A:
For most Christians, the four most important sources of information on the life of Jesus would be the four New Testament gospels. However, this would not be the case for scholars, who now know that three of the gospels were not written independently, but were substantially based on the first.
The four gospels were originally anonymous and were only attributed to Matthew, Mark, Luke and John later in the second century. Scholars have also established that none of them could really have been written by an eyewitness to the events portrayed, which means that we have no first hand account.
The first Gospel to be written was Mark, approximately 70 CE, and this was followed over subsequent decades by Matthew, Luke and then John. By placing the Gospels of Mark, Matthew and Luke in parallel and reading them synoptically ('with the same eye') in the original Greek language, it becomes obvious that there is a literary dependency among them, with Mark being the original. John's Gospel was, in turn, loosely based on Luke. Matthew and Lukedo contain detailed reports on the birth of Jesus, which Raymond E. Brown (An Introduction to the New Testament) says are "massively different" and virtually irreconcilable, and which John Shelby Spong (Born of a Woman: A Bishop Rethinks the Birth of Jesus) says contain no historical truth. Matthew, Luke and John are derivative and really add nothing to our knowledge of Jesus, so Mark's Gospel is the only gospel account that might be an important source of information about the life of Jesus.
The only other canonical material that touches on the life of Jesus are Hebrews and the epistles that Paul wrote. However, the hypothetical 'Q' document, used by the authors of Mathew and Luke as sources of further sayings material attributed to Jesus, should provide some useful information about what Jesus said. Although no copy of Q has survived to the present time, scholars have been able to reconstruct it.
Hebrews speaks of Jesus crucified, but makes no mention of the circumstances of the crucifixion. It briefly mentions Jesus as having been a high priest, but also says that if he had been on earth he would not have been a high priest. The book otherwise talks of Jesus as the high priest in heaven.
Paul's most significant mentions of Jesus are about the crucifixion and resurrection. In 1 Corinthians 15:3-8, he says that Jesus was seen by Cephas (Peter), then the twelve, then by more than 500, most of whom were still alive, then by James and all the apostles, and finally by himself. One concern here is mention of the "twelve" - on the gospel accounts, there should have only been eleven at this stage.
It thus appears that for most New Testament scholars the most important sources of information on the life of Jesus are Mark's Gospel, Q, the Epistle to the Hebrews and Paul's Epistles.
There were four different disciples of Jesus that were fishermen. The four disciples were Peter, Andrew, James and John.
I dont' know but a lot
The four books of The Bible that tell of Jesus' life are Matthew, Mark, Luke, and John. These New Testament books are collectively known as the Gospels.
We have four Gospels in the Bible. These Gospels give us the life of Jesus Christ from four slightly different angles. Because Jesus Christ came to earth to die for mankind's sin on the cross of Calvary this portion of the Gospels is very important. This was Jesus' greatest mission for coming to earth. No other person could appease God for the sins of man except Jesus. He was the God/Man, He was sinless, the Messiah that had been predicted to come for centuries before the event actually happened. He was the only one qualified to die for man and He is the only way to heaven, there is no other way. John 14:6, "I am the way, the truth, and the life. No one comes to the Father except by Me."
In the Christian faith these four are the names of the authors of the first four books of the New Testament known as Gospels. They lived either as contemporaries of Jesus Christ, in the case of Matthew and John or as of those who knew Jesus, in the case of Mark and Luke.
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the four types of sources are books, internet, library,files I know there is general, primary and secondary, Not sure about the last.
catalogs, internet, labels, hangtags.
They are: The Mighty Internet Newspapers Radio And of course, television
the internet ,newspaper,tv and radio
The four criteria used to evaluate sources when writing are credibility, relevance, accuracy, and currency. Credibility assesses the reliability of the source, relevance looks at the information's applicability to the topic, accuracy considers the validity of the information presented, and currency examines how up-to-date the information is.
If there are no verifiable proofs for the existence of Jesus, what more for jesus' ressurection? The historical resurrection accounts are recorded in the four Gospels, with a further major reference in 1 Corinthians 15, including its meaning and a list of witnesses. Matthew chapter 28. Mark chapter 16 Luke chapter 24 John chapter 20
what are the four sources of heat
Four major sources Americans use for accessing political information are, The Internet, newspapers, TV news, and radio. ... there did part A u do the other part lazy society...
A:There are eight beatitudes to be found in Matthew and four of these are in Luke, although with some differences. This four are believed to have been copied by both authors from the hypothetical 'Q' document, a book of sayings attributed to Jesus, and could therefore have actually been spoken by Jesus. The remaining four beatitudes, in Matthew only, can be found in various earlier sources, making it somewhat less likely that they were really spoken by Jesus.
1. The internet 2. Books 3. A knowledgeable person 4. A wine oriented magazine