Not really because the gospel account ended with the death and resurrection of Jesus. Or if your a skeptic and want to believe it ended with the death of Jesus. The deaths of the apostles came after the time period he was writing about. If I wrote a book about the life of Harry Truman in 1980. It would not be strange not to mention the death of John Kennedy.
That's interesting; so you no longer believe that the fact that the destruction of the Temple is not mentioned helps to date when the gospels were written?
No I still believe it. There may be other reasons why the gospel writers didn't report the martyrdom of the apostles.
1) they occurred after the gospel was written
http://poptop.hypermart.net/howdied.html
notice how the earliest martyrdom of James 44 a.d. was in fact recorded in the Book of Acts.
2) the writer of the gospel might not have heard about the martyrdom at the time of his writings since according to oral tradition -- which as I've shown (according to at least one rabbi) is more important than a written source during that time -- several of the apostles died in places like India, Ethiopia, and Britainia. On the other hand, it is much more likely the gospel writer would have heard about the destruction of the Temple in Jerusalem.
3) He didn't want to scare non-believers before they had a chance to deeply learn the teachings and become strong in their faith.
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