The_Horned_King
Forever an Adventurer
- Joined
- Jul 13, 2006
- Messages
- 1,162
Originally Posted by LuvDuke
Btw, The Gospels were not written by any one with those first hand accounts.
You say that as if it's established fact. A quick google search shows that's not necessarily the case.
While nothing is established as fact...I happen to agree with LuvDuke. Here is a very interesting link to someone questioning when the gospels were written.
http://www.geocities.com/questioningpage/When.html
here's a quote form it...
So this is the question that we will deal with here: Were the gospels written before 50AD, as these Christians claim, or after 70AD, as critical scholarship claims?
The obvious place to begin our search is to look at the gospels themselves, to see when they claim to be written. Alas, the authors do not identify themselves, and they make no mention of the date of writing. So this doesn't help us.
Our search next takes us to early documents that refer to the gospels. We notice something odd. The gospels appear to be completely unknown to Paul and the other first-century Christians. Now if Paul or another first-century writer had referred to a gospel, we could use that information to date the gospels prior to that apostle. But the first century writings are no help here. Instead we find no clear mention of the gospels until well into the second century. [4][5] This absence-of-evidence would hint that the gospels were not written before the later part of the first century, but, of course, this is not conclusive.
It continues on for along time and is very interesting.
Many people conclude that they were not written until 70ad((both believers and not)) and I did a google search also..and just as many pages and links support this view...Many of them not linked to such sites as catholic.net
http://www.catholic.net/RCC/Periodicals/Homiletic/May97/gospels.html
It also depends on how you put it into google. As what you search will get more answers to support your cause. Believe what you want.
I choose to believe they were not first hand accounts.

Jesus doesn't necessarily speak about salvation, but about being a pathway to God - which is how I tried to word my note. Faith for many - Christian and others - is more about communion with God than about having a get-out-of-heck-free card.
I have been told more times than I can count that I shall be burning in my own special version of hell, all for the mere fact that I was baptized in a church that I do not practice in. Apparently, that makes me a heretic and there is a special damnation for us! Woot! Party in the hizzouse! Who's bringing the wine and cheese?