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Topic 6 Gospels: Introduction and Context

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General Epistles (c. 65-150) 8 Hebrews-Jude. Apocalypse (c. 95) Revelation ... Devoted to keeping written and 'oral law. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Topic 6 Gospels: Introduction and Context


1
Topic 6 Gospels Introduction and Context
  • Introduction to the Gospels
  • The World of Jesus and the NT

2
I. Introduction to the Gospels
  • Overview of the NT
  • Chronology
  • Jesus (c. 6 BC c. 30 AD)
  • 27 NT books (c. 50-150)
  • Writing the NT books
  • Gospels (65-100) Matthew, Mark, Luke, John
    accounts of Jesus ministry
  • History (c. 90) Acts rise and growth of
    Christian church
  • Letters
  • Pauline Letters (c. 50-64) 13 Romans-Philemon
  • General Epistles (c. 65-150) 8 Hebrews-Jude
  • Apocalypse (c. 95) Revelation
  • Canonization (gathering into a collection BPJM,
    139-40)
  • 100 Pauls letters being collected
  • 140 Marcions canon Luke 10 letters of Paul
  • 200 core canon taking shape similar to ours
  • 367 earliest list of exactly our 27

3
I. Introduction to the Gospels
  • Origin of the Gospels
  • Oral tradition (30 65 AD and beyond)
  • Gospel good news.
  • Gospel was proclaimed orally for 3-4 decades
    before written gospels appeared.
  • Written gospels (65 100 AD)
  • Passing of eyewitness generation spread of
    church to new lands.
  • Need for written accounts emerges.
  • Synoptic Problem
  • Matthew, Mark, Luke are called Synoptic Gospels
    because of many similarities of content, order,
    wording (synoptic viewed together).
  • John stands apart as different in many ways.
  • Synoptic Problem Why 3 similar gospels and one
    different?
  • Solution
  • Mk. was written first then it was used by Mt.
    Lk.
  • Q a written collection of sayings of Jesus
    was also used by Mt. and Lk.
  • Mt. and Lk. supplemented with their own special
    materials M and L.
  • John written independently of Synoptics.

4
The Two-Source Theory
This theory, first put forward in 1863, is held
by a broad majority of NT scholars today.
5
I. Introduction to the Gospels
  • B. Origin of the Gospels (cont.)
  • Authorship - uncertain
  • Gospels were originally anonymous.
  • Titles reflect 2nd-cent. traditions which may or
    may not be accurate.
  • Character of the gospels
  • Not intended as objective biographies or
    eyewitness documentaries.
  • Faith witnesses to Jesus.
  • Evangelists want to preach the gospel to their
    readers not just recalling bare facts but
    interpreting meaning of Jesus story for faith.
  • Each has edited the sources/traditions to shape a
    theological message for their readers.

6
I. Introduction to the Gospels
  • Four Portraits of Jesus Each Gospel paints a
    distinctive portrait of Jesus for its particular
    readers.
  • Mark Suffering Messiah
  • Written c. 65-70 earliest, shortest gospel.
  • Tradition Mark, disciple of Peter.
  • Addresses church under persecution.
  • Highlights Jesus suffering and death.
  • Calls readers to suffering discipleship.
  • Matthew Teaching Messiah
  • Written c. 75-90 based on Mk., Q, and M.
  • Tradition Matthew the tax collector.
  • Marks story plus 5 blocks of teaching (Q, M).
  • Sermon on the Mount (Mt. 5-7).
  • Addresses Jewish audience.
  • Jesus fulfills OT prophecies.
  • Reveals true meaning of Law.

7
I. Introduction to the Gospels
  • Luke Inclusive Messiah
  • Written c. 75-90 based on Mk., Q, and L.
  • Tradition Luke the physician.
  • Addresses Gentile readers.
  • Inclusiveness of the gospel sinners, outcasts,
    women, foreigners.
  • Continued in Acts churchs mission to whole
    world.
  • John Eternal Word of God
  • Written c. 90-100 latest of the canonical
    gospels.
  • Tradition John ben Zebedee.
  • Jesus is heavenly Son of God who comes to reveal
    Gods love.
  • Invitation to believe and find life.
  • Spiritual gospel reads theology of church back
    into the story.

8
II. The World of Jesus and the NT
  • The Political Situation
  • Roman Empire dominated Mediterranean world.
  • Roman occupation of Palestine 63 BC
  • Some Jewish autonomy
  • Jewish king or governor appointed by Rome
  • Sanhedrin Jewish ruling council high priest
    appt. by Rome
  • Roman taxes heavy resented tax collectors
    were despised.
  • The Herods Jewish rulers clients of Rome
  • Herod the Great (37-4 BC)
  • King of the Jews
  • Great building program rebuilt Temple
  • Ruthless, brutal tyrant
  • Birth of Jesus c. 6 BC (Mt. 2)
  • Herod Antipas (4 BC-39 AD) Galilee and Perea
  • Imprisoned, then beheaded John the Baptist
  • Governed Galilee during Jesus ministry
    suspicious of Jesus
  • Capital at Sepphoris, 4 miles from Nazareth!

Herodian Palestine
Sepphoris
9
II. The World of Jesus and the NT
  • Philip (4 BC-34 AD) NE districts
  • Archelaus (4 BC-6 AD) Judea and Samaria so
    brutal that he was soon removed, replaced
  • Procurators (prefects) Roman governors
    beginning in 6 AD.
  • Direct Roman rule new tax census.
  • Provoked unrest uprising of Judas the Galilean
    2,000 crucified.
  • Period of procurators was time of seething
    resentment and sporadic rebellions.
  • Fifth procurator was Pontius Pilate (26-36)
    crucified Jesus c. 30 AD as suspected rebel.
  • Jewish War (66-70 AD)
  • Major Jewish revolt against Rome.
  • 70 AD Jerusalem sacked Temple destroyed.
  • Cataclysmic event for both Jews and Christians.

Map
10
II. The World of Jesus and the NT
  • Religious Situation many different Jewish
    parties
  • Pharisees (separated ones)
  • Devoted to keeping written and oral law.
  • Growing body of interpretations by scribes and
    rabbis.
  • Meticulous rules for Sabbath, tithing, ritual
    purity, fasting, etc.
  • Believed in doctrines of resurrection final
    judgment rewards and punishments in afterlife.
  • Nurtured hope for Messiah.
  • Challenged Jesus view of Law.
  • Sadducees (Zadokites)
  • Chief priests and other wealthy aristocrats.
  • Controlled Temple and Sanhedrin.
  • Cooperated with Rome to stay in power.
  • Accepted only written Torah.
  • Rejected doctrines of resurrection and afterlife.
  • Opposed Jesus as potential troublemaker.

11
II. The World of Jesus and the NT
  • Essenes (pious/holy ones?)
  • Sectarian group not mentioned in NT but
    described by several ancient writers.
  • Probably associated with Dead Sea Scrolls and
    commune at Qumran.
  • Originated c. 150 BC out of temple protest
    withdrew to wilderness Teacher of
    Righteousness organized into community claiming
    to be the true Israel..
  • Awaited 2 messiahs final battle between Sons of
    Light and Sons of Darkness.
  • Strict discipline and ritual purity daily baths
    of purification sacred meals.
  • Many parallels with NT theory that John the
    Baptist may have come out of this group.
  • Zealots
  • Militant revolutionaries freedom fighters.
  • Zeal for God and Torah motivated violence against
    pagan domination (and against compromise of
    Jewish law).
  • Many around Jesus wished him to lead rebellion.

Qumran
12
II. The World of Jesus and the NT
  • Jewish Future Hopes (Eschatology)
  • Eschatology doctrine of last things or of
    the end time.
  • Two main types
  • Hope for a Messiah
  • Messiah anointed one comes out of OT royal
    ideology kings were anointed to designate as
    Gods chosen rulers.
  • Hope for a new king, descended from David who
    would liberate and restore Israel many notions
    of how this would play out.
  • Christ Greek for anointed one NT claims Jesus
    fulfills hope but in unexpected ways.
  • Apocalypticism
  • More radical hope, looking not for restoration of
    nation but for cataclysmic end of world and
    creation of another.
  • God intervenes to defeat powers of evil
    resurrection of dead final judgment rewards and
    punishments glorious new age.
  • These themes pervade the NT.

13
II. The World of Jesus and the NT
  • Diaspora Judaism
  • Diaspora refers to the scattering or
    dispersion of Jews outside Palestine about 3
    times as many Jews lived in Diaspora as in
    homeland.
  • Tended to be Greek-speaking read scripture in
    Septuagint version, a Greek translation produced
    in Alexandria 250-100 BC.
  • Synagogues Jewish places of study and worship
    probably originated in Diaspora (by NT times,
    synagogues existed throughout Palestine as well).
    Synagogues differed from the temple in 2 main
    ways
  • There was only 1 temple (in Jerusalem)
    synagogues were found everywhere Jews lived in
    sufficient numbers they were very local.
  • No animal sacrifices were performed in
    synagogues synagogue worship revolved around
    reading/interpreting scripture and reciting
    prayers influenced early Christian worship.
  • Proselytes and God-fearers
  • Proselytes Gentiles who converted to Judaism
    required circumcision, baptism, sacrifice in
    temple.
  • God-fearers Gentiles who drew near but did not
    convert Cornelius, the Roman centurion converted
    by Peter in Acts 10, was a God-fearer.
  • Diaspora Judaism provided a natural network for
    spread of early Christianity.

14
II. The World of Jesus and the NT
  • Larger Greco-Roman World
  • Prevailing culture of Roman Empire was
    Hellenistic Greek was most widely spoken
    language early church was mostly Greek-speaking.
  • Empire was filled with many new religions
    oriented towards personal salvation of
    individuals.
  • Popular philosophies like Platonism, Stoicism,
    and Cynicism were preached in marketplaces by
    wandering teachers.
  • Mystery religions were a category of cults
    devoted to various deities (Demeter, Isis,
    Dionysus, Mithras, etc.).
  • Often featured myth of a dying and rising god.
  • Through secret rituals, initiate experiences
    death/rebirth of god becomes immortal, divine
    like the god.
  • Christians adopted similar pattern, language.
  • Gnosticism was a philosophical religion of
    salvation by knowledge.
  • Based on dualism considering spirit to be good
    and matter to be evil.
  • Human being is good spirit imprisoned in evil,
    material body/world.
  • Salvation comes by knowledge (gnosis) which
    illuminates/liberates spirit.
  • Fully developed Gnosticism was 2nd-cent.
    Christian heresy early Gnostic thought
    influenced Christianity in NT period.

15
Map of Herodian Palestine
Caesarea Philippi
NE Districts
(Philip)
(Antipas)
Sepphoris
Nazareth
(Antipas)
(Archelaus)
Bethlehem
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