> I may be misinterpreting your previous comment but do you hold to traditional authorship of the Gospels?
I do hold to the traditional authorship of the Gospels. Every piece of external evidence we have points to the traditional authorship. They are all unanimously affirmed by the early Church; there are no competing contenders for an alternate author, and the way they spread throughout the Empire contributes to the plausibility of traditional authors.
Internally, all of the writings (style, level of Greek, themes) match perfectly with the traditional authors. Every piece of stylistic assessment leads in their directions.
I find that the case for traditional authorship, when weighed against the competing case, is stronger and weightier than the case against. I even go for an early date of writing for the 3 Synoptics (late 50s, very early 60s)
I'm working on Matthew quite a bit now.It is said that Matthew copied Mark. I'm up to chapter 8 and I'm not seeing it, but I want to withhold judgment.
Matthew 1 - this material is not in Mark
Mt. 2: Not in Mark.
Mt. 3: This John the Baptist material not in Mark. The baptism material—quite a bit of overlap.
Mt. 4: The Temptation scene, very different. The preaching in Capernaum: not in Mark. Calling the 4 disciples: some overlap, but I'd be hard-pressed to say Mt copied from Mk. Too much is different.
Mt. 5: Not in Mark
Mt. 6: Not in Mark.
Mt. 7: Not in Mark.
Mt. 8.1-4: Healing the leper. 3 of the verses are very similar, but those are mostly quotes from Jesus. The rest is different.
Mt. 8.5-13: Not in Mark
Mt. 8.14-17: Hardly the same as Mark.
Mt. 8.18-22: Not in Mark.
So despite the BIG consensus about Mt being a copycat of Mark, I'm not seeing it, yet. Still working.
As far as date, there are SO many reasons to see Matthew as early (50s-very early 60s). I'll only list some here.
As far as date, there are SO many reasons to see Matthew as early (50s-very early 60s). I'll only list some here.
- Such early theology
- Early eschatology
- Writing as a Jew to Jews, which to me makes a WHOLE lot more sense if it's BEFORE the destruction of Jerusalem.
- early expressions
- Identifying Jesus as "the Son of Man"
...and so many more.
> From what I gathered in almost all the biblical claims in our back and forth you’ve come out in favour of the bible, is there anything that is in the biblical birth narrative that you don’t think happened in history?
No, there isn't. The authors are interested in theology and history, not fabrication or mythology. We can go through the story piece by piece if you wish; I've written a book on it. We can discuss any matter of concern in the narrative; I'm always looking both to learn and to discuss.
> And do you think the NT scholars who don’t affirm the massacre of the innocents are maliciously interpreting the texts or are they mistaken?
I think they want to discard it for 2 reasons: (1) There is no extrabibilical record to corroborate it, which to me is not a strong argument; (2) some of them have an agenda to discredit the Bible, and this is just another platform. Here are some of my points:
1. Matthew rides a theme of the shedding of innocent blood (Mt. 2.16-18; 23.34-39; 27.3-10, 24-25). I don't doubt Judas's suicide or Jesus's crucifixion, so I don't doubt the massacre of the innocents.
2. It fits Herod's personality and behavior, especially late in his life.
3. I wouldn't expect a secret raid on a tiny village to make the official records or to be noticed by later historians. It's possible we're talking about the deaths of maybe 15-20 children. Usually historians pick up major trends and items of concern. We have specific lack of records from reliable historians about other major events.
I don't see a particular reason to doubt the story. There is no particular body of evidence leading me to consider it a fraud.