Difference between revisions of "Mystery: Was John a Samaritan"

From Conservapedia
Jump to: navigation, search
(John's repeated references -- 10 times more than any other Gospel -- to "the Jews," meaning the Jewish people in and around Jerusalem, was how Samaritans would have referred to their rivals)
(and the Samaritans recognized only the Pentateuch in the Old Testament)
Line 4: Line 4:
 
*John's sympathy with Samaritans, including how Jesus first disclosed his divinity to a Samaritan woman at a well;
 
*John's sympathy with Samaritans, including how Jesus first disclosed his divinity to a Samaritan woman at a well;
 
*John's repeated references -- 10 times more than any other [[Gospel]] -- to "the Jews," meaning the Jewish people in and around [[Jerusalem]], was how Samaritans would have referred to their rivals;
 
*John's repeated references -- 10 times more than any other [[Gospel]] -- to "the Jews," meaning the Jewish people in and around [[Jerusalem]], was how Samaritans would have referred to their rivals;
*the [[Gospel of John]] contains only 27 quotations and allusions to books of the [[Old Testament]], far less than "Matthew (124), Mark (70), and Luke (109)."<ref>https://rsc.byu.edu/prophets-prophecies-old-testament/use-old-testament-new-testament-gospels</ref>
+
*the [[Gospel of John]] contains only 27 quotations and allusions to books of the [[Old Testament]], far less than "Matthew (124), Mark (70), and Luke (109),"<ref>https://rsc.byu.edu/prophets-prophecies-old-testament/use-old-testament-new-testament-gospels</ref> and the Samaritans recognized only the [[Pentateuch]] in the Old Testament;
 
*among the few references by the [[Gospel of John]] to the [[Old Testament]], many are [[Editorial Comments in the Gospel of John]] which may have been added later;
 
*among the few references by the [[Gospel of John]] to the [[Old Testament]], many are [[Editorial Comments in the Gospel of John]] which may have been added later;
 
*the universality of the [[Gospel of John]], as in {{bible ref|John|3|16}};
 
*the universality of the [[Gospel of John]], as in {{bible ref|John|3|16}};

Revision as of 08:22, December 23, 2023

See also: Mystery:Unsolved_Gospel_Mysteries

John the Apostle was most likely a Samaritan, in light of:

  • John's description of Jesus as possibly coming from the Samaritans, with none of the genealogy asserted elsewhere;
  • John's sympathy with Samaritans, including how Jesus first disclosed his divinity to a Samaritan woman at a well;
  • John's repeated references -- 10 times more than any other Gospel -- to "the Jews," meaning the Jewish people in and around Jerusalem, was how Samaritans would have referred to their rivals;
  • the Gospel of John contains only 27 quotations and allusions to books of the Old Testament, far less than "Matthew (124), Mark (70), and Luke (109),"[1] and the Samaritans recognized only the Pentateuch in the Old Testament;
  • among the few references by the Gospel of John to the Old Testament, many are Editorial Comments in the Gospel of John which may have been added later;
  • the universality of the Gospel of John, as in John 3:16 ;
  • his harsh language against Jewish leaders;
  • John had a rivalry with Peter, suggesting they may have had different ethnicities; and
  • the name "John" is Aramaic rather than Hebrew.[2]

References