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Jesus did many more than ten things as recorded in the synoptic Gospels. Here are some of His main activities. During his life on earth, Jesus:

* was tempted by the Devil

* asked for and was baptized by John the Baptist

* called a group of twelve disciples to follow Him

* healed the sick, lame, blind etc.

* raised people from the dead

* taught people about the Kingdom of God, about himself, and the right way to live

* cast out demons

* stilled a storm and walked on water

* fed four thousand and five thousand people from few supplies

* cast the moneychangers out of the temple

* died on the cross and was raised to life on the third day

* appeared to people after his resurrection

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Q: What ten things did Jesus do as recorded in the synoptic Gospels?
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The Gospels that describe the life and miracles of Jesus were recorded in?

GreekandAramaic


When was the book of Matthew mark Luke and john written?

Matthew, Mark, and Luke are called synoptic gospels because they are from the same point of view.John is the four gospel, written to fill in for the others and to help those find Jesus who did not know him in person.


Why are the synoptic gospels called synoptic?

A:The word synoptic means 'seen with the same eye'. The synoptic gospels, Matthew, Mark and Luke not only agree moderately well on the story of Jesus, but when laid in parallel and viewed synoptically can be seen to have a close literary relationship. New Testament scholars have established that Mark was the first gospel to be written, and that Matthew and Luke were substantially based on it, with Matthew containing some 90 per cent of the verses in Mark, often in exactly the same words in the Greek language.AnswerOne of the meanings of the word "synoptic" is "taking the same point of view." Since the gospels of Matthew, Mark and Luke share a great deal of content and present a similar order of events (while John's gospel is quite different in style and content), the first three are called "synoptic."


Who are what group or people were the gospels written for?

Matthew was written primarily for the Jews. Luke was written for the believing Romans or non-Jews. John was written for gnostics--people who believed more in knowledge and mysticism. Mark was probably the earliest Gospel written, and written for the followers of Jesus.


Why did Jesus breathe on his apostles?

In John's Gospel, Jesus breathed on the disciples on the evening of the day of his resurrection, giving them the Holy Spirit. The synoptic gospels do not have this episode, and Acts of the Apostles has the disciples receive the Holy Spirit as tongues of fire on the Day of the Pentecost.

Related questions

Which gospel was written to inspire faith in Jesus but is not a synoptic gospel?

The gospel of John is not part of the Synoptic Gospels.The gospels of Matthew, Mark, and Luke are referred to as the Synoptic Gospels.


How is Jesus betrayed in the synoptic gospels?

In the Gospels according to Matthew, Mark, and Luke, Judas turned Jesus in to the scribes and high priests in exchange for coins.


What has the author Audrey written?

Audrey has written: 'Jesus Christ in the synoptic gospels' -- subject(s): Bible, Textbooks


Who was the Cyrenean?

Simon the Cyrenean was the man compelled by the Romans to carry the cross of Jesus as Jesus was taken to his crucifixion, according to all three Synoptic Gospels


Encountering Jesus in the New Testament chapter review answer?

List three ways johns gospel Differs from the synoptic gospels


Who was Simon the Cyrenean?

Simon the Cyrenean was the man compelled by the Romans to carry the cross of Jesus as Jesus was taken to his crucifixion, according to all three Synoptic Gospels


The Gospels that describe the life and miracles of Jesus were recorded in?

GreekandAramaic


Which Gospels include the Last Supper?

The Last Supper was the Passover feast and appears in the Synoptic gospels, Matthew, Mark and Luke, because Passover occurred on the Thursday before the crucifixion. In John's Gospel, the Passover was on the Friday of the crucifixion, so there is no Last Supper recorded, instead Jesus washed the feet of the disciples.


What are the 2 groups of the gospels?

Of the four canonical Gospels - Matthew, Mark and Luke are known as the synoptic gospels because they contain a lot of the stories - in some cases with almost the exact same wording. Matthew was written primarily to the Jews, Mark to the Romans, Luke to the Gentiles. The Gospel of John focuses less on specific historical events (ex. Jesus' birth) in the synoptic Gospels, but zeroes in on the signs that Jesus is the Messiah. It starts out claiming that Jesus is the Logos or Word of God and continues showing signs pointing to his divinity as much as his humanity.


WHAT NEW TESTIMATE BOOK RECORDS THE SELECTION OF THE DECIPALS?

The commissioning of the twelve apostles is an episode in the ministry of jesus that appears in all three synoptic gospels


What date was the Temple cleared by Jesus?

John's Gospel has Jesus clearing the Temple of money-changers at the beginning of the mission of Jesus, some three years befor the crucifixion. In this gospel, Jesus did not make any effort to hide his true nature, as he does in the other gospels, on the contrary making every effort to proclaim his mission. It was consistent with this theme that he would declare his interest in the Temple of his Father as soon as possible. The synoptic gospels all place this incident at the end of the mission of Jesus, as the catalyst for the arrest of Jesus. This appears to have taken place in the synoptic gospels on the day when Jesus entered Jerusalem, commemorated today as Palm Sunday.


What are the common oral traditions between the synoptic gospels?

A:Common oral traditions would be a useful explanation for what is known as the 'Synoptic Problem', a problem of the surprising similarities among the synoptic gospels, if those traditions exist. However, a parallel reading of the three synoptic gospels, in the original Greek language, shows that when they agree, the similarities are too great and they often use exactly the same words in the Greek language. Clearly, there is a literary dependency among the synoptic gospels, and it can not be explained by oral sources. The explanation for this is that Matthewand Luke were actually based on Mark, but also relied on the hypothetical 'Q' document for further sayings material attributed to Jesus. There is no evidence of common oral traditions.