po18guy
Well-known member
What I am immediately suspicious of is “modern scholarship”. This subject runs the gamut from teaching that the Gospels writers had to confer to get their stories straight, clear to the asinine and blasphemous conclusions of the “Jesus seminar”. It seems that modern man (certain scholars included), increasingly rejects or redefines God, and perceives himself somehow superior to those crude, unrefined ancients. Yet, show me a work of “modern scholars” which exhibits the sheer beauty and poetic revelation of God’s truth as the Gospels do.This is the “internal” approach that has NO evidence to back it up. There is evidence that Matthew was written quite early, which blows this whole elaborate theory out of the water. It doesn’t matter how many “scholars” hold to a theory with no outside evidence to support it, it’s still unsupported by any real evidence, and is actually damaging to Church teaching if taken too far. Indeed, the History Channel relies on it whenever it has a program on that challenges Church teaching (traditional interpretation, as they insist on calling it) for this very reason. It’s bad theorizing, makes for bad theology, and is unsupported by hard evidence.
As to Mary not understanding Jesus’ mission, once again, we have no clear evidence for this idea. Certainly, she wouldn’t necessarily have known every move he was to make, but she surely understood who he was and that whatever he did/said he had good reason for doing/saying it.
Since Matthew apparently did not travel nearly as far as the others, it is quite possible that his Gospel was the first. It was written in Aramaic, but translated early on into Greek. No Aramaic text has been found. The connection of Mark to Rome places his Gospel rather later in the story, in my mind.