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What is the current consensus of when the NT was written.
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What is the current consensus of when the NT was written.
The bible is a collection of writings, not one continuous story. Every book except the book of revelations was written between 35-67 AD. The book of revelations was written around 95 AD.
You can believe that date, but its not the scholarly consensus.I believe the scholarly consensus that all of the books of the NT were in their final form before 70AD.
Why? Because none mentions the sacking of Jerusalem by Titus in that year. No author from there or Jewish (which is what the writers were) could fail to mention the event. Revelation was written late in 68 and talks about the events in Rome surrounding the Year of the Four Emperors.
You can believe that date, but its not the scholarly consensus.
If you mean do all scholars agree then you are right. From the 18th century in the glory of the Enlightenment people began to question any elements of the biblical story that did not 'fit' into their increasingly materialistic world view. In biblical studies the majority of scholars propounded later dates for the NT canon. Their was the orthodoxy intil around the mid 19th century, following large quantities of new information becoming available and which has led to our current situation where rejection of the 'liberal' viewpoint is widely supported. Both camps remain (e.g. the Jesus Seminars) but the balance now is with those who accept earlier dates.
For a period ideology dominated history. Historical data has re-established its authority.
John
NZ
The balance has moved back from some of the extremes that were popular some decades before, but not to the point of putting all the gospels before ad70 as suggested in the post I was responding to, or accepting all the epistles as written by their purported authors.
It is widely accepted that the synoptic gospels contain material from older sources, now lost to us. Thus, mush of their content is quite early, some possibly from direct quotes from Jesus and early eyewitnesses. John's writings are later although more recently a dates as early as AD 50 but nol ater than AD70 have their proponents.
John
NZ
ebia said:You can believe that date, but its not the scholarly consensus.
That does not follow. However important an event you are not obliged to write about it in every text talking about something else. Not one of the books likely to be written after that date has any reason to mention it. Do you find it in every single other Christian and Jewish text written around the end of the first century? No.
It's not surprising at all - of the contenders there isn't one that has cause to mention it. We are talking about some of the most carefully crafted literature ever written, not random collection of stuff - someone trying to date by silence on an issue needs to show exactly where and why a text would need to mention the event.Not every but there are some after 70 AD. The amazing fact is that none of the 27 books of the NT mention such a cataclysmic event.
Some thought follows that line. But a good deal of other thought dates Mark to mid 60s as that's where by far the best evidence, including the early tradition, puts it, and that pushes Matthew and Luke into the 70s. John has always been dated late, even traditionally right at the end of the life of "John the Elder"The reason I mention 70 AD is because it is the main argument for later dating. Mark is mistakenly thought to refer to the event and since, so the argument goes Matthew & Luke rely on Mark then everything is pushed past 70 AD sometime even into the mid-100s.
ebia said:It's not surprising at all - of the contenders there isn't one that has cause to mention it. We are talking about some of the most carefully crafted literature ever written, not random collection of stuff - someone trying to date by silence on an issue needs to show exactly where and why a text would need to mention the event.
ebia said:Some thought follows that line. But a good deal of other thought dates Mark to mid 60s as that's where by far the best evidence, including the early tradition, puts it, and that pushes Matthew and Luke into the 70s. John has always been dated late, even traditionally right at the end of the life of "John the Elder"
A really crass author would be that unsubtle, but these are sophisticated authors who expect a sophisticated and well informed audience.Not so. Jesus in Mark, Luke and Matthew speaks of the destruction of the Temple. If Jesus had forecasted this and you were writing after 70 AD, after the Temple was destroyed in dramatic fashion, you would be all over this event saying how Jesus had predicted it.