Realworldjack wrote: ↑Fri Nov 22, 2024 4:02 am
My friend, it has not been verified that Luke copied Mark.
Then where instead did 'Luke' get some of his word-for-word identical statements?
Realworldjack wrote: ↑Fri Nov 22, 2024 4:02 am
What is the evidence that the Church created the Gospel of Luke?
I'm with you here, and also against you. I do not contest that the earliest writings would not be from any 'church', as 'the church' was not for Christianity until later. My argument is that the canonized version(s) we have today, are after 'the church' got their hands upon it. When you read "Luke", you have to ask yourself why it props up the Romans and Jesus much more-so than 'Mark'? Well, logically speaking, it would be because whoever wrote 'Luke' wanted to do damage control against the declarations of "Mark" and to convince Romans, by making them look better in the story line. It also wanted to tie itself back to Paul's claims. However, we do not know who the author for 'Luke' was, nor 'Luke's' source(s).?.?.?.?.? This is kind of important to know, wouldn't you agree? I mean, we have Paul's claim. So, we know he wrote stuff. But Paul, for whatever reason(s), does not co-sign 'Luke's' work(s).?.?.?.?.? Further, "Luke" was not made an official thing until canonization, centuries later.
The video also explains and cites passages which deliberately downplay both the Romans and Jesus's actions, to make both look much better.
Further, the earliest surviving manuscript of the Gospel of Luke, Papyrus 75, is only a fragmentary papyrus that dates to around 175–225 CE. . It is now known as "Hanna Papyrus 1 (Mater Verbi)". So, stating you know more here than me is pure wishful thinking. I remain skeptical to such supernatural claims, and for GOOD reason(s).
Realworldjack wrote: ↑Fri Nov 22, 2024 4:02 am
What we do know for a fact is, Paul was out violently attempting to put a stop to Christianity only to convert, to become the reason for the spread of Christianity all over the known world at the time. We know that Paul would have been alive at the time of Jesus, and we know that Paul would have known and spent time with the original apostles, and would have heard the claims they were making, and Paul mentions these folks reporting on the resurrection.
Yes, this is what Paul says, but we have no authentication back to Paul's claims. Have we verified the author of 'Luke'? No. Did Paul co-sign 'Luke's' writings, which would point back to Paul's claim(s). no. Besides 'Mark', do we know 'Luke's' source(s)? No. Which means it's all speculative and faith based alone. In a nutshell, you have a claim or claims from Paul, who converted. Nothing ties directly back to Paul. You have an anonymous claim from 'Luke', who states he got his information from a 'reliable source'. Hence, we have no corroboration. Based upon what we do have, which is very little 'facts and evidence', your lawyer friend would not take this case. He would pass upon it.
Realworldjack wrote: ↑Fri Nov 22, 2024 4:02 am
if Luke was made up, whoever made it up also authored the second letter to Theophilus. Do you even realize what all this would entail? This would have been a very painstaking effort in those days, and very risky to say the least. In other words, these folks would have spent months on the effort, with no guarantee in the least that the effort would pay off. It is like you are willing to believe anything at all, no matter what all would have to be entailed, as long as it does not involve what you would rather not believe.
As I've told others here, there exists no one 'smoking gun' piece of evidence. It is cumulative. We can only speculate because we cannot identify the author, or the source(s) to check.
It is quite obvious that 'Luke' doctored itself up quite a bit to both promote a better image of the Romans and Jesus. The video explains. In my eye's, this makes 'Luke' untrustworthy, and a non-starter.
In case anyone is wondering... The avatar quote states the following:
"I asked God for a bike, but I know God doesn't work that way. So I stole a bike and asked for forgiveness."