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Contradictions In The Gospels
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Bible Question Form to send your own question.
Q:
The Gospels seem to contradict one another
when they show Jesus' last words. I am attempting to show a person that
the King James Bible doesn't contradict itself, yet I didn't really have
a good explanation for this, other than each account gives some of
Jesus' last words and perhaps not literally the last words.
A: The different accounts of the gospels concerning the
words of Jesus is not limited to the King James Bible
but is certainly a characteristic of every Greek
manuscript and every translation of the New Testament in
every language and time. Perhaps someone could find one
example where this is not the case in some Bibles, but
that would not erase the multitude of other examples
throughout the gospels. This is not a problem exclusive
to the King James Bible and it is not a problem limited
to the last words of Jesus. The possible examples are
myriad.
My reason for the above paragraph is to help you understand that,
if slight differences in the wording of Jesus in the various gospels
negates the value of a Bible, then all Bibles are worthless. In
fact, this is one of the arguments of skeptics against the Bible.
However, there is no need for us to trash our Bibles for this reason.
Every time any historical record is given, the information given
is selected by the author according to the purpose of the writing.
Even in a courtroom setting where every word is recorded, there
are times that the recorder is told to leave some statement or
comment out of the record. Yet, we do not accuse the recorder of
dishonesty because of this act.
The biblical records of conversations are true and they are completely
what God wanted them to report. But they are not a complete record
of everything that was said at the time. This is not required or
desired (people think the Bible is long now). The Holy Spirit chose
the words to be recorded according to their importance to the purpose
of the text at that point. Each gospel is telling the story of
the life and work of Christ, but each is approaching His life from
different perspectives. If two of the gospels record the same event,
they are not required to tell all the same details of that event.
John stated concerning the works of Christ that "if they should
be written every one, I suppose that even the world itself could
not contain the books that should be written" (John
21:25). The Holy Spirit chose the most appropriate details
of each scene according to the purpose of that gospel at that point.
However, this does not mean that the record is in any way false.
At almost any event, the words spoken would have been many times
the words actually recorded in the text of the gospels. The longest
recorded sermon of Jesus is the Sermon on the Mount in Matthew
5-7. Yet, it would take only about
15-20 minutes to speak. But we see Jesus speaking to the multitudes
for entire days (this is why He fed the 5,000). What he said greatly
exceeded what was recorded of His sayings. What is recorded in
the gospels is carefully selected for its God-given purpose.
This can explain why comparisons of the sayings of Christ do not
always perfectly match. One gospel may have 25 words of His speech,
while another may have 39 words of the same speech. However, He
may have spoken 800 or more words at the time. The authors, by
the direction of the Spirit, have simply chosen the words that
best tell the story from their perspective. What may seem like
a contradiction is not. The authors have just chosen different
words from the same speech.
One example of these so-called contradictions is found in the sign
that Pilate put over the head of Jesus at His crucifixion. Consider
the following accounts:
Matthew
27:37 THIS IS JESUS THE KING
OF THE JEWS
Mark
15:26 THE KING OF THE JEWS
Luke
23:38 THIS IS THE KING OF
THE JEWS
John
19:19 JESUS OF NAZARETH THE
KING OF THE JEWS
Many have pointed to this as a certain contradiction in the Bible.
But I believe the sign probably said: "THIS IS JESUS OF NAZARETH
THE KING OF THE JEWS." Check it out. This includes all the
elements found in all four gospels. Every account is true, but
none had the complete wording. This is not error. If you were the
companion of a blind man and he asked you what you saw at any given
point, would you be dishonest if you did not tell him everything
you could see at that point in time? Of course not. In fact, so
many things come into the range of our eyes, that this would be
practically impossible. Before you could get to everything in the
range of your eyes, the scene would have changed.
Now consider if the blind man asked four different people at the
same time and in the same place to tell him what they saw. Would
they tell him the same things? No, of course not. They would all
see according to their own perspective. However, what if this blind
man were able to record each of the four accounts and study them
over a period of time? Would he understand more or less because
of four accounts of the same scene. I think we would agree that
his understanding would be increased. Not only that, he would know
more than the sum of adding the four accounts together, for by
comparing the records, he would learn things that were not specifically
stated by any of the reporters. This is the effect that the study
of the four gospels can have on our understanding of the life and
ministry of our Lord Jesus Christ.
I hope this helps,
Pastor David Reagan
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