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Lecture: “New Evidences the Gospels were Based on Eyewitness Accounts” from Peter Williams

Peter Williams - March 5, 2011

New Evidences the Gospels were Based on Eyewitness Accounts

The authorship of the first four books of the New Testament has fascinated scholars for centuries. If the authors were eyewitnesses, one could assume greater reliability. If not, then questions are naturally raised about the historicity of details in the writings. Because the first three Gospels are so similar, many theories have been proposed and argued to explain the sources of verbatim sections, as well as the unique material. Did Mark rely on Peter for eyewitness details? Luke admits his use of other sources, but did he use Mark or Matthew or both? What about Matthew and John? New evidence in the discussion of these questions and more will be the focus of this lecture.

From Series: "LTL Lecture Series Academic Year 2010-2011"

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