“As it relates to the dating of New
Testament books, the pioneering labor of
John
A. T. Robinson in his scholarly work Redating the New Testament
is
of great importance. He argues persuasively that all the books of
the
New Testament were written before 70 A.D.”.
Jim
Seghers
Dates of the
New Testament – Preterist Archives
DATING
THE BOOKS OF THE NEW TESTAMENT – OR –
THE EMPEROR’S NEW CLOTHES
by Jim Seghers
The
majority of modern scripture scholars attribute late dates to the composition
of the New Testament books in the form that we now have them. This is
particularly true of the four Gospels. It is usually claimed that Mark was the
first gospel written around A.D. 70. Matthew’s composition is dated in the
80’s, followed by Luke in the late 80’s. The Gospel of John is given a
composition date in the 90’s.
One
may be inclined to think, “So what! After all, regardless of the dates
attributed to their composition, each book remains the written word of God
because the Holy Spirit is the principal author. What does it matter?”
Actually, it matters a great deal.
One
naturally assumes that the proponents of late composition dates, men with
academic degrees, base their conclusions on sound scholarship that is rooted in
recent discoveries in History, Archeology, Patristics, Papyrology and other
related fields. This is especially true because these scholars pride themselves
on their “scientific” approach to biblical interpretation. Certainly, it would
seem that their arguments must be buttressed by the data coming from objective
research. Nothing could be further from the truth. Those supporting late
authorship base their statements solely on the wobbly foundation of their own
fanciful imaginations. Why is this so?
Late authorship fits conveniently into their first principles, which rejects
the possibility of any reality that is beyond the scope of their personal
experience. They make the limits of their finite intellects and narrow
experiences the measure of God’s activity in the world he created out of
nothing. Thus accounts of miracles, the resurrection, claims that Jesus is God,
the definition of his mission, the founding of the Church with its hierarchical
authority, and statements attributed to Jesus cannot be part of what is the
actual inspired word of God. Rather these “beliefs” are explained away as a
late editing which merely reflects the tenets of Christians far removed from
eyewitnesses and the actual words of Jesus. These claims, of course, have no
documented foundation in any historical sense of the word. In order to support
this evolutionary flight of fancy it is necessary to claim that the gospels had
late compositions.
Starting
from this faithless, secular viewpoint it is easy to understand why Mark was
selected as the first gospel written and the source of Matthew and Luke. This
is expedient because Mark lacks many of the “embellishments” found in Matthew
and Luke, for example, the institution of the Church on Peter, and the miracles
surrounding Jesus birth. Support is drawn from another fashionable invention
the Q document, so called from the German word quelle, “source.”
“Q” is a hypothetical source from which it is claimed the Synoptic Gospels drew
common material. There is no historical evidence that Q ever existed except, of
course, in the fertile imaginations of revisionist scholars. The result of this
foolishness is a whole system of biblical interpretation based on the myths
fabricated by their creators who, themselves, have become the embodiment of the
fable, The Emperor’s New Clothes. In the fable of The
Emperor’s New Clothes, it required the uninhibited innocence of a child to
proclaim, “The king is Nude!”
The
resulting interpretations of many modern biblical scholars are so
methodologically flawed that they should be the subjects of derision not
serious study.
Unfortunately,
just as in the fable there were many that gawkishly admired the Emperor’s
invisible attire, so today there are many who fawn over these illusionary
conclusions based on invisible data. At the college and university levels these
speculations are taught with indiscriminate dogmatism. Woe to the inquiring
student who dares to challenge these pronouncements! One is left to wonder if
St. Paul foresaw these times when he prophesied: “For the time is coming when
people will not endure sound teaching, but having itching ears they will
accumulate for themselves teachers to suit their own liking, and will turn away
from listening to the truth and wander into myths” (2 Tim 4:4). Fortunately, amid
this academic madness there are voices that are exposing the nudity of much in
modern biblical studies.
As
it relates to the dating of New Testament books, the pioneering labor of John
A. T. Robinson in his scholarly work Redating the New Testament is
of great importance. He argues persuasively that all the books of the New
Testament were written before 70 A.D. Modernists have refused to seriously
investigate his scholarship, choosing instead to ignore it. However, Robinson’s
thesis provides a reasonable assumption of composition dates based on sound
scholarship not ideological illusion.
Recently
the scholarly work of the papyrologist, Carsten Peter Thiede (d. 2004), has
received widespread notice. He persuasively argues that Matthew’s Gospel is the
account of an eyewitness to the events of Jesus’ life. His pathfinding book
written with Matthew D’Ancona, Eyewitness to Jesus, published in 1996,
argues that the Magdalen Papyrus of St. Matthew’s Gospel was written around
A.D. 60.
Between
Robinson and Thiede other persuasive voices have also challenged the late
dating nonsense.
Gunther
Zuntz, the internationally recognized authority on Hellenistic Greek, assigned
the date 40 A.D. as the most likely date of Mark’s composition. Orchard and
Riley in their book, The Order of the Synoptics, argue that Matthew
was written in A.D. 43. Reicke’s “Synoptic Prophecies on the Destruction of
Jerusalem,” in Studies in New Testament and Early Christian Literature:
Essays in Honor of Allen P. Wikgren, 1972, give the years 50-64
A.D. for the composition of Matthew. Eta Linnemann’s two works: Historical
Criticism of the Bible: Methodology or Ideology? and Is There
a Synoptic Problem? Rethinking the Literary Dependence of the First Three
Gospels provide a piercing debunking of the myths of modern biblical
scholarship. What makes her arguments so penetrating is the fact that she
studied under Rudolf Bultmann and Ernst Fuchs.
Kenneth
L. Gentry, Jr. in his doctoral dissertation, Before Jerusalem Fell:
Dating the Book of Revelation, argues persuasively that John wrote the Book
of Revelation before 70 A.D. David Chilton in his excellent commentary on the
Book of Revelation, The Days of Vengeance, comes to the same
conclusion. Dating of the Book of Revelation is important since even most
revisionist scholars affirm that it was the last New Testament book written.
The
impressive work of Claude Tresmontant, a distinguished scholar at the Sorbonne,
confirms Robinson’s thesis. He bases his arguments on language and archaeology.
He points out, for example, that in John 5:2 that
“there is [estin in Greek, not “was”] at
Jerusalem, at the sheep gate, a pool named in Hebrew Bethzatha. It has five
porticos.” This makes no sense if Jerusalem was reduced to a heap of stones 25
or 30 years earlier. (See: Claude Tresmontant, The Hebrew Christ and The
Gospel of Matthew.) Father Jean Carmignac of Paris also assigns early
composition to the four Gospels. Carmignac, a philologist with exceptional
skills in biblical Hebrew, was a noted scholar of the Dead Sea scrolls and the
world’s most renowned expert on the Our Father. His The Birth of the
Synoptic Gospels is a lucid summary of his thesis.
As
a result of the persuasive erudition of these and other scholars a shift is
occurring away from the blind acceptance of late New Testament authorship. An
example of this shift is reflected in Fr. George H. Duggan’s fine article in
the May 1997 issue of Homiletic & Pastoral Review titled:
“The Dates of the Gospels.” By the grace of God may this trend continue!
February
7, 1998
+
+ + + + +
Damien Mackey comments:
Read also:
Fr
Jean Carmignac dates Gospels early
(4) Fr Jean
Carmignac dates Gospels early
Fr
Jean Carmignac dates Gospels early. Part Two: Institut Catholique de Paris
ignores Carmignac
(4) Fr Jean
Carmignac dates Gospels early. Part Two: Institut Catholique de Paris ignores
Carmignac

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