No. John's Gospel takes its inspiration from the Gospels of Mark and Luke, not from a mystical Jewish sect.
The Gospel of John was written well into the second century, whereas the Dead Sea Scrolls were hidden prior to the destruction of Jerusalem in 70 CE (with the exception of a few late Dead Sea Scrolls, dating from the Bar Kokhba revolt of 135 CE). All the Dead Sea Scroll fragments large enough to interpret unambiguously either were copies of Old Testament scrolls or were secular documents.
John Marco Allegro has written: 'The people of the Dead Sea scrolls' -- subject(s): Dead Sea scrolls, Qumran community 'The Dead Sea scrolls' -- subject(s): Accessible book, Dead Sea scrolls 'Search in the desert' -- subject(s): Antiquities 'The Dead Sea Scrolls and the Christian myth' -- subject(s): Christianity, Criticism, interpretation, Dead Sea scrolls, Essenes, Gnosticism, Origin, Relation to the New Testament 'The Dead Sea scrolls and the origins of Christianity' -- subject(s): Dead Sea scrolls 'All manner of men' -- subject(s): Race, Physical anthropology 'Mystery of the Dead Sea scrolls revealed' -- subject(s): Dead Sea scrolls
The Dead Sea Scrolls were hidden in caves overlooking the Dead Sea around 70 CE, at the end of the First Roman-Jewish War. They included many standard Jewish scriptures, as well as a number of scolls concerned with rules and practices of the community that hid them. Since John the Baptist was executed in 36 CE, long before the Dead Sea Scrolls were hidden, he was of course not influenced by these scrolls themselves. Whether he was influenced by the scrolls before they became "Dead Sea Scrolls", or by other copies of them, depends on whether John was a member of the community that hid them. This possibility continues to be debated.
Emmanuel O. Tukasi has written: 'Determinism and petitionary prayer in John and the Dead Sea Scrolls'
No. According to many, the Gospel of John was written by the Apostle John.
A Gospel form first are the four gospels of the new testament matthew, mark, luke, and john. Second the Gospel For considered a biography of jesus which is written in the Gospels. Similar to Memorabilia that XENPHON had written about Socrates.
The Gospel of John has 21 chapters.
There are 4,146 verses in the Gospel of John.
You'll find this from the Gospel of John Chapter 11 Verse 37-39
The account of Jesus raising Lazarus from the dead is found in the Gospel of John, chapter 11.
They are the Gospel of Matthew,Gospel of Mark,Gospel of Luke,and the Gospel of John.
The Gospel of John was released on 09/26/2003.
The Production Budget for The Gospel of John was $11,000,000.