What can we actually know about the Jesus of history? Is is possible to get beyond our own biases and find out who he actually was?
All in Bible
What can we actually know about the Jesus of history? Is is possible to get beyond our own biases and find out who he actually was?
Why is resurrection important, and what makes the Christian version of resurrection significant?
The final episode in our series on NT origins covers how we get from the Greek New Testament to the English New Testament.
How did the New Testament make it from ancient times to today? What about all those copies?
How did those particular books and letters get into the New Testament? Why them and not others?
How did the Gospels get created? In this episode, we're going to look at the "who?" "what?" "when?" "how?" and "why?" to see if we can't get a better picture of what was going on back then.
Exactly what are the epistles that we find in the NT, and what was their role in the growth of the early church?
The leaders of the early church put together official statements of their theology, which were passed on orally. We still have some of these today. What are they?
There were no audio or video recorders in the ancient world, and it was awhile before anyone wrote down stuff about Jesus. So, how did information about what he said and did survive?
As we approach the 500th anniversary of the Protestant Reformation, we need to ask "Was it necessary? "Did it succeed?" and "What does it mean for us today?"