Skeptics make much to do of differences in details between the Gospel accounts, claiming they prove the Bible is full of contradictions, and thus can’t be the Word of God. One popular example is the number of angels at the tomb of Jesus. Was there one angel (Mt 28:2; Mk 16:5) or two (Lk 24:4, 23; Jn 20:12)? Other differences include the discoverers of the tomb. Was Mary Magdalene the lone discoverer of the empty tomb (Jn 20:1) or were there others (Mt 28:1; Mk 16:1; Lk 24:1, 10)? How many others, and who were they (each account gives a different number and grouping of names)? And then there’s the demoniac of the Gadarenes. Was there one demoniac (Mk 5:1-2; Lk 8:26) or two (Mt 8:28)?
It’s important to note that none of these examples are contradictions; they are mere differences. A contradiction is to say something is both A and not A at the same time and in the same way. That’s not what’s going on here. We simply have one author providing more details than another author. Adding details someone else left out is not a contradiction. If I hit a 2 base run and a home run during a baseball game, it’s not a contradiction for sports writer A to say I hit a home run and sportwriter B to say I hit a homerun and a 2 base run. One is providing more details than the other, but neither is contradicting the other. One provides more details, but neither has conflicting details.
Other passages aren’t so easy to explain, however. Consider Jesus’ healing of the centurion’s servant. Who came to Jesus asking Him to heal the child? Was it the centurion (Mt 8:5), or elders of the Jews (Lk 7:3)? This seems to be a genuine contradiction. Or is it?
We tend to force modern writing standards on the Biblical writers. We expect them to be as concerned about including every little detail as we are. When a big news story breaks we spend hours exploring and reporting on every (almost meaningless) facet of it. Every detail must be included, and everything said must be quoted exactly as spoken/written. Not so in the ancient near eastern world. They were more interested in the big picture, not the details; the gist, not the minutae.
I was reading the Gospel of John recently when I noticed something that illustrates my point beautifully. John 3:22 says, “After these things came Jesus and his disciples into the land of Judaea; and there he tarried with them, and baptized.” Baptized is in the third person singular, the antecedent singular subject being “Jesus.” And yet in John 4:1-2 we read, “When therefore the Lord knew how the Pharisees had heard that Jesus made and baptized more disciples than John, (though Jesus himself baptized not, but his disciples,)….” Same author. Same book. Same context. Clealry John did not see any contradiction between these two statements. Notice how similar this is to the story of the centurion. Who came to Jesus? One person: the centurion? Multiple persons: the elders of the Jews? I think the answer to who came to Jesus is the same as who was doing the baptizing. Jesus’ disciples were doing the baptizing, but John could say it was Jesus because His disciples were doing so in His behalf. Likewise, the elders of the Jews came to Jesus, but Matthew can say it was the centurion because the Jewish elders represented him.
Or consider John 20:1 again. John only mentioned Mary Magdalene as a witness to Jesus’ resurrection, and yet in the very next verse he records Mary as saying to the apostles, “We do not know where they have laid him.” While John only reports Mary as a witness, he is clearly aware of the fact that there were more present than Mary.
My point is not to try to answer every kind of apparent contradiction in Scripture, but only to point out that what we think is a contradiction in Scripture would not have been viewed as such by the authors of Scripture. We are guilty of imposing modern standards of historiography and discourse on the apostles; they are not guilty of contradictions.
May 11, 2007 at 2:03 pm
Jason,
What about Jesus’ final words? The gospels differ greatly. Do you believe, as some claim, that Jesus rambled on, speaking all of the different “final words”? Do you believe that such an interpretation is faithful to the intent of each of the Biblical authors?
If a man told you that he was shocked to see an angel sitting on his bed last night, and later in the day he told you it was two angels, would you conclude that he’s changed his story or would you assume that two includes one?
I’m interested in your take on Jesus’ genealogies. I think that’s one of the more problematic areas in Scripture. The conventional dodges are untenable. They’re all clearly the genealogies of Jesus – not of Mary, Peter or other random individuals as some would claim. And one of the genealogies, in Matthew, clearly specifies the number of generations, and thereby prevents the claim the claim that the shorter ones left out insignificant generations that Luke included.
(“all the generations from Abraham to David are fourteen generations; and from David to the deportation to Babylon, fourteen generations; and from the deportation to Babylon to the Messiah, fourteen generations” (Mt. 1:17).
Arthur
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May 11, 2007 at 6:31 pm
Thanks for the blog, I was actually wondering about a few of those differences myself.
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May 15, 2007 at 1:06 am
Arthur,
Since your question was general, so will my response be. In general, yes, of course Jesus said more than what is reported in any one particular Gospel. Each Gospel writer selected certain portions of Jesus’ words to report in his gospel; words that would advance the theological purpose for the writer’s gospel portrayal of Christ’s life and teachings.
In regards to the two angels, of course I would question the consistency of the story at first. But there may be a good explanation for his two different portrayals. Maybe he only talked about one angel initially because of the two angels, only one of the angels spoke to him, so he was focussing on the one angel. Later, however, he mentions the presence of the other “silent” angel as well.
Matthew was clearly telescoping Jesus’ geneology so that it would fit into “episodes” of 14 generations from patriarch to patriarch. This was both for the purposes of easy memorization, as well as to fit with the numerical number of David’s name: 14. Please see these two articles that give great treatments on Jesus’ geneologies:
http://www.christian-thinktank.com/fabprof4.html
http://www.tektonics.org/gk/jesgen.html
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May 15, 2007 at 8:55 am
For those interested, similar apologetic techniques are used to explain how there are no contradictions in Star Trek.
http://www.fstdt.com/winace/st_contradictions_refuted.htm
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May 15, 2007 at 8:57 am
Here’s the link, tiny’ed:
http://tinyurl.com/3yf4cp
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May 15, 2007 at 2:17 pm
I also wanted to add that there is no question the different gospel authors do not include all of the same appearances of the resurrected Jesus. There is no reason to assume that the last statements they record of Jesus prior to His ascension were uttered at His last appearance to them. It could be a matter of them using words from any one of His appearances to them, that they saw as a fitting conclusion for their book, at which point they concluded by saying Jesus ascended into heaven.
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May 15, 2007 at 2:19 pm
Arthur,
What relevance is that? The question is whether or not the explanation is true to historical precedent, and true to fact. I think Miller and Holding persuasively argue both.
Jason
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October 20, 2011 at 11:22 am
[…] in May I posted a blog entry titled “Differences in the Gospels” in which I discussed some of the supposed contradictions the Gospels, and how they are not […]
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August 16, 2012 at 11:37 am
[…] several previous posts (here, here, and here) I addressed the problem of differences in the Gospels, pointing out that what are […]
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March 22, 2016 at 9:43 am
I don’t believe Jesus did not baptize his disciples. Jo.4:2 says, Not but his disciples. I think it’s saying that Jesus didn’t baptize anyone but/ except his disciples. Otherwise, it doesn’t make sense that any of the disciples did any baptizing without first having been baptized by Jesus. They wouldn’t have any real authority to use the name without someone In the name giving that authority. They wouldn’t have known or understood the names significance. Just saying!
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March 23, 2016 at 12:34 pm
Jesus did not baptize; but his disciples followed John’s baptism model it’s as plain as the knows on your forehead in every gospel. Where do you think the authority of John’s baptism came? From Heaven. Where does the Kingdom reside? In your Brain.
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March 23, 2016 at 2:20 pm
I disagree completely, It is possible that this scripture is saying that Jesus baptized no one but his disciples. No one except his disciples. John baptist authority has nothing to do with it. Even today, people aren’t given the authority to baptize anyone except they themselves have been baptized. You seem to think that the disciples, who were believer’s at one point and disbelievers at another, were told to baptize by Jesus, without first being baptized by him. I doubt it. But, this is a question that really has no bearing on one’s eternal destiny. We disagree. Oh well! And, to your statement that my nose is on my forehead. My nose is not on my forehead. It’s below my forehead and in the middle of my face. And, the kingdom of God is certainly not in my brain. That makes no sense. The kingdom of God is the indwelling of the Holy Ghost which the scriptures declare is located in a temple. The temple is my body. I Co. 3:16 Thanks for the debate.
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March 24, 2016 at 9:12 am
Lloyd A Dale:
You disagree completely or do you completely disagree?
Your body is the temple so where do you think your brain is located?
Unfortunately you only have a slight understanding of scriptural context: in the bible there are many references about the forehead and the right hand which are merely symbolic references; the following are a few that are not meant to be taken so literally as your knows on the middle of your face:
Jeremiah 48:45
“In the shadow of Heshbon, those who have run for their lives stand without strength. For a fire has gone out from Heshbon and from Sihon. It has destroyed the forehead of Moab and the top of the heads of the trouble-makers.
Ezekiel 3:8
Behold, I have made thy face strong against their faces, and thy forehead strong against their foreheads.
Acts 5:31
Then God put him in the place of honor at his right hand as Prince and Savior. He did this so the people of Israel would repent of their sins and be forgiven
Nehemiah 13:10
And then I learned that the Levites hadn’t been given their regular food allotments. So the Levites and singers who led the services of worship had all left and gone back to their farms. I called the officials on the carpet, “Why has The Temple of God been abandoned?” I got everyone back again and put them back on their jobs so that all Judah was again bringing in the tithe of grain, wine, and oil to the storerooms. I put Shelemiah the priest, Zadok the scribe, and a Levite named Pedaiah in charge of the storerooms. I made Hanan son of Zaccur, the son of Mattaniah, their right-hand man. These men had a reputation for honesty and hard work. They were responsible for distributing the rations to their brothers.
Ezekiel 3:8
Behold, I have made thy face hard against their faces, and thy forehead hard against their foreheads. This is actually literal..
Matthew 23:5
“Everything they do is done for others to see. On their foreheads and arms they wear little boxes that hold Scripture verses. They make the boxes very wide. And they make the tassels on their coats very long.
Isaiah 3:17
Therefore the Lord will afflict the scalp of the daughters of Zion with scabs,And the LORD will make their foreheads bare.”
And where do you think the Mark of the beast is made on the forehead? It is in the mindset…that is what the forehead means…………lol
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March 24, 2016 at 12:56 pm
My last statements speak for themselves. Thanks for the debate. I simply think you are in error. I am not the only person on earth that believes Jesus did, in fact, baptize his disciples and your so-called arguments really don’t do justice to the replies I’ve given. Thank you for thinking I’m some child and you have some kind of intellectual authority on scripture over me. I did have a stroke in 2008, and am a might slower mentally. Having a stroke at 57 years of age was not pleasant, I’m now 64. Your attitude and title as Revelator suggests some superior intelligence you seem to believe you possess. But, I still believe that Jesus must have baptized his disciples before sending them out to baptize. That just seems what John is writing in Jo. 4:2. And, if you believe he didn’t baptize them, I am wondering if you believe it would be fine for a non-baptized person to go out and baptize someone. That would make the non-baptized person a non-Christian. If you were pastoring folks, would you let some of your Church attendees do that if they weren’t baptized yet? So, Jesus is going to send his disciples out in the water to baptize themselves in a name they really had not grasped the significance of as yet. Then, he sends them out into the communities to baptize all that desire baptism. Sorry, it just doesn’t make a lot of sense. The Greek word ‘but’ can mean ‘except’, along with many other definitions. Just as the Greek word ‘and’ can mean ‘also’ along with many other definitions. Your arguments about forehead and nose don’t do much to answer me. Thanks for your argumentative spirit. You must be a very holy person. Pro. 14:7
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March 24, 2016 at 5:46 pm
Lloyd:
I am sorry to hear that you had a stroke; good health is so important especially the older we become. I myself had an Ilio femoral endarterectomy; at the end of this commentary I’ll post the URL and you can watch the procedure as it happened:
When it comes to the bible I do believe I have a special ability to see things about the bible few people can see so in that sense many Christians are like children.
The two books I have studied, read and re-read the most are the Bible and the Dictionary. The dictionary is full of knowledge as is the Bible but the difference in my bible studies was that I read it without a human mentor and that put me at a distinct advantage because I read it with a view of common sense and was not content to go off the deep end of supernaturalism to explain what I did not immediately understand and so I searched and searched. Oh I heard the preachers all talking about the miracles and being raised from the dead but the Preachers never think about the metaphorical aspect of ordinary language; like we say almost without thinking about it, “the alarm goes off” when the alarm actually “goes on”. I mean Moses started his ministry using magic tricks to get attention while Jesus started his campaign to revolutionize religion as it was being taught indiscriminately about the supernatural and still is today by 32.5 percent of the world’s population of Christians claiming to follow a man who was completely against the supernatural nonsense of religion.
In any case take care and thank you for your comments.
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March 24, 2016 at 6:44 pm
Wow! A more toned down & civil response. Thank you. I m actually not embarrassed in the least to say that when I got in to Church in 1976, I got in to Bible study in such a way that I would actually get upset at myself if I got too tired to read and had to sleep. It got so I knew if you read it right and would correct you if you didn’t. And, I still am blessed to have that love for his word. I was in an accident in 1973, ten months from my discharge from the Marine Corp. I was on the job at an asphalt construction company where I fell on the job approximately 20-30 ft. I broke my back and had compound fractures of my right leg along with other injuries because of the fall. I died in the hospital that evening. A nurse found me early in the morning and I woke up from a coma after being found in a necrotic state. I remember telling God the night of the accident and before I went to sleep that first night, If you get me out of this, Lord, I’ll live for you. Thirty six hours later, I woke up in ICU, and started pulling tubes out of my mouth, nose and where ever, talking to a nurse & calling her Mom. Later on, after 18 operations, after being raised from a death bed and healed of cancer of the bone that was contracted in the hospital (I contacted a UPC preacher I knew of, although, I was not yet a Christian, I sit here now writing and remembering all the thing’s that the Lord has done for me. I’ve not always been the best Christian I should be, but thank God I am still here able to work on being better than I was yesterday. I believe to this day, that if I had not prayed that prayer, that I would not have woke up that night. I even searched for the medical records so I could really see for myself that I had died. And, I did die. My stroke happened exactly 33 1/2 years to the hour of my accident. I did not realize that until one of my stroke doctors informed me of that information. I certainly can’t say that the information I am telling you now is 100% how it is, but, when I was told about the 33 1/2 years, I guess I put it together like this. God has given us 70 years, and if we live longer, it’s perhaps we lived healthy or for whatever reason. Half of 70 years is 33.5 years. At the specific time I had the stroke, I was not living exactly or completely like I should have been living. I feel that God just has a way of waking us up and a stroke was his way to shake me awake. So, I have reason to be thankful. I was adopted and lived under a different name most of my life. When I had the stro0ke, I decided to find my brother, who was adopted by a separate family. And, after putting my search for him on-line, I did indeed find him. After 549 years of being without a brother, I now have a relationship with him and moved closer to him so we can ‘grow up together’, since we couldn’t long ago. I to have a type of relationship with the Lord that I wouldn’t call ordinary. Perhaps one day we can discuss our mutual association with the Word. I hope that your medical problem is corrected and I am, of course, wondering where you attend Church? Thanks for your kind words. Lord bless!
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March 24, 2016 at 7:50 pm
Lloyd:
Thank you for sharing your story. I don’t attend any church; the only temple I have is the body I was born with and I’m in that temple 24/7. I never had a crisis moment as you did but I was in a Residence School for truancy, among other boyhood behaviors; my father was overseas in in Germany with the Army; I was 4 years old when he came home. By 9 I was in the residence school, out at ten and in another one by 11. Forced to attend Church I listened to the monotone droning of the priest while reading about the Gospels and Jesus; it never turned my life around but the words resonated deeply in the spirit and he seemed like the father I never knew. At 13 I was transferred to Foster Care where I tried building a cross to carry around in the woods in a secret connection with the tribulations of Jesus. I guess he impacted me in my own quaint way and has stuck in my mind ever since popping in and out as I have travelled about. I don’t see Jesus as anything but a real man, a real common sense man whose words rang true to my own spirit and it irks me when people talk about Jesus as some kind of supernatural ghost freak out of Charles Dickens, the way Hollywood delights in playing and preying on the superstitious nature of believers to get everything out of them that religion can garner by perpetuating the hoax and myths that devour widows homes while playing on peoples’ fears of the unknown.
Jesus was totally against that kind of religious insanity and he and I are one and I am unanimous in that. lol
Oh by the way, I believe it just a typo, but your sentence that read…..”After 549 years of being without a brother…..” made me chuckle and think: why Lloyd 549 years is only half a biblical lifetime…when people seemed to have lived 800 and 900 years old. But I think a biblical year was a monthly moon cycle so that 800 to 900 months would be actually between 66 and 75 years…that’s the way I reckon things anyway and that would have been old since about 100 years ago the life span was around 46 to 49……Seventy years would be 840 biblical moon cycles counting 12 moon cycles a year. 🙂
It is a blessed and happy man who does not condemn himself for what he does and the man who sends out thoughts of love will never be chastised for that.
Take care.
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March 24, 2016 at 9:52 pm
I failed to critique my note to you. Sorry., I meant 59 years. I do have a concern with someone who thinks so highly of their scriptural abilities that they would entitle themselves the Revelator. It sounds as though you don’t believe in Church, and you certainly don’t have any understanding of whom you claim you have a relationship with. It’s certainly not with the Jesus Christ I know and who is more than just a man. Church is where we find true life. Not just any Church. Jesus came and died and rose again to begin the New Testament Church where Peter preached the first gospel message. It is a wonder to me that you cling to a web sight by Jason Dulle’s and act as though you are some spiritual giant. You are not. You and Jesus are in no agreement whatsoever concerning your religious idea’s if you think one can even have a relationship without Church and without a Pastor. It’s so evident that you don’t have the Holy Ghost, yet you act like you’re so spiritual minded when you aren’t even remotely close to having any truth in your life. You are a Joker, Sir! You think that you know thing’s that you absolutely don’t know. You have another spirit and it is not the Spirit of truth. I am not interested in any more conversations with you. You’re a fraud and a fake. Paul made statements about your sort, He that thinketh he knoweth anything knoweth nothing as he ought. I will not answer any responses from you from now on, Period! I like Pro. 14:7 for folks such as yourself. Jesus is just a man, huh? My Bible tells me that Jesus is God manifest in the flesh. And, I am finished conversing with you. Go, get in a Church that preached Jesus as the one God and obey Acts 2:38. Now I am finished. Sorry I met you. I thought we might have had some fruitful discussions. I was mistaken
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March 25, 2016 at 10:56 am
LAD:
The critique of your note is not all that you failed at.
Your lack of discipline is exceeded only by your mean spiritness. I detect a deep device of hatred and remorse in your heart.
“Let me tell you why you are here. You’re here to be salt-seasoning that brings out the God-flavors of this earth. If you lose your saltiness, how will people taste godliness? You’ve lost your usefulness and will end up in the garbage.
If a man can take up the profession of Christ, and yet remain graceless, no other doctrine, no other means, can make him profitable.
Through me, Jesus offered words of comfort, you rejected it. He who rejects me rejects my Father. “You do not know me or my Father,” Jesus says. “If you knew me, you would know my Father also.”
During the commentary as I wrote, there came a scripture to mind and which proved to be a warning about you and which you fulfilled magnificently according to your last post; nevertheless, I decided to reply despite the spirit warning of Matt 7:6. After that scripture, came the follow up scripture that addresses your last post perfectly. John 2:24-25.
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March 25, 2016 at 6:54 pm
Witness accounts are not always as reliable as we would expect when compared one with the other such as in traffic accidents. When persons show up at the tomb they usually come in intervals and each interval has its own character so that the first arrival sees the character as it happened to her and the next few moments the scene takes on a different character, It is never a static situation and contradictions are not necessarily contradictions but merely characteristics reflected and perceived at different moments in time by different people.
Now let’s see what the different actors said about the remission of sins:
JESUS:
“From that time began Jesus to preach, and to say, Repent ye; for the kingdom of heaven is at hand.”
JOHN:
John the Baptist came, preaching in the wilderness of Judea, saying, “Repent, for the kingdom of heaven is at hand.”
PETER:
Peter said to them, “Repent, and let every one of you be baptized in the name of Jesus Christ for the remission of sins; and you shall receive the gift of the Holy Spirit. (when push came to shove Peter denied ever knowing Jesus, denying him all night long when Jesus was arrested, after Peter answered and said to Him, “Even if all are made to stumble because of You, I will never be made to stumble.” Jesus said to him, “Assuredly, I say to you that this night, before the rooster crows, you will deny Me three times.” Peter said to Him, “Even if I have to die with You, I will not deny You!”
SCRIBES AND THE PHARISEES:
In fact, according to the law of Moses, nearly everything was purified with blood. The shedding of blood, was for the remission of sins. The High Priest on pain of death, each year, was allowed to go first to make a sacrifice for himself and then for the nation by the sprinkling of blood for the remission of sins.
Follow Peter as you see fit; I follow the words of Jesus as truth spoken with authority.
That’s why the 5th verse of the second chapter of the epistle to the Philippians says, “let this mind be in you which was also in Christ Jesus”, that word mind seems attitude. It means disposition. Let this disposition be in you that was in Christ. He playing the role of man let the Father be everything; you playing the role of men let Christ be everything. As he derived everything he ever did, said or was from the Father in the son so now you derive everything you say and do and are from the son living in you. It’s called sanctification. And that is full of the grace you fail to display in your accusation.
“Now have come the salvation and the power and the kingdom of our God, and the authority of Jesus. For the accuser of our brothers and sisters has been thrown down to earth–the one who accuses them before our God day and night.
So rejoice, O Heavens, and all who live there, but doom to earth and sea,
For the Devil’s come down on you with both feet; he’s had a great fall;
He’s wild and raging with anger.
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