John 1:1-3 - In the beginning was the Word, and the Word was with God, and the Word was God. He was in the beginning with God. All things were made through Him, and without Him nothing was made that was made. [NKJV]
The Bible mentions Jesus' occupation as a carpenter in the Gospel of Matthew 13:55.
The Bible mentions in the Gospel of Matthew 13:55 that Jesus was referred to as a carpenter, the son of Mary.
The scripture in the Bible that mentions Jesus fasting for 40 days is found in the Gospel of Matthew, chapter 4, verses 1-2.
AnswerNo. On the one hand, neither the genealogy in Matthew's Gospel nor the genealogy in Luke's Gospel mentions Isaiah as an ancestor or otherwise. On the one hand, the Book of Isaiah never really mentions Jesus and certainly not his family line.
Jesus is present in the WORD (readings and Gospel).Jesus is present in the PEOPLE.Jesus is substantially present in the EUCHARIST (Body and Blood).
Mark's Gospel portrays Jesus as fully human, adopted by God as his son at the time of his baptism. This gospel even has Jesus deny being God ("Why call me good, there is none good but God").Matthew and Luke portray Jesus as the Son of God from hi conception, but not divine in the way that God was.John's Gospel portrays Jesus as divine and pre-existing, from the time of creation. In this gospel, Jesus frequently asserts his divinity.
Mark's Gospel portrays Jesus as fully human, adopted by God as his son at the time of his baptism. This gospel even has Jesus deny being God ("Why call me good, there is none good but God").Matthew and Luke portray Jesus as the Son of God from his conception, but not divine in the way that God was.John's Gospel portrays Jesus as divine and pre-existing, from the time of creation. In this gospel, Jesus frequently asserts his divinity.
There may have been; but there is no gospel record of the names of any of the soldiers at Jesus' death.
Mark mentions that Mary Magdalene was first. None of the other Gospels specify which was first.
The only gospel that mentions Christ assigning the care of his mother to one of his disciples at the crucifixion is the Gospel of John. Specifically, in John 19:26-27, Jesus entrusts his mother Mary to the disciple whom he loved, traditionally understood to be John himself. This moment highlights the close relationship between Jesus and this disciple and emphasizes the importance of familial care.
The earlier gospels leave some doubt as to just how divine Jesus was. Mark's Gospel says that Jesus was a human with divine powers, adopted by God as his Son, at his baptism. The next two gospels, Matthew and Luke say that Jesus was born of a virgin and truly was the Son of God. Only John actually says that Jesus was God and that he was present in the beginning of creation, and only John has Jesus raise Lazarus from the dead.By reading John's Gospel first, the new convert understands that modern Christians regard Jesus as God, in the same way as his Father.
In the gospel of John, the eleventh chapter, the name of Jesus appears twenty four times, the most of any chapter in the Bible. It is interesting to note that the book of the Revelation of Jesus Christ (full title), also written by John and about the same size as the gospel of John only mentions the name of Jesus fourteen times in the entire book.