Also, creeds which speak of Jesus, appeared as early as five
years after his crucifixion.
Also, the gospels were written approximately between 30 - 50
years after the crucifixion, so you may want to look at your «400 years later» and oral tradition part.
The fact is, that we have no more evidence that John wrote the Gospel of John than we do that Peter wrote the Gospel of Peter, other than Irenaeus» declaration in 180 AD, in France, one hundred and fifty
years after the crucifixion, that the four gospels we have today were written by the persons that he asserts, based upon evidence, that he never gives!
Islam did not appear until 600
years after his crucifixion.
Not exact matches
None of the «four gospels were even written contemporary to Jesus» lifetime, the oldest being Mark, which was written 35 - 42
years after Jesus supposed
crucifixion.
Don't tell me the story written at least 30
years AFTER his death is your evidence... any records of the trial,
crucifixion, birth records?
But one question that I have is, what happened to the people who died during the time
after Jesus» birth, and the 33
years he lived before His
crucifixion?
Dr. Robert W. Funk, New Testament scholar and organizer of the Jesus Seminar, points out that all four New Testament gospels were written forty
years or more
after Jesus»
crucifixion, and though church tradition says that the disciples Matthew and John both wrote gospels, Bible scholars for more than a century have believed that none of the gospel writers actually knew Jesus during his lifetime.
His parents are X and Y — his aunts and uncles are A, B, C D. His father's occupation will be Z. 33
years after his birth, at such and such a place, he will be charged by ZZ, and condemned to die by
crucifixion.
All we know about Jesus comes from 4 short stories written 50 - 130
years after his supposed
crucifixion by anonymous authors who couldn't have known him personally, who radically disagreed with each other about what happened during his life.
The gospels were written at least 40
years after the time that the
crucifixion is assumed to have taken place, as well as
after the destruction of Jerusalem in the The Fiirst Jewish Revolt.