Matthew wrote for Jews, Mark for Romans, Luke for Greeks, John for advanced Christians but all are suited for Christians in every age and nation. The immense labor of late years in bringing out the comparative characteristics of the Gospels and in harmonizing their discrepancies has not been in vain, and has left a stronger conviction of their independent worth and mutual completeness. At the same time the striking combination of resemblances and differences stimulates close observation and minute comparison, and thus impresses the events of the life of Christ more vividly and deeply upon the mind and heart of the reader than a single narrative could do. The apparent contradictions of these narratives, when closely examined, sufficiently solve themselves, in all essential points, and serve only to attest the honesty, impartiality, and credibility of the authors. The symbolical poesy of the church compares them with the four rivers of Paradise, and with the four cherubic representatives of the creation, assigning the man to Matthew, the lion to Mark, the ox to Luke, and the eagle to John. The several evangelists present the infinite fulness of the life and person of Jesus in different aspects and different relations to mankind and they complete one another. The Gospel of Mark, the confidant of Peter, is a faithful copy of the gospel preached and otherwise communicated by this apostle with the use, perhaps, of Hebrew records which Peter may have made from time to time under the fresh impression of the events themselves.īut with all their similarity in matter and style, each of the Gospels, above all the fourth, has its peculiarities, answering to the personal character of its author, his special design, and the circumstances of his readers. Luke used, according to his own statement, besides the oral tradition, written documents on certain parts of the life of Jesus, which doubtless appeared early among the first disciples. Hence the striking agreement of the first three, or synoptical Gospels, which, in matter and form, are only variations of the same theme. The gospel story, being constantly repeated in public preaching and in private circles, assumed a fixed, stereotyped form the more readily, on account of the reverence of the first disciples for every word of their divine Master. They did not create the divine original, but they faithfully preserved and reproduced it. It would take more than a Jesus to invent a Jesus. Plain fishermen of Galilee could not have drawn such a portrait of Jesus if he had not sat for it. The Gospels have their common source in the personal intercourse of two of the writers with Christ, and in the oral tradition of the apostles and other eye-witnesses. The common practical aim of the Evangelists is to lead the reader to a saving faith in Jesus of Nazareth as the promised Messiah and Redeemer of the world. Hence Mark is often called the Gospel of Peter, and Luke the Gospel of Paul. The first and fourth Gospels were composed by apostles and eye-witnesses, Matthew and John the second and third, under the influence of Peter and Paul, and by their disciples Mark and Luke, so as to be indirectly likewise of apostolic origin and canonical authority. The authors, in noble modesty and self-forgetfulness, suppress their personal views and feelings, retire in worshipful silence before their great subject, and strive to set it forth in all its own unaided power. Their artless and naïve simplicity resembles the earliest historic records in the Old Testament, and has its peculiar and abiding charm for all classes of people and all degrees of culture. The style is natural, unadorned, straightforward, and objective. They are not photographs which give only the momentary image in a single attitude, but living pictures from repeated sittings, and reproduce the varied expressions and aspects of Christ's person. They are not full biographies, but only memoirs or a selection of characteristic features of Christ's life and work as they struck each Evangelist and best suited his purpose and his class of readers. The four canonical Gospels are only variations of the same theme, a fourfold representation of one and the same gospel, animated by the same spirit. The New Testament opens with the gospel, that is with the authentic record of the history of all histories, the glad tidings of salvation through the life, death, and resurrection of Jesus Christ. History of the Christian Church, Volume I - Philip Schaff General Character and Aim of the Gospels.Ĭhristianity is a cheerful religion and brings joy and peace from heaven to earth.
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