The wedding of Cana in Galilee. see John 2:1-11.
The healing of the man born blind. see John chapter 9.
The raising of Lazarus. see John chapter 11.
Matthew and John recorded the preachings of Jesus after He died. These are found in the New Testament as the Gospels bearing their names. Other disciples, such as Peter, verbally communicated Jesus' preachings to others, such as Mark, who then recorded them in written form.
The Gospels came to be written by man....through God....the gospels are the life of Jesus Christ from birth to his years of ministering to God to his gruesome death....
The Gospels do not specify how many armed soldiers and other men were sent to arrest Jesus. There is not any other tradition about the number, either.
According to the synoptic gospels, yes:In Mark's Gospel, followed by Matthew and Luke, there was a great darkness that can not be explained as an eclipse, but which was not recorded outside the gospels. The Temple curtain was rent from top to bottom.In Matthew's Gospel, there was also a great earthquake that opened the graves. The dead arose and walked into Jerusalem, where they were seen by many. This miracle is not in the other gospels and is not attested outside the Bible.
That depends. What do you mean by "other?" The four gospels were written by the Apostle Matthew, John Mark, who received much of his account from the Apostle Peter, Luke, who served as a doctor and followed Jesus, and John the Revelator, who replaced every mention of his name with "The disciple whom Jesus loved." There are a few other gospels, for example in the Catholic Bible, there's a gospel that Thomas (the Doubter) wrote.
I can't find 'follow you' in Scripture. but 'follow me' from the mouth of Jesus is recorded 17 times in the Gospels.
Matthew 27:51 says that there was an earthquake just when Jesus died, and then the graves were opened and many of the bodies rose up and walked into the city, where they were seen by many.Surprisingly, none of the scholars who recorded every significant natural event in Palestine recorded this event, which also went unreported by the other New Testament gospels. Ian Wilson (Jesus: The Evidence) says it is probably safest to regard the author of Matthew's Gospel as demonstrably over-fond of the miraculous.
Jesus is mentioned the most in the Gospels: Matthew, Mark, Luke, and John. Of the gospel books -- the name of Jesus is mentioned in the book of John more than another other book.
Very many according to the gospels, - John 21.25. And there are also many other things which Jesus did, the which, if they should be written every one, I suppose that even the world itself could not contain the books that should be written. Amen.
The only evidence we have is the text of the Gospels. The teachings of Jesus recorded there are within the range of teachings you'd find within the Pharisees, so if the only text we had was the Gospels, without Acts, Paul's letters and so on, scholars would probably conclude that Jesus was a Pharisee. Leaders among the Pharisees had desciples, Jesus had desciples. Jesus hung out in synagogues and argued with Pharisees, and typical Pharisees out in synagogues and argue with each other. The arguments got quite heated, more heated even than some of the Gospel quotations about the Pharisees. So, I'd say that there's no evidence that Jesus "gave up his Jewish faith."
According the the Christian gospels, two other men were crucified with Jesus. These two men are variously described as thieves, criminals or rebels. Some fundamentalist Christians interpret the Gospels so that there were four men crucified with Jesus because of the different ways in which the men are described and because they take the Bible absolutely literally. So because one gospel says two "criminals" were crucified with Jesus and another says two "thieves" were crucified with Jesus there must have been four. Most people dismiss this and interpret the gospels more sensibly as there being only two other men crucified with Jesus.
The Bible does not provide specific information on the exact number of times Mary spoke to Jesus. However, there are several instances recorded in the Gospels where Mary had conversations with Jesus, such as at the wedding in Cana, during his ministry, and at the foot of the cross.