No, the Gospels are strictly Christian texts and are not recognised by Jews as religiously valid.
The Bible. It says specifically that it is the word of God. Just make sure it actually is the bible, watch out for the gnostic gospels.
AnswerThere is so little genuine historical evidence about Jesus. It is the nature of historical inquiry that the assertions contained in the gospels can not be claimed as historically true, without independent confirming evidence, which does not exist. But the following are true historical assertions:That there were many wandering preachers in Palestine during the first century BCE and the first century CE, making it plausible that Jesus of Nazareth really did exist, as one of these wandering preachersThat many millions of Christians believe that he was the long-awaited Jewish MessiahThat a religion was founded in his nameThat several books of the genre known as 'gospels' were written about Jesus, four of those gospels being placed in the New Testament canon.
AnswerThe Gospel of Thomas was written in a different branch of Christianity than the branch that gradually came to dominate and which selected its own New Testament canon. Nevertheless, the Gospel of Thomas was very popular in the proto-Catholic-Orthodox Church and there was pressure for its inclusion.Ireneus, bishop of Lyons, had the last say, deciding that it was as natual for there there to be four gospels as for there to be four corners of the earth, and that the four gospels should be Matthew, Mark, Luke and John.
4 Calling Birds - this refers to the Four Gospels and/ or the Four Evangelists.
none of them are true. The Quran is the true book of god.
Very very very false. It is not possible to add or remove from the Tanach.
Many Christians have faith that the Gospels are true even though they were written by human authors instead of by God. Often, the events in different Gospels can be compared to each other to find the validity in them.
God is the true author of the Bible. He used men to pen the Bible
The Bible has four books called gospels or good news, and these books are Matthew, Mark, Luke, and John. These four books all have the true stories from Jesus' life on earth. The four books were written by four writers, Matthew a disciple of Jesus, Mark which Early Christian tradition identifies as Mark the Evangelist, who is said to have based the work on the testimony of Saint Peter. Luke a co-worker of the Apostle Paul, and John was also a disciple of Jesus.
Back in bible times, some people did believe he was the son of the one true God, but the Jewish priests thought he was a liar. They thought he was committing blasphemy.
James wrote a troubled group of Jewish believers to help them understand how to distinguish true faith in Christ from insincere faith. He called them to endure persecution to live out true religion.
none That is not true. One of the Midrashim - which is the Hebrew commentary on the Hebrew bible - says that Samson (and Delilah) did indeed have children and that they lived elsewhere in the land of Israel, in a place where gold was: Havilah. So, the Bible doesn't really mention children perhaps, but commentators to the Bible, who studied the Bible in the years after the second destruction of the Hebrew Temple, interpreted the story with children to Samson and Delilah. I guess those children were half Jewish (or Hebrew) and half non-Jewish(Philistines).