and one of the three synoptic gospels
11Canon of the New Testament — • The idea of a complete and clear cut canon of the New Testament existing from the beginning, that is from Apostolic times, has no foundation in history Catholic Encyclopedia. Kevin Knight. 2006. Canon of the New Testament …
12The Passion of Christ (Gospel Accounts) — The Passion of Christ (Gospel Accounts) † Catholic Encyclopedia ► The Passion of Christ in the Four Gospels See also DEVOTION TO THE PASSION OF CHRIST. We have in the Gospels four separate accounts of the Passion of Our Lord, each …
13Gospels — The central fact of Christian preaching was the intelligence that the Saviour had come into the world (Matt. 4:23; Rom. 10:15); and the first Christian preachers who called their account of the person and mission of Christ by the term… …
14The Shepherd of Hermas — (sometimes just called The Shepherd ) is a Christian work of the second century, considered a valuable book by many Christians, and occasionally considered canonical scripture by some of the early Church fathers. The Shepherd had great authority… …
15SYNOPTIC PROBLEM — one of the problems of BIBLICAL CRITICISM has been to devise an explanation for the fact that there is some identical and a great amount of similar material contained in the first three Gospels of the NEW TESTAMENT as well as materials… …
16The Bible and history — Part of a series on The Bible …
17synoptic — /səˈnɒptɪk / (say suh noptik) adjective 1. relating to or constituting a synopsis; affording or taking a general view of the whole or of the principal parts of a subject. 2. (often upper case) taking a common view (applied to the first three… …
18Gospel of the Hebrews — Part of a series on Jewish Christianity …
19Christianity in the 1st century — Christians believe that Jesus is the mediator of the New Covenant.[1] Depicted by 19th century Danish painter Carl Heinrich Bloch is his Sermon on the Mount (c. 30) in which he Expounds on the Law. Some scholars consider this to be …
20Crucifixion darkness and eclipse — A solar eclipse from August 2008. It takes about an hour for the moon to cover the sun, with total coverage lasting a few minutes.[1] …