đ [EN] 1. lecture notes
Introduction to the Gospels and the Distinctiveness of John
This material introduces the literary nature of the four canonical Gospels, explains why multiple Gospel accounts were written, and highlights key ways Johnâs Gospel differs from the Synoptics (Matthew, Mark, and Luke). The aim is to give clear categories for reading the Gospels well and to prepare for deeper study of Johnâs Gospel, Johnâs Letters, and Revelation.
Course Scope and Emphasis
The overall module surveys Johnâs Gospel, Johnâs Letters, and Revelation within a very limited time frame. Emphasis will fall mainly on Johnâs Gospel and Revelation; Johnâs Letters will receive a shorter treatment due to time constraints.
Why Four Gospels?
Each Gospel offers a unique portrait of Jesus. Rather than one exhaustive account, the Church received four complementary witnesses that together communicate who Jesus is and what he did. These are historical, narrative, and theological writings intended to convey reliable testimony about Jesusâ deeds and words, interpreted for faith and discipleship.
The Synoptic Gospels
âSynopticâ (from syn, âtogether,â and optic, âseeingâ) designates Matthew, Mark, and Luke because they can be âseen togetherâ: they follow a broadly similar outline and share much material and perspective on Jesusâ public ministry.
What Kind of Literature Are the Gospels?
Historical Literature
- They report events that occurred in concrete times and places in first-century Palestine under Roman rule.
- The authors drew on eyewitness testimony and earlier traditions to compile their accounts (e.g., Lukeâs stated method in Luke 1:1â4; Johnâs appeal to a witnessing disciple in John 21:24).
- The intent is to transmit truthful, grounded information about Jesus, not timeless myths detached from history.
Narrative Literature
- The Gospels are stories with settings, plots, and characters. They trace Jesusâ public ministry, journey to Jerusalem, arrest, trial, crucifixion, and resurrection.
- They are not mere collections of sayings; even where teaching is prominent, it is embedded in a narrative arc.
Ancient (Greco-Roman) Biography
- The closest ancient genre is âLivesâ (biographies) that highlight a subjectâs public, exemplary life rather than providing modern, cradle-to-grave coverage.
- Accordingly, the Gospels devote most space to Jesusâ public ministry (about three years) and especially to the final week, with relatively little on his birth and nothing on his youth and twenties except Luke 2âs episode.
- Ancient biographers arranged materials thematically as well as chronologically and felt free to paraphrase, abridge, or interpret their subjectâs words without reproducing exact wording in every instance.
Theological Literature
- Each evangelist is also a theologian who selects, orders, and frames materials to communicate Jesusâ identity and saving work for the intended audience.
- Introductions signal emphases (e.g., Matthewâs genealogy and fulfillment motif; Markâs brisk announcement of the âgospel of Jesus Christ, the Son of Godâ; Lukeâs orderly account for a Gentile reader).
Acceptable Diversity Among the Gospels
- The same episode may appear in different locations or sequences (e.g., the order of Jesusâ temptations in Matthew vs. Luke; programmatic placement of the Nazareth sermon in Luke 4 vs. later in Mark 6). Such differences reflect ancient biographical practice, not error or deception.
- Large teaching blocks (e.g., Matthew 5â7) may be grouped thematically, while parallel content in Luke appears distributed across multiple contexts.
Why the Canonical Four (and Not Others)?
Besides the four canonical Gospels, later writings (e.g., âGospel of Thomas,â âGospel of Judas,â âGospel of Peterâ) appeared in the second century and beyond. These lack the historical rooting and apostolic testimony of the canonical Gospels and reflect later theological agendas. The early Church therefore rejected them as unhistorical and non-inspired.
How the Gospels Came to Be (A Four-Stage Sketch)
- Events: Jesusâ ministry, death, and resurrection occurred in history.
- Oral Tradition: Eyewitness apostles and early servants of the word transmitted narratives and sayings in living memory within communities where literacy rates were low.
- Written Sources: Prior to our four Gospels, various written collections and narratives began to circulate; Luke acknowledges âmanyâ attempts to compile accounts.
- Evangelistsâ Compositions: Each evangelist investigated, selected, ordered, and retold materials into an âorderly accountâ suited to purpose and audience.
What Distinguishes Johnâs Gospel?
- High Christology Stated Overtly: John emphasizes Jesusâ divine identity with great clarity (e.g., the opening confession of the eternal Word who âwas with Godâ and âwas Godâ).
- Extensive Discourses: John preserves long, reflective speeches of Jesus, offering sustained theological teaching rather than brief aphorisms alone.
- Holy Spirit Teaching: John contains distinctive material on the Spiritâs person and work (e.g., the Paraclete sayings), which will be explored in detail later in the course.
Reading the Four Introductions as Theological Signposts
- Matthew: Genealogy foregrounds Jesus as the Messiah, âson of David, son of Abraham,â and frames fulfillment of Scripture as a key theme.
- Mark: Concise, urgent openingââthe beginning of the gospel of Jesus Christ, the Son of Godââintroduces a swift, action-oriented narrative.
- Luke: Preface pledges careful investigation and an orderly account for assurance of the truth, signaling a broad Gentile horizon.
- John: The prologue (to be studied next) launches from eternity, identifying the pre-existent Word and framing Jesusâ mission in terms of revelation and new creation.
Key Takeaways
- The four canonical Gospels are historically grounded narratives shaped as ancient biographies and crafted with clear theological aims.
- Divergences in order or wording reflect accepted conventions of ancient biography and do not undermine reliability.
- John stands apart by explicitly articulating Jesusâ divine identity, preserving extended discourses, and presenting distinctive teaching on the Holy Spirit.