Gospel of John

Argue for and against Christianity

Moderator: Moderators

Post Reply
User avatar
Mithrae
Prodigy
Posts: 4326
Joined: Mon Apr 05, 2010 7:33 am
Location: Australia
Has thanked: 112 times
Been thanked: 195 times

Gospel of John

Post #1

Post by Mithrae »

I'm interested in folk's views on the subject. A few points worth discussing:

1 - Many biblical scholars hold that the gospel was written in the late 1st century CE, some 60ish years after Jesus' death.
- - - the earliest manuscript fragments date from as early as 130CE, if memory serves; the work has strong anti-gnostic themes, and early Christian tradition holds that it was written in opposition to the teaching of Cerinthus (late 1st century)

2 - Many biblical scholars hold that the gospel had the same author as the first epistle of John
- - - the similarities in style, themes (love, anti-gnostic themes etc.) and specific phraseology are obvious even to the untrained reader

3 - 1 John 1:1-3, John 1:14 and John 19:35 are the only distinct eyewitness claims regarding Jesus' life in the bible (besides 2 Peter, widely held to be a 2nd century work)
- - - of particular interest, note the contrast between 19:35 and the appended section in 21:24, which uses third person

4 - While someone present during Jesus' ministry would be in his 80s by the time the gospel was written, there are numerous examples of such comparatively long lives in the ancient world (several notable Greek philosophers, for example)

5 - In addition to the specific eyewitness claims, some verses such as John 5:2 imply a sense of familiarity with Jerusalem which one wouldn't particularly expect from the author of Greek work, unless the author was in fact a Jew



Interested in everyone's thoughts :)

Shermana
Prodigy
Posts: 3762
Joined: Sun Jul 04, 2010 10:19 pm
Location: City of the "Angels"
Been thanked: 5 times

Post #101

Post by Shermana »

If your problem is for me dismissing Ignatius as a heretic, I'm assuming you think the Judaizers who HE condemned as heretics were heretics of course.

Ignatius would have called James who kept the Law and Sabbath a heretic.

So who is a heretic, and what did the original Disciples believe?

Ignatius was heavily against the Sabbath. He must have missed the verse where Yashua told the Disciples

The Romans certainly had an agenda when they extinguised Sabbath practice on Friday-Sabbath by legal decree.

When you accuse people of having agendas, what are you trying to say exactly? Do you think Ignatius had the truth and the Judaizers and Jerusalem Church had it wrong? Jesus would be a heretic by Ignatius's standards. Jesus was a Judaizer. That's not an opinion.

Whoever tacked on Chapter 21 had an agenda. How do we know John wrote it other than the implication of Chapter 21 to begin with? Justin Martyr?

User avatar
Mithrae
Prodigy
Posts: 4326
Joined: Mon Apr 05, 2010 7:33 am
Location: Australia
Has thanked: 112 times
Been thanked: 195 times

Post #102

Post by Mithrae »

Student wrote:The same applies when comparing 1 Apology 61.4 and John 3:3

Justin " Unless you are born again you will not enter into the kingdom of heaven.
- -- - - -

John " If any one may not be born from above, he is not able to see the kingdom of God
- -- -

While we might choose to ignore the difference between entering the kingdom of heaven and seeing the kingdom of God, we cannot ignore how differently each author expresses the idea of being born again. Justin uses the word -- be born again, whereas John uses the more unusual phrase -- be born from above. If Justin was quoting John, word-for-word, why doesnt he adopt Johns more peculiar idiom?
Point taken - I should have checked more closely before making that comment :shock: John does use the phrase 'born again' later in that passage (3:7), and they're both quite distinctive terms regardless; I'd actually be more concerned about the difference between 'see the kingdom of God' vs. 'enter the kingdom of heaven,' which could mean quite different things theologically. Matthew's gospel is noteworthy in its use of 'kingdom of heaven' rather than kingdom of God. In that light, it's probable that Justin Martyr didn't have John's gospel open in front of him to write the above. But like I say, the two passages are very distinctive and very similar - enough that even having read John 3 a few days ago I mistook it for an exact quote.
Student wrote:The claim that Justin quotes John as an authoritative gospel is palpably untrue. Justin never specifically names any work by John, and while he does refer to the memoirs of the Apostles, saying that these recollections were a gospel, he refers to these memoirs in the singular i.e. () it is called a gospel, so there was only one work, not many gospels.
Then it would seem that someone else, even earlier than Justin Martyr, must have composed a harmony of the four gospels to which Justin referred.

I agree that of the four quotes I listed above, the reference to the fourth gospel is the least compelling. However we know from textual evidence that Mark and Matthew at least were written well before 80/90CE. Since the reference to Matthew's nativity is quite clear, and in particular the references from Mark and Luke are very distinctive, it would seem strange to propose that he was referring to some other work/s entirely. Even granting the accuracy of your Greek grammar (I don't suppose you know of an online source I could check up with?), the fact that he said the memoirs were called gospel should be weighed alongside these distinctive references to passages in three canonical gospels. To us of course, 'gospel' refers to a written work, so using it as a singular would mean a single written work; was the same true for Justin Martyr?

Was he using a single source, a harmony of the four gospels? Does his grammar in 1 Apol. 66, saying that the memoirs were called a gospel, make a strong enough case that all his references to the memoirs are from a single source? And if not, since the references to three canonical gospels are rather distinctive, is it a great leap of the imagination that when he also ascribes to the memoirs themes similar to the fourth gospel, he was probably using the fourth gospel?
--------------------------
Shermana wrote:When you accuse people of having agendas, what are you trying to say exactly? Do you think Ignatius had the truth and the Judaizers and Jerusalem Church had it wrong? Jesus would be a heretic by Ignatius's standards. Jesus was a Judaizer. That's not an opinion.

Whoever tacked on Chapter 21 had an agenda. How do we know John wrote it other than the implication of Chapter 21 to begin with? Justin Martyr?
I don't think any of them had 'the truth.' They wrote stuff, and those of us who get a kick out of doing so are left with the hobby of trying to guess how things really happened. Dismissing them out of hand as being 'arch heretics' is not the best way to go about that, in my opinion.

I would also suggest that, since you're so concerned about whether or not we can confirm what Irenaeus says about Polycarp, going on to say that Jesus being a Judaizer is "not an opinion" isn't a very consistent approach. Our best information on Jesus (Paul, Mark, Q or John - take your pick) is less reliable as evidence than anything said about Polycarp even by Irenaeus (let alone Ignatius!). However that's neither here nor there; it just seemed more than passing strange to be so concerned about evidence regarding Polycarp, yet so certain about Jesus' teachings.

As for how we 'know' that John was the beloved disciple who wrote the fourth gospel, that's mostly from what Irenaeus himself wrote, and what he attributes to Polycarp. I summarized my views on the various bits of evidence and their relative weight in post 84. Yourself and Student have added some interesting points and discussion, particularly regarding the gnostic use of the gospel which hadn't really been covered earlier in the thread.

Ironically talking with Student has actually convinced me even further of Justin Martyr's relevance to the discussion, since I hadn't previously realised that he appears to reference all four canonical gospels. But even if that weren't the case, even if Irenaeus was the very earliest external reference to the fourth gospel, you'll see in that post that I don't consider them central points regarding whether a disciple (whoever it may have been) wrote the gospel. In that vein, I believe that looking for and emphasising the significance of the earliest external references can be something of a red herring; because then wouldn't one be obliged to seek the earliest references to Irenaeus, to confirm that it wasn't a later pseudonymous work - and then the earliest references to Origen, or Clement, or Tertullian, which might also be forgeries? Certainly I've previously encountered folk who, following that kind of reasoning, proposed that Paul was a literary invention who never actually existed. Taken to the extreme, that kind of thinking would have us imagining that Eusebius' history was written in the 6th century and Constantine had never heard of Christianity :confused2:

So while I enjoy the discussion, even if it were the case that Irenaeus was the first mention of the fourth gospel, there would still remain a huge question of whether that's significant, and why.




Anyways, apologies to both of you about the brevity and delay in my reply. I'm on a public computer, 'cos we've been having some problems with our ISP recently. So just a heads up that I'll probably be responding erratically, if at all, for the next week or so until we get it all sorted out.

Shermana
Prodigy
Posts: 3762
Joined: Sun Jul 04, 2010 10:19 pm
Location: City of the "Angels"
Been thanked: 5 times

Post #103

Post by Shermana »

It is odd for a believer in the Great Noodle Monster to cling tenaciously to the idea that John wrote John more so than the Fundies.

Let's break it down.

1. Iraneus goes OUT OF HIS WAY to try make it out like Polycarp his mentor, knew John personally.

2. Chapter 21 is the only part that refers to John, and is a TACK ON.

3. Iraneus is the only de facto person to actually reference John as by John, this Justin Martyr stuff I have no idea how its concrete.

4. All 4 Gospels say Jesus is a "Judaizer", as well as the Didache, and pretty much all non-Gnostic Christian texts.

5. Iraneus went OUT OF HIS WAY to condemn Cerinthus as a "Gnostic" (which he wasn't by any stretch, he was more of a Philo-era Christian...who directly matched many of the base of "John's" ideas strangely) and these condemnations are contradictory to other's descriptions

6. Cerinthus's followers insist for while his Gospel (which you apparently mentioned you haven't heard of, type in "Lost Gospel of Cerinthus") was the original John. I see no reason why this shouldn't be as compelling of evidence as saying that Iraneus attributed it to John or that Polycarp knew John.

7. Go to historical-jesus.info for a full breakdown on the Gospel of John. There is more evidence of changes and spurious fixes over the years than any other text, and the Egerton fragments hint at some things that may have been left out too....

8. John was disputed as written by john even back in the day.

9. The evidence overwhelmingly amounts to Iraneus being a liar and having something to do with the adoption and manipulation of Cerinthus's work to become John.

User avatar
Mithrae
Prodigy
Posts: 4326
Joined: Mon Apr 05, 2010 7:33 am
Location: Australia
Has thanked: 112 times
Been thanked: 195 times

Post #104

Post by Mithrae »

Shermana wrote:It is odd for a believer in the Great Noodle Monster to cling tenaciously to the idea that John wrote John more so than the Fundies.

Let's break it down.

1. Iraneus goes OUT OF HIS WAY to try make it out like Polycarp his mentor, knew John personally.
What can I say? I just try to weigh the evidence, as much as I can, and in this case I believe the balance of evidence suggests the gospel was written by a disciple.

In the John/Cerinthus/bath-house incident, Irenaeus says that he'd heard it from other people who'd heard it from Polycarp. If he were, as you imply, falsely trying to strengthen the weight of his claims, surely he'd say that he'd heard it from Polycarp directly? The fact that he didn't implies that he wasn't being deceptive in what he said about Polycarp. Whether or not he was mis-informed, we can't be certain.
Shermana wrote:2. Chapter 21 is the only part that refers to John, and is a TACK ON.
Ch.21 doesn't refer to John, it says the beloved disciple wrote the gospel. Since/if it was written shortly after the disciple's death, to my mind this is strong confirmation of the eye-witness claims the gospel's author himself makes (John 1:14 & 19:35, also 1 John 1:1-3).
Shermana wrote:3. Iraneus is the only de facto person to actually reference John as by John, this Justin Martyr stuff I have no idea how its concrete.
Agreed that Irenaeus is the first source we have identifying John as the beloved disciple. Justin Martyr's reference shows that the gospel quite quickly gained acceptance in proto-orthodox circles; unlikely if it had been written by Cerinthus, or (perhaps) if its claim to be written by a disciple was a lie.
Shermana wrote:4. All 4 Gospels say Jesus is a "Judaizer", as well as the Didache, and pretty much all non-Gnostic Christian texts.
All 3 synoptic gospels (and arguably John) also say that Jesus broke (or at least allowed his disciples to break) the Sabbath law. Moses had someone stoned for gathering wood on the Sabbath, yet Jesus allowed his disciples to pick corn.
Shermana wrote:5. Iraneus went OUT OF HIS WAY to condemn Cerinthus as a "Gnostic" (which he wasn't by any stretch, he was more of a Philo-era Christian...who directly matched many of the base of "John's" ideas strangely) and these condemnations are contradictory to other's descriptions
Cerinthus' ideas about creation, as told by Irenaeus, are similar to gnostic notions. Irenaeus uses the phrase in passing "knowledge, falsely so called" in reference to Cerinthus (and the Nicolaitans from memory), but I don't see how that's going 'out of his way' to condemn him as a gnostic alongside the Valentinians or the like. He actually groups Cerinthus with the Ebionites.



Got to run now, I'm afraid. I'll get back to your other points when I get a chance :)

Shermana
Prodigy
Posts: 3762
Joined: Sun Jul 04, 2010 10:19 pm
Location: City of the "Angels"
Been thanked: 5 times

Post #105

Post by Shermana »

Mithrae wrote:
Shermana wrote:It is odd for a believer in the Great Noodle Monster to cling tenaciously to the idea that John wrote John more so than the Fundies.

Let's break it down.

1. Iraneus goes OUT OF HIS WAY to try make it out like Polycarp his mentor, knew John personally.
What can I say? I just try to weigh the evidence, as much as I can, and in this case I believe the balance of evidence suggests the gospel was written by a disciple.

In the John/Cerinthus/bath-house incident, Irenaeus says that he'd heard it from other people who'd heard it from Polycarp. If he were, as you imply, falsely trying to strengthen the weight of his claims, surely he'd say that he'd heard it from Polycarp directly? The fact that he didn't implies that he wasn't being deceptive in what he said about Polycarp. Whether or not he was mis-informed, we can't be certain.
Shermana wrote:2. Chapter 21 is the only part that refers to John, and is a TACK ON.
Ch.21 doesn't refer to John, it says the beloved disciple wrote the gospel. Since/if it was written shortly after the disciple's death, to my mind this is strong confirmation of the eye-witness claims the gospel's author himself makes (John 1:14 & 19:35, also 1 John 1:1-3).
Shermana wrote:3. Iraneus is the only de facto person to actually reference John as by John, this Justin Martyr stuff I have no idea how its concrete.
Agreed that Irenaeus is the first source we have identifying John as the beloved disciple. Justin Martyr's reference shows that the gospel quite quickly gained acceptance in proto-orthodox circles; unlikely if it had been written by Cerinthus, or (perhaps) if its claim to be written by a disciple was a lie.
Shermana wrote:4. All 4 Gospels say Jesus is a "Judaizer", as well as the Didache, and pretty much all non-Gnostic Christian texts.
All 3 synoptic gospels (and arguably John) also say that Jesus broke (or at least allowed his disciples to break) the Sabbath law. Moses had someone stoned for gathering wood on the Sabbath, yet Jesus allowed his disciples to pick corn.
Shermana wrote:5. Iraneus went OUT OF HIS WAY to condemn Cerinthus as a "Gnostic" (which he wasn't by any stretch, he was more of a Philo-era Christian...who directly matched many of the base of "John's" ideas strangely) and these condemnations are contradictory to other's descriptions
Cerinthus' ideas about creation, as told by Irenaeus, are similar to gnostic notions. Irenaeus uses the phrase in passing "knowledge, falsely so called" in reference to Cerinthus (and the Nicolaitans from memory), but I don't see how that's going 'out of his way' to condemn him as a gnostic alongside the Valentinians or the like. He actually groups Cerinthus with the Ebionites.



Got to run now, I'm afraid. I'll get back to your other points when I get a chance :)


These are common objections.

1. Jesus did not break the Sabbath. The Pharisees accused him. Divine Healing and picking heads of grain was not work. They tried to accuse him of it according to their version of the Law. They did not gather. They picked heads of grain. Gathering would be cutting the grain. Big difference. Do you understand the concept that the Pharisees had twisted the Law and were trying to accuse Yashua of their own interpretation of what was breaking teh Sabbath? Picking heads of grain and eating them is no different than picking apples off a tree. Gathering sticks for firewood with an axe and chopping is work. Hope that settles that.

2. Jesus told the Disciples to pray they didn't have to even flee on the Sabbath. Does that make sense? Even after he was dead, the Disciples were supposed to pray they didn't have to break a sweat fleeing on the Sabbath. That should settle that issue.

3. I said specifically that Cerinthus was a "Philo-era" believer in the Jewish concept of the Logos, the principle foreman of Creation. It is now no longer part of modern Rabbinical Judaism but Philo explains the Logos concept extensively.

Shermana
Prodigy
Posts: 3762
Joined: Sun Jul 04, 2010 10:19 pm
Location: City of the "Angels"
Been thanked: 5 times

Post #106

Post by Shermana »

Also, you say that it was unlikely to gain widespread acceptance if written by Cerinthus...

Apparently Cerinthus was such a threat that John wrote it, according to Iraneus, specially to COUNTER Cerinthus.

Of course he didn't want to just steal his manuscript and forge some things that conformed to his own ideas or anything.

User avatar
Mithrae
Prodigy
Posts: 4326
Joined: Mon Apr 05, 2010 7:33 am
Location: Australia
Has thanked: 112 times
Been thanked: 195 times

Post #107

Post by Mithrae »

Shermana wrote:1. Jesus did not break the Sabbath. The Pharisees accused him. Divine Healing and picking heads of grain was not work. They tried to accuse him of it according to their version of the Law. They did not gather. They picked heads of grain. Gathering would be cutting the grain. Big difference. Do you understand the concept that the Pharisees had twisted the Law and were trying to accuse Yashua of their own interpretation of what was breaking teh Sabbath? Picking heads of grain and eating them is no different than picking apples off a tree. Gathering sticks for firewood with an axe and chopping is work. Hope that settles that.
Fair enough; you make valid points, and whether or not Jesus was a 'Judaizer' is a little off-topic in any case :) I'd certainly agree that he wasn't the kind of anti-law type that Paul was.
Shermana wrote:Also, you say that it was unlikely to gain widespread acceptance if written by Cerinthus...

Apparently Cerinthus was such a threat that John wrote it, according to Iraneus, specially to COUNTER Cerinthus.
No, I said that 'Saint' Justin Martyr's use of it (alongside Matthew, Mark and Luke) shows that John had quickly gained acceptance in proto-orthodox circles. Justin Martyr's views were more in line with Irenaeus' than Cerinthus' - if Cerinthus had written the gospel, Justin would be considerably less likely to have used it.

Incidentally, what do you believe Cerinthus taught? You've said his views on creation come from Philo. Do you agree with Irenaeus that Cerinthus also did not believe in a virgin birth, and that he considered 'the Christ' separate from Jesus before his baptism and during his death/resurrection?
Shermana wrote:6. Cerinthus's followers insist for while his Gospel (which you apparently mentioned you haven't heard of, type in "Lost Gospel of Cerinthus") was the original John. I see no reason why this shouldn't be as compelling of evidence as saying that Iraneus attributed it to John or that Polycarp knew John.
There's no end to what I haven't heard of, I'm sure :lol: As I've said three times now, our information on this point comes from Epiphanius around 390CE. You haven't provided, and I haven't been able to find, any earlier mention of it. Irenaeus didn't accuse the heretics of perverting and lying about the gospel's author. Nor did Caius. Dionysius reported that some folk believed Cerinthus was the one who prefixed John's name to the Revelation, but again made no mention of anyone believing that Cerinthus had written a gospel. And Eusebius, summarizing all of these three, apparently found no other early source accusing Cerinthus' followers of believing him to have written a gospel. Not until the end of that century did Epiphanes mention that belief.

If you think an argument from silence is valid because no-one identified John as the beloved disciple before Irenaeus, how much more deafening is the silence on a gospel by Cerinthus! It may well be that Epiphanius wrote accurately what people of his day believed. It might even be true that some folk in the earlier 4th, or even in the 3rd century believed that Cerinthus had written a gospel. But until you provide some kind of further evidence or source, that's about all we've got; a guess about very late beliefs. If you see no reason why claims from 290 years after composition aren't as compelling evidence as claims from 90 years after composition, there's not much more I can add.
Shermana wrote:9. The evidence overwhelmingly amounts to Iraneus being a liar and having something to do with the adoption and manipulation of Cerinthus's work to become John.
What? Let's see if I can remember what you've accused Irenaeus of lying about...
- - About Polycarp being John's disciple. I haven't thoroughly checked whether there's any earlier evidence for that, but there's certainly no evidence that Irenaeus was wrong
- - You say Irenaeus went "OUT OF HIS WAY" to accuse Cerinthus of gnosticism. What he actually said was "[Cerinthus and] ...those termed Nicolaitans, who are an offset of that knowledge falsely so called..." Unless you're thinking of some other passage by Irenaeus, I'd say that comparing a Philoan/Nicolaitan/Cerinthian view of God and creation with a gnostic view is no more of an error than your implication that it was some major scheme by Irenaeus
- - And you seem to be implying that Irenaeus lied about John being the author, and that he himself had revised the gospel now in the Christian canon. Yet your very own source for claiming there were many changes to the gospel states that the final change was the epilogue, which was added shortly after the disciple's death and does not name the disciple. "Finally, the "epilogue" (Jn21:1-25ff), widely considered to be an appendix, was added on at the end." Clearly it was not written by Irenaeus and, since it was the final change, obviously Irenaeus didn't change anything, according to your own source!

Let me know if I've missed anything, but as far as I can see you haven't provided a single iota of evidence that Irenaeus lied about anything. Even if we accept your argument that he was off the mark in saying "knowledge falsely so called" in reference to Cerinthus, you yourself have made errors at least as bad in trying to discredit him and we wouldn't accuse you of lying. People do make mistakes, you know ;)
Shermana wrote:7. Go to historical-jesus.info for a full breakdown on the Gospel of John. There is more evidence of changes and spurious fixes over the years than any other text, and the Egerton fragments hint at some things that may have been left out too....

8. John was disputed as written by john even back in the day.
I won't have much time to look at that site 'til I get my home internet sorted out. But having just briefly glanced down one of the pages, I was interested to find that it confirms what I'd earlier said:
  • Mithrae wrote:
    We have evidence that shortly after the author/disciple's death, a follower added the final chapter to somewhat off-set the disappointment of his death, to confirm that he'd written the gospel and to lend support to Petrine leadership of the church now that all the apostles were gone.

    Muller writes:
    Peter becomes very prominent at the end of the gospel (Jn13:6-9,18:10). However, according to Jn13:24-25 & Jn20:3-8, Peter is second to another (unnamed) disciple who, as his latter contemporaries thought (Jn21:20-23), was being kept alive (because he was "the disciple whom Jesus loved"). But when this last known (alleged) eyewitness finally died (as Peter did long before), and obviously before the second coming, the main reason for his predominance was removed
As I've said before - and I re-ordered your comments a little to get this in at the end - it seems a simple and important fact that the appendix, written shortly after the beloved disciple's death, explicitly confirms that he wrote the gospel. After the eyewitness claims in the gospel itself this is probably the single most important piece of evidence in the discussion - and as explicit, additional confirmation by a third party, its weight as evidence is considerably greater.

In the absense of any clear or strong evidence to the contrary, we have sound reasons to believe that the fourth gospel was written by a disciple of Jesus.

Shermana
Prodigy
Posts: 3762
Joined: Sun Jul 04, 2010 10:19 pm
Location: City of the "Angels"
Been thanked: 5 times

Post #108

Post by Shermana »

Umm...

1. Saying he heard it from other people or Polycarp makes no difference, Iraneus was using hearsay to back his claims.

2. That site goes against what you're saying. That sites makes the point that the John we know today is mangled.

3. I have no idea what planet you're on in thinking that Chapter 21's tacked-on ness confirms John's authorship, I'm gonna have to reread what you said, I'm missing something.

Shermana
Prodigy
Posts: 3762
Joined: Sun Jul 04, 2010 10:19 pm
Location: City of the "Angels"
Been thanked: 5 times

Post #109

Post by Shermana »

Also, you are strangely insistent that Justin Martyr actually quoted from John, I will in no way accept that Justin Martyr knew and quoted of John.

User avatar
Mithrae
Prodigy
Posts: 4326
Joined: Mon Apr 05, 2010 7:33 am
Location: Australia
Has thanked: 112 times
Been thanked: 195 times

Post #110

Post by Mithrae »

Shermana wrote:Umm...
1. Saying he heard it from other people or Polycarp makes no difference, Iraneus was using hearsay to back his claims.
You said he was a liar. You've given no evidence for this, and the fact that he was accurate enough to say he got it 2nd hand, not from Polycarp directly, suggests that he wasn't being deceptive.
Shermana wrote:2. That site goes against what you're saying. That sites makes the point that the John we know today is mangled.
You said that Irenaeus editted a gospel by Cerinthus. Your site contradicts you, since it says that the last changes were made not long after the 'alleged' disciple's death.
Shermana wrote:3. I have no idea what planet you're on in thinking that Chapter 21's tacked-on ness confirms John's authorship, I'm gonna have to reread what you said, I'm missing something.
We generally don't take claims, like the gospel's eyewitness claims, as 100% proof of anything. Additional confirmation, like the appendix's confirmation, is additional evidence.
Shermana wrote:Also, you are strangely insistent that Justin Martyr actually quoted from John, I will in no way accept that Justin Martyr knew and quoted of John.
Assuming that Student is correct in saying that Justin called the Memoirs gospel in the singular, I suspect that still falls short of solid evidence that he meant a single written work.

Justin Martyr refers to the memoirs in saying that James and John were called Boanerges - distinctive reference to Mark
He refers to the memoirs in saying that a star led magi to Jesus at his birth - distinctive reference to Matthew
He refers to the memoirs in saying that Jesus' sweat was like blood when he asked that his cup be taken from him - distinctive reference to Luke
He refers to the memoirs in saying that Jesus was the Logos and the first begotten of the Father. Reference to...???

It's not as distinctive as the other three, but it's hardly a leap of faith to see the point. There's also the other two references/paraphrases which are similar to John. It's obviously not undeniable proof. This comes down to what level of scepticism one chooses to employ in examining the evidence. One could just as easily say "I will in no way accept that Irenaeus knew and quoted of John," since he only quotes a few verses - surely they could be from a work entirely different! In fact, that's rather similar to what you have been saying :lol:

If you choose not to accept that Justin Martyr made reference to John, that's obviously your decision to make.

Post Reply