Christian Dude
Scholar
- Joined
- Aug 11, 2005
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- 118
Ryokan said:What were Jesus' last words?
Who was present when his tomb was found open?
Both of these seemingly contradictions you bring up are basically the same and a matter of not understanding who each gospel was written for, and thinking through the normal way different people might describe the same thing. Two of the gospels are direct eye witness accounts, Matthew and John. Mark’s could be an eye witness account or an account put together from the events told to him by other Apostles. Luke’s is definitely an account that is from the events being told to him by Apostles. All four gospels are inspired by God, but it is important to remember, God does not take over a persons’ body and they supernaturally write down words while they are in a trance. God inspires the person and their intellect and personalities come through while writing. Also, with God’s inspiration and guidance, they don’t make any mistakes. It is the same for all books of the Bible, Old and New Testament.
Say that you and I witnessed something and someone asked us to tell our account of what happened. I might describe the exact same thing with a difference in what was important. I might say that I saw three men go into a building. You might say that you saw two men go in, and then one man go in a little later. Both are true, but to me the important thing was that three men went in, I didn’t think it was that important that one went in a little later. But you, on the other hand, were more concerned with a deeper level of detail. I might also recount a conversation different that you by giving an account of what was said that differs from yours. I will account for what I thought was important and I may have been distracted and did not hear something said that you did. So, the person interviewing us does not dismiss anything ether one of us said if we are reputable people, he just puts it all together to get the complete picture. That is what is going on in the differences in the accounts in the four gospels.
I will take on the simplest one first, what Jesus’ last words on the cross were. Matthew and Mark do not tell what Jesus said just before he died. Luke and John tell us what Jesus said. Each is correct, Jesus didn’t say only one thing or the other, he said both. They are complimentary to each other. Put together they give us a more complete picture of what happened. Luke was a physician, he was writing to the Greek, the philosophers and thinking people so to speak. He presented Jesus as the perfect man. When he recorded the events as described to him, he put down what was important to presenting Jesus to the Greek. Since he was showing that Jesus was perfect, it was important to him to show his reader that the perfect man died gracefully.
John was writing to believers and presenting Jesus as God incarnate that came to redeem his beloved children. What was important to him was to show that the work of redemption was completed. Jesus said both things and we have the more complete picture because of the different accounts.
It is the same for the events at the empty tomb. So when you work it out an put the accounts from the four gospels together in the correct order, you find that the first people that are recorded to see the empty tomb are Mary Magdalene, the other Mary and Salome. Other women were following along behind bringing spices to anoint the body. The first three find the tomb empty, Mary M. immediately leaves to tell the disciples (Luke 23:55-24:9; John 20:1,2). The other Mary goes closer to the tomb and sees the angel (Matthew 28:2) She leaves to meet the other women who are coming along behind. While that has been going on, Mary M. has talked with Peter and John and the two men arrive at the empty tomb, inspect it and leave (John 20:3-10). Mary M. has made it back and sees the two angels and then Jesus (John 20:11-18). Then she leaves to tell the disciples what has happened as Jesus told her to do. And while all that was going on, the other Mary has caught up with the other women and they all show up together at the empty tomb and see two angels (Luke 24:4,5; Mark 16:5). They also receive an angelic message. They leave to go to the disciples and run into Jesus as well (Matthew 28:8-10).
They are accounts of the same morning given by four different men that are all true and provide the complete picture, almost; I wonder what Salome did that morning, not enough is said about her. Maybe she fainted and was passed out on the road side while all the commotion was going on. Or, maybe she just sat there with a huge smile on her face. As you can see, things like that are not truly important to what is really being communicated to us in these events in scripture. What is important is that Jesus is exactly who he said he is, and has risen, and has bridged the gap between God and man by his death and resurrection all for the forgiveness of our sins.
- Dude