True, true.mOctave wrote: ↑Sun Dec 31, 2023 12:18 amYes, but in this case there were plenty of references, which I removed in the quotes but you can find in the footnotes section of the original page. I'm sure some of those could provide more reliable detail.CaptainFritz28 wrote: ↑Sat Dec 30, 2023 8:56 pmA) Wikipedia is... a source. How accurate it is is dubious, but I'll take it as it is.
Fair enough. I don't know all the history of them, but I was simply pointing out that in general, they were written by the end of the first century, and if they were edited they still agree with writings in the Epistles, which were finished earlier.mOctave wrote: ↑Sun Dec 31, 2023 12:18 amCaptainFritz28 wrote: ↑Sat Dec 30, 2023 8:56 pmB) Each of these quotes place the gospels as written by the end of the first century AD. Long before 180. The Epistles were probably written before the gospels, as the authors had died by around 90 AD, and made their journeys/visitations to the churches much earlier.
Written, yes. Finished, not necessarily. After all, there's a lot of things in the gospels that weren't found in the earliest manuscripts. That's why I figured that 180 AD is a safe estimate: there probably weren't any major changes after that point, and there may have been before then since we don't have any manuscripts from the first century (https://www.bible-researcher.com/papyrus.52.html). Also, 180 AD seems to be around the earliest we still have a complete manuscript from, so that may be where that number came from? As for the Epistles, I 100% agree.
Although this is now going off on a relatively unimportant tangent...
And yeah, it is a sidetrack. I'll respond to your other longer post soon; I've had some things to do today which relegated my responses to the shorter ones.