows a line, but only became canonised at Carthage in 397. This, of course, was a long time after Constantine had declared it the official religion of the Roman Empire (303 ?).
So with so few references to Jesus in secular accounts near the time, and some of those untrustworthy, we are left with very little of evidential substance to go on. Although his existence is something not in much doubt.
The real question is who was he ? And that is what folk would need to find out through experience. I cannot see how the New Testament, and the way it came together, would be a person's authority. A guide, perhaps, but not an ultimate authority. A good example of this is how they were convinced that Jesus was coming back soon, and yet here we are nearly 2,000 years later.
Acts 17: 24-27