M
Medawlinno
Guest
I’ve always supposed that, though they were written in Greek, they came from an Aramaic oral tradition.
First thank you for your post. There are some things that I have to think about. I do not have a copy of Hengel’s book.The quotations from Eusebius and others show that one of these books was attributed to Matthew. However, what Papias says about it would suggest, I think, that it may not have been a full “Gospel” but rather a collection of sayings, possibly even compiled—why not?—by Matthew himself.
That’s my source for what Papias says! “He arranged the Lord’s oracles in order.” The word “oracles” in this context means simply “sayings” (logia in Greek).Eusebius of Caesarea (ca. 260 – 340) reports Papias, bishop of Hierapolis (ca. 100 – 110), as recording that “Matthew arranged the Lord’s oracles in order in the Hebrew language (or dialect) and each one translated (or "interpreted”) them as he was able” (Hist. eccl. 3.39.16).
Yes, and with a Hebrew mindset. We surely should have a little humility when approaching Scripture. Three languages and two millennia make for tricky understanding. Matthew in particular seems to use Hebrew phrase, spoken in Aramaic and then written in Greek.I’ve always supposed that, though they were written in Greek, they came from an Aramaic oral tradition.
We have no evidence that the Gospels were translated from Aramaic to Koine Greek.were the Gospels translated from Aramaic to Koine Greek?
I will try to find a source, but im pretty sure St Jerome had stated that he personally saw a Hebrew original.You quote Irenaeus, Eusebius and Papias in support of the view that Matthew’s Gospel was first written in Aramaic or Hebrew. Other writers from the Patristic period are also mentioned in the same connection from time to time. But did any of these writers claim to have seen, handled, or read a copy of Matthew’s Aramaic/ Hebrew Gospel? Or are they all simply repeating what would nowadays be called hearsay evidence?
Thank you, I look forward to that.I will try to find a source, but im pretty sure St Jerome had stated that he personally saw a Hebrew original.
http://hebrewgospel.com/Jeromes Scholarly Speculation.phprcwitness:![]()
Thank you, I look forward to that.I will try to find a source, but im pretty sure St Jerome had stated that he personally saw a Hebrew original.
I’m sorry but I don’t quite understand your logic here, do you mind clarifying for me please?Most NT quotes of the OT, including those in Matthew, are from the Septuagint (I’ll use the
There are no proven facts. I think we can all agree on that. If there were proven facts, there’d be nothing for us to talk about on this thread.My understanding (a minority opinion) is that Matthew was written in Hebrew (not Aramaic) as Jerome states; Mark was written in Latin as Baronius says (some of the oldest manuscripts of Mark are Latin); Luke was written in Greek; John was written in Aramaic. There are various theories about which book was written in which language. The majority opinion (everything in Greek) is not a proven fact.