they put it in a cave under the sea
A:The 'lost gospels' are those non-canonical gospels such as the Gospel According to the Hebrews, the Gospel of Peter, the Gospel of Philip, Gospel of Thomas, Infancy Gospel of Thomas and many others. It should be born in mind that these attributions are no more reliable than are the attributions of the canonical gospels to Matthew, Mark, Luke and John. For scholars, the most important of the non-canonical gospels are the Gospel of Thomas and the Gospel of Peter. A search of the internet will access English translation of some of these texts, and the are also available (with difficulty) in printed form.
The only gospel that includes Jesus' parables about the lost sheep, the lost coin, and the lost son is the Gospel of Luke. These parables emphasize the themes of repentance, forgiveness, and God's unending love for humanity.
The 10 tribes of the Hebrews are known as the lost tribes because no one knows what happened to them.
The lost books of the Bible were not really lost - they were suppressed. The many biblical writings which Jerome chose not to include in the canon of the Bible that we know ofinclude the Gospel of Judas, the Gospel of Thomas, the Second Gospel of Mark, the Acts of Peter and Thecla, the Second Gospel of Peter ... and many more.
The Hebrews were established city dwellers in Israel, around 1000 BCE.
Lost people or things
yes they can
No, the Bible does not trace the Hebrews back to a man named Solomon. The Hebrews are believed to have descended from Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob, while Solomon was a later king of Israel who ruled after the Hebrews had become a distinct people.
22 years.
Lost people or things
Abraham was called a Hebrew (Ivri) possibly because he came from beyond (evehr) the river. His family and descendants became known as Hebrews.
The Epistles of Paul are generally regarded as the earliest books of the Bible, and therefore the oldest references to Jesus that we have. These are generally regarded as having been written in the 50s of the first century CE. The Epistle to the Hebrews is probably similarly ancient, so it is possible for Hebrews to be the oldest extant reference to Jesus. Mark's Gospel is regarded by scholars as the first of the gospels. They believe that this Gospel was written in the 70s, some time after Paul's epistles and after Hebrews. We have no extant early record of Jesus from any source outside the New Testament.