The four writers wrote from different perspectives emphasizing different aspects of who Jesus was...Matthew is an eyewitness account from his notes while with Jesus and shows Him to be the coming one they were waiting for (Isaiah 53; Daniel 9)...Mark is the memoirs of Peter when he was in roman prison awaiting martyrdom and emphasizes Jesus "the Servant" of God...Luke is a History taken from Public Records and personal Interviews and shows a chronol;ogical occurance of events...John is a response to the gnostics and a call to those Jews and Rabbis that had not yet believed and brings out the Divinity of Christ (as the Word...look up the Memra which in Greek is logos)
So go on line and look up Gospel Comparison or look in the back of most good King James Bibles for a chart
There are four gospels of Christianity, each starting in very different ways...
He is mentioned by name four times.
Of the 12 disciples chose by Jesus, the most mentioned is Peter, with 93 mentions in the four gospels and 63 in the remainder of the New Testament, (156 in all). And a close second is John, with 100 mentions in the four gospels and 30 in the rest of the New Testament, (130 in all)
In the present format of the new testament there are four gospels> There are however many others which were excluded by the early church. The basis of why some are in and others out lacks documentation.
The four gospels; Matthew, Mark, Luke and John
No one knows who wrote the gospels.
The name Rameses is mentioned in four verses of the KJV bible. (Genesis 47:11, Exodus 12:37, Numbers 33:3, Numbers 33:5)
The word "yellow" appears in the King James Version of The Bible four times. It is in four verses. Please see the related link below.
The word "yellow" appears in the King James Version of the Bible four times. It is in four verses. Please see the related link below.
The name "Eve" is in the King James Version of the Bible four times. It is in four verses. Please see the related link below.
there are four gospels in the bible
There are dozens of gospels apart from the four that were chosen by Irenaeus for inclusion in the New Testament.