Who Chose the Gospels?: Probing the Great Gospel Conspiracy (Hardcover)
Publisher: Oxford University Press Author: Hill, C. E. ISBN-10: 0199551235 | ISBN-13: 9780199551231 Binding: Hardcover
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Publisher's Description: It is now widely said that the four Gospels rose to prominence only after a long battle within early Christianity, a battle finally won in the fourth century, after the establishment of the Church by Constantine the Great. In Who Chose the Gospels? Charles E. Hill demolishes this claim, providing a more historically accurate, alternative account of how the Church came to acknowledge four, and only four, narratives of the life of Jesus. Hill offers not only an informed critique of recent, overtly "political" readings of early Christian history, but also a more nuanced analysis of how and why, out of all the Gospels written in the early centuries of the Church, just these four "made it" into the Bible. In fact, the author shows that despite the profusion of Gospels, there was wide agreement among church leaders, in diverse regions of the empire, at least from the second century onward, as to the authority of Matthew, Mark, Luke, and John. Thus it was not a conspiracy but common consensus that determined the books of the New Testament.
295 Pages
Published October 2010
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"For those willing to examine the documentary evidence, there is no better guide than this book by Charles E. Hill. Hill is meticulous, even-handed, careful to distinguish between historical datum and speculation-and a good writer to boot. Not many books that are so informed are such a pleasure to read." - D. A. Carson
"A lively, engaging, and authoritative account of the origins and early history of the fourfold gospel." - Andrew Gregory, University of Oxford
"How many gospels were really being used in the early church? In this book Hill guides the non-expert through what we know of the early manuscript tradition, challenging along the way what many consider to be the consensus view. With careful scholarship and a bit of wit, Hill defends the view that the four canonical gospels were far and away the most used and circulated in the first few centuries. For those that are already convinced that the four canonical gospels are the standard, this book will provide supporting evidence. For those that may be struggling with what to make of the oft-asserted radical diversity of the early church, this book should provide a convincing argument that the fourfold gospel articulated by Irenaeus was not a 2nd century invention, but was what the church had always known."
- Brandon Crowe, Assistant Professor of New Testament, Westminster Theological Seminary
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