![]() ![]() Hovering over the references below will bring up the NET Bible version on each of these. Nearly all scholars conclude that both books were written by the same author, usually taken to be Luke. Since we also quickly look at the Book of Acts, Luke-Acts is the shorthand way of saying the Gospel of Luke and the Book of Acts. The writers of the four Gospels are also called evangelists. The authors are sometimes called synoptists. Matthew, Mark, and Luke have a lot of passages in common, so they are called the synoptic Gospels ( synoptic means viewed together). ![]() Maybe it can help seminarians and church leaders, like home Bible study and Sunday school teachers.Īs usual, since people read these articles as stand-alones, I repeat the basic facts that true beginners to the Gospels may not know about. Maybe high school students and undergraduates at universities can make use of it. The goal of the entire series and Part Eleven here is to send out over the worldwide web scholarship that supports traditional views on the Gospels. This concern contradicts the widespread belief that the Gospel is built on the inventions of later anonymous disciples who substantially changed the words and life-story of Jesus, nearly beyond recognition, according to the needs of the later church. Luke was very much concerned to base his Gospel on the earliest and best eyewitnesses who went back all the way to the beginning of Jesus' ministry. ![]()
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