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Center of Scripture
•Record Jesus’ life, teachings, and redeeming work.
•4 accounts that proclaim the “Good news”
•Have no error in their truth and are harmonious, but are not identical
•They invite us to accept Jesus in faith and apply his teachings to our
lives•They are NOT historical biographies,
although they contain historical events
Three Stages in Gospel Formation
•Life and teaching of Jesus, Himself
• Oral tradition, eyewitnesses to the Christ
event
• Written gospels, early texts
Why 4 Gospels?
•Each community had different and diverse experiences, concerns and challenges.
•Evangelists: Matthew, Mark, Luke, and John▫Guided by the Holy Spirit, each focuses on
a different aspect of Jesus’ life and teachings
▫Matthew, Mark and Luke are “synoptic” Similar in style and content Present different images of Jesus, meaningful
to the audience
Synoptic Gospels
Mark Q
LukeMatthewBoth Matthew and Luke used Mark’s Gospel as a guide. They also used a
source named “Q”. This is why they have a “similar view”
m l
Four Images of Jesus
•Matthew▫Teacher and prophet
•Mark▫Suffering servant of God
•Luke▫Compassionate Healer
•John▫Incarnate Word of God
Gospel of Matthew
•Written by “Matthew”, a Jewish Christian
•Written about 70-80 AD•Written for Jewish
Christians & Gentiles probably residing in Palestine.
•His theme is that Jesus is the Promised Messiah
• Jesus is the fulfillment of the Old Testament promises
Jesus as the New MosesMatthew presents Jesus as the New Moses
His sermons reveal Jesus as a great Teacher
Matthew strives to show that Jesus Christ fulfills all of God’s promises to the Chosen People and through them to all people. He connects the Old Testament with the New.
Gospel of Mark
• Written by John Mark, a friend of Peter
• Written about 65-70 AD• Written for gentile Christians
probably residing in Rome, during the persecution of Nero.
• His image of Jesus is the Suffering Messiah
• The theme of this gospel is “Salvation comes through the cross”
• Messianic secret or mystery• “Do not tell”
Titles for Jesus in Mark’s GospelChrist—Messiah
“anointed one”Son of Man (Ezekiel)
Suffering Servant (Isaiah)
Jesus was reluctant to reveal his identity
because his concept of the “anointed one” was radically different from that of his people and
disciples.
Even suffering Christians can celebrate the Good
News because Jesus brings eternal life.
God Became Man“The beginning of the gospel of Jesus Christ
(the Son of God)” (Mk 1:1)
Mark stresses Jesus’ humanity throughout his Gospel.
Mark teaches that Jesus is the Son of God who assumed human nature.
Gospel of Luke
• Written by Luke, a Greek convert, friend of Paul
• Written about 70-85AD• Admits to using “other writings”
• Written for Greek Christians, probably in Greece
• His image of Jesus is the Compassionate Savior
• Believing in Jesus goes beyond all barriers
• Inclusion of the “outcasts”• Poor, women, sinners, sick, etc.
Jesus’ Message in Luke
Jesus Offers a Message of Joy
Jesus Is for Everyone
• Heart of Luke includes parables that highlight God’s forgiveness
• “I tell you, there will be rejoicing among the angels of God over one sinner who repents”
• Jesus’ compassion is a divine sign of healing love
• Jesus sought out people who were considered “outcasts”
• Jesus is everyone’s compassionate Savior
• We should allow Jesus to live in us so we can love everyone in imitation of our Lord
Infancy Narratives•Annunciation: Jesus’ coming is
announced•Jesus was conceived by the Holy
Spirit, Mary is a Virgin•Joseph agrees to take care of Mary
and Jesus•Incarnation: God becomes flesh•Jesus is born in Bethlehem•Jesus is acknowledged by visitors•Jesus lives in Nazareth
Passion Narratives
•Last Supper▫Institution of the Eucharist
•Passion and death▫Sacrifice for our sin, Redemption
•Resurrection▫Victory over death
•Ascension▫Kingdom of God is present
Matthew Mark Luke
Infancy Narratives NoPassion narratives
Baptism
Temptation
Feeding the crowd
Beatitudes
Parables
Miracles/ signs
Parables• Short stories, about everyday life that communicate a
mystery about the ▫ Kingdom of God ( Kingdom of Heaven)▫ God’s justice and His forgiveness and mercy
• Comes from a Greek word meaning “comparison”▫ Compares two different things to illustrate a point
• Characteristics▫ Teach spiritual and ethical truths▫ Based on everyday life▫ Usually a response to a question▫ Faith plays a part in being able to understand the
message• Filled with surprises• Offer a challenge
Miracles
•Marvelous and unexpected events that manifest the presence and power of God
•Provide credibility to Jesus’ words & teachings by showing His power over sin & evil
•Reveal the Kingdom of God as a place where ALL are welcome
Miracles• Healing: Physical healings
▫ Jesus cures a leper▫ Jesus heals a paralytic
• Exorcisms: Casting out demons▫ Jesus heals a boy with a demon▫ Jesus heals a possessed man
• Nature: Control over the powers of nature▫ Jesus calms the storm▫ Jesus walks on water
• Restoration of life: Raising the dead▫ Jesus raises the daughter of Jairus▫ Jesus raises the widow’s son
John’s Gospel
•Written by the John
•Written about 90-100 AD)
•Written for all Christians,
was written in Ephesus
•The image of Jesus is God
Incarnate, the Life Giving
Savior
•Strengthens the faith of
the followers
Content• Prologue: Jesus is the Word
• Dialogues and personal testimony of Jesus are
“mystical” (shows Jesus contact with God the
Father)- Kingdom is present in Jesus
• 7 miracles/ signs that show Jesus’ divinity
• “Bread of Life” discourse
• “I am” statements
• Last Supper discourse
• Passion narrative