Not really. Was the gospel signed or does it state John wrote this gospel?
If not, how is it determined to have been written by John?

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Jhn 21:2 There were together Simon Peter, and Thomas called Didymus, and Nathanael of Cana in Galilee, and the [sons] of Zebedee, and two other of his disciples.
If John wrote the fourth gospel, why would he have included "and two other of his disciples"?otseng wrote: John 21:2 leaves a clue as to who wrote the fourth gospel.[....] If TDWJL was the author, the he would be one of the two other disciples. He recognized the apostles by name and the non-apostles anonymously.
I wouldn't build an argument on the above but since you seem to be trying to imply that John 21 verse 2 is evidence that the writer could not possibly have been John son of Zebedee (and was probably Lazarus) , I have taken the time to point out the weakness of such a position. Your "clue" is certainly one that implies that the writer of the gospel, and a witness to this resurrection account, were one and the same person but it is a total non-clue as to who that writer was, bar that he may have been either one of the five Apostles named or another disciple that knew how to fish.On the contrary, Lazarus lived at least two days journey away to the south in Judea, an area that the disciples saw as particularly hazardous since Jesus execution. For Lazarous to have been accompany Peter on his impromptu fishing trip he would have had to leave his home (and possible his two unprotected sisters) and move up north. This is of course possible, Jesus had told the Apostles to go north where he would meet them (although he did not order all of his Judean disciples to do this so), all things being equal it is less likely that one of the fishermen in this account was Lazarus (never mentioned as being able to fish) than John (specifically named as a professional fisherman).
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JOHN 18:16
"Peter was standing outside at the door.* So the other disciple, who was known to the high priest, went out and spoke to the doorkeeper and brought Peter in" -NWT
Indeed, the doorgirl's grilling of Peter (whom the disciple had earlier guaranteed) indicates he had not used his identity as a disciple at all, much less as the disciple who was also a hunted man (Lazarus) to gain access to the palace courtyard. In short "the unnamed disciple" almost certainly did not go up to the doorkeeper and say "Hey man, it's me Lazarus, Lazarus!... you know the guy your boss is hunting for to kill, can you let me in? Your boss knows me ! ... oh and I have a friend with me can you let him in too?!" If the unnamed disciple was indeed Lazarus, to suggest he used the High Priests death warrant on Him to gain access to the High Priests courtyard is particularly ludicrous.
It would be like Osama Bin Laden, identifying himself as such so he could gain access to the location where authorities were investigating the terrorist attacks of 9-11.
How do you know there were 7 in the boat outside of John 21:2?JehovahsWitness wrote:There were 7 in the boat and evidently the writer wants the readers to know there were seven.
Then this would be the only time the author would have referenced himself by name, unless it was either James or John. As for it being John, it is highly unlikely based on reasons I've already listed.Possibly or he could have been one of the other named five in the list.
I do not present any single evidence as conclusive. All are cumulative evidence that simply fits together logically.The point is there nothing absolutely nothing that bars the writer from being one of the named Aposltes rather than one of the unnamed disciples present, and there is certainly nothing that imposes he be Lazarus of Bethany rather than John son of Zebedee.
I agree if it was not Lazarus, then we don't know. However, the Bible states the high priest knew about Lazarus.JehovahsWitness wrote: QUESTION How did the High Priest come to know Peter's companion as per John 18:16 ?
♦ANSWER The short answer is we don't know. The gospels do not provide any details as to how Peter's companion knew such a highly placed dignitary.
Possibly, but the reason behind the high priest seeking killing Lazarus was because Jesus raised him from the dead. If they already had Jesus in custody, they have less reason to kill Lazarus.If he had revealed himself as Lazarus, known to the High Priest because he was the individual that one was looking to kill, his using this information to gain access to the Palaces woild have been tantemount to signing his own death warrant.
Actually, the damsel knew TDWJL was a disciple of Jesus. When she asked Peter, she said, "Art not thou also one of this man's disciples?" The "also" must refer to TDWJL. Otherwise, why would she say "also"?Indeed, the doorgirl's grilling of Peter (whom the disciple had earlier guaranteed) indicates he had not used his identity as a disciple at all
What scriptural evidence do you have to support this?Whether "the unnamed disciple" of John 18:16 was John, Lazarus or another disciple, he gained access to palace grounds by means of something other than his discipleship of Jesus.
It's an interesting topic. I'm working on a response to your summary post. I will have it up shortly.otseng wrote: BTW, if you asked me a month ago who wrote the gospel of John, I would've thought that was a dumb question and immediately responded "John." But, after reading through thedisciplewhomjesusloved.com and looking at the evidence, I'm now almost entirely convinced it is Lazarus. I want to see how well this theory can go up against debate, so I welcome any challenges to this theory.
I think it’s important to note that the reasons you give do not go so far as to rule out John as the author.otseng wrote: To recap, here are the reasons John could not be TDWJL:
Yes but that says nothing about the Gospel of John. None of the Gospel authors explicitly self identify in the text itself so it’s not at all surprising the author of John likewise does not directly name himself.- John identifies himself in Revelation
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This is a particularly weak argument. Ἱε�οσόλυμα used in the Gospel of John and Ἰε�ουσαλήμ used in Revelations are virtually the same word taken from the same Hebrew origin word.- There are two ways to spell Jerusalem. One is used in Revelation and another different one is used in the fourth gospel.
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You asked, “If John was one of the three chosen ones to participate at these major events, why did he not mention them if he wrote the fourth gospel?�- The fourth gospel does not mention events where only Peter, James, and John were present with Jesus (raising of Jairus' daughter from the dead, Jesus' transfiguration, and the prayer at Gethsemane), but all synoptic gospels record them
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You asked, “Luke mentions Peter visiting the empty tomb, but does not mention John. If the disciple Jesus loved was John, shouldn't he have been mentioned too in Luke?�- John not mentioned in Luke of visiting the tomb of Jesus
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You are arguing from an inconsistency with Mark 16:14 here, no? No need to even address this one if you are. Mark 16:14 probably wasn’t part of the original ending of Mark. The original probably ended at 16:8.- Fourth gospel said beloved disciple believed, but Mark says the 11 disciples did not believe
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But this works against your argument. John the disciple is never mentioned by name in the fourth Gospel. John the Baptist is sometimes referred to merely as John. Who else could do that without confusing his audience unless it were none other than John himself behind the Gospel?- Fourth gospel calls John the Baptist only by John and does not qualify it
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But John does mention the last supper. To point out that John doesn’t mention the preparations seems a terribly weak argument from silence here.- Events that John is recorded as participating at is not mentioned in the fourth gospel (preparation of the last supper)
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You asked, “If the disciple was John, how did the high priest know about John?�- John could not have been known to the high priest
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Yes but John does say there was another unnamed disciple along with Peter. It’s more likely it was John with Peter when we see that John and Peter are often found together (Acts 3:1ff, 4:19, 8:14; Gal 2:9). Where do we ever see Lazarus and Peter together?- Only Peter is recorded in the synoptic gospels as following Jesus when he was arrested
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Acts 4:13 is Luke recording what the Jewish leaders perceived based upon a speech. This isn’t Luke stating as a fact John and Peter were "unlearned and ignorant."- John was considered "unlearned and ignorant" and not likely to have written the fourth gospel.
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Yes but that seems odd if Lazarus wrote the fourth Gospel. Wouldn’t we expect Lazarus to mention this event? Only John, himself, could omit this without any accusation of insulting John.- Fourth gospel never mentions the calling of John as an apostle (whereas all the synoptic gospels do)
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Not sure why that’s significant, let alone would rule out John.- Fourth gospel never lists the names of the apostles
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Well, it’s not as though John claimed to be worthy of sitting at the hand of Jesus. John merely makes the request. An understandable request coming from a young man eager to make a name for himself. Further, I’m working under the assumption the author John was much older, wiser, and as a result more mature than the John described in the New Testament.- John was not humble
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Is this an accidental repeat from above?- In Luke, John is not mentioned to have visited the tomb
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Agreed. But how does that rule out John? This seems consistent with the idea that John wanted to avoid directly naming himself.- John 21:2 mentions other disciples
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This assumes that when John says, “And from that hour the disciple took her unto his own home� (John 19:27) that the word home is a literal house where the beloved disciple took Mary. In the Greek text, however, the word for “home� which is οἰκι�α or οἶκος does not appear. John 19:27 ends with ̓�διος (one’s own). The disciple took Jesus’ mother as his own, into his own family. There’s no literal house here.- John lived several days journey from Jerusalem
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No, I do not claim that it is impossible for John to be the author of the fourth gospel. But, in my mind, it makes much more sense if Lazarus was the author.Goose wrote: I think it’s important to note that the reasons you give do not go so far as to rule out John as the author.
Yes, I agree this argument is weak regarding the fourth gospel. None of the gospels state who the author is, so the fourth gospel would be no different. However, the epistles do have authors directly naming themselves.In sum, given the above considerations we have reasons to think John might not directly name himself in his Gospel yet directly name himself in his Revelation.
Possibly. However, Ἰε�ουσαλήμ is not used to reference a New Jerusalem outside of Revelation, so there would be no particular reason readers of Revelation should identify Ἰε�ουσαλήμ with the New Jerusalem. John could've used either word and the meaning would be the same to readers.When John uses Ἱε�οσόλυμα in his Gospel he is referring to the earthly Jerusalem, the historical Jerusalem, an actual place. In the three occasions Ἰε�ουσαλήμ is used in Revelations it is referring to the new Jerusalem, a Jerusalem come down from heaven.
Of course, these writings have different purposes. The gospels relate the story of Jesus and the disciples. The epistles were written to encourage and address issues with fellow believers.But I could apply the same logic to 1 Peter and ask the same question. If Peter was one of the three chosen ones to participate at these major events, why did he not mention them if he wrote his first letter?
I agree that any single argument from silence does not prove anything. However, taken as a whole, the pieces fit together better with Lazarus as the author.These are interesting questions but as is the case with most arguments from silence they don’t go very far proving anything.
One reason could be that John felt awkward in his later years when reflecting back on being one of only three chosen.
The other gospels are regarded to have been written prior to the fourth gospel. So, these other gospels have already revealed this "contentious" issue.Perhaps there were some rumblings of jealously among the disciples because of this and John, having matured, didn’t want to reopen contentious issues by mentioning these events directly.
I agree these themes are common, but these themes are found throughout the gospels and in the ministry of Jesus. So, saying John wrote about these themes does not show he is indirectly referencing these specific events.So John does cover the underlying themes you mention thereby conveying the same message without having to directly mention events he was singled out with only two others to be present.
A door that is so wide open to include any possible event would not address why the fourth gospel does not mention these three specific events.Finally, I think John does leave the door open for other events that he could have mentioned such as the ones you have listed.
Not sure what you mean. In the fourth gospel, only two men were at the tomb - Peter and TDWJL. Why would any other apostle need to be mentioned?Why would John necessarily be mentioned here by Luke when Luke doesn't mention any other disciples aside from Peter at this point?
In Acts, John is quite often mentioned alongside Peter.Luke devotes a large portion of the book of Acts to Peter so it’s not all surprising that Peter features prominently in Luke’s Gospel at this juncture in the narrative.
The basic question is why is Lazarus not mentioned in the synoptic gospels, regardless of who wrote the fourth gospel. If the fourth gospel was written by John, then why would only he write about Lazarus? And why would the other gospels omit this seemingly important event of Lazarus being raised from the dead?You argued, “Why wasn't Lazarus mentioned? I think the same reason he was not mentioned at all in any of the synoptic gospels - he was a youth and considered to be inconsequential.�
But that theory doesn’t hold. Luke mentions the impetuous youth Mark in the book of Acts. No reason for Luke not to mention Lazarus, the disciple whom Jesus loved. The disciple who eventually wrote a Gospel under your theory.
Yes, I'm assuming the Bible that is commonly published is authoritative and not assuming we should reject certain passages. I agree several parts can be considered questionable if they are authentic, but for sake of argument I'm assuming the entire Bible can be used as evidence.You are arguing from an inconsistency with Mark 16:14 here, no? No need to even address this one if you are. Mark 16:14 probably wasn’t part of the original ending of Mark. The original probably ended at 16:8.
Actually, I see it as the opposite. During the life of John the apostle, I'm sure he talked about John the Baptist with other people. Since their names are the same, I doubt John would've just referred to him as John since it would be confusing. If he talked with people and referred to him as John the Baptist, and not just John, then more likely it would also carry over to his writings.But this works against your argument. John the disciple is never mentioned by name in the fourth Gospel. John the Baptist is sometimes referred to merely as John. Who else could do that without confusing his audience unless it were none other than John himself behind the Gospel?- Fourth gospel calls John the Baptist only by John and does not qualify it
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I don't think it's a terribly weak argument, especially considering he devotes 5 chapters to describe that evening. He has gone into such detail of that evening, yet is completely silent on events that we know John was there from the other gospels.To point out that John doesn’t mention the preparations seems a terribly weak argument from silence here.
I'm not so sure the religious leaders had taken note of them as followers of Jesus. They had to ask Peter and John the following:The high priest knew about John, the same way the anonymous servant girl at the door knew about Peter. They were followers of Jesus.
My hypothesis is that he was considered inconsequential by the gospel writers, not by everybody. Obviously he was not considered inconsequential by the religious leaders since they sought to kill him.And yet you’ve also argued Lazarus was too inconsequential to even be mentioned. Now you argue he was important enough that he was known to the High Priest.
Even before this, he did not seem to care about the possibility of his death.There are further problems. We have Lazarus, who the Jews were earlier trying to kill, simply walking in and out of the presence of the high priest’s courtyard without a care in the world it seems.
If the fourth gospel was written by Lazarus, we also see Lazarus and Peter together in:Goose wrote: Where do we ever see Lazarus and Peter together?
Right, it's what the religious leaders perceived.Acts 4:13 is Luke recording what the Jewish leaders perceived based upon a speech. This isn’t Luke stating as a fact John and Peter were "unlearned and ignorant."
Never said I dismissed any evidence of the church fathers. Please go ahead and present the evidence from the church fathers that the fourth gospel was written by the apostle John.So I don’t see how you can admit as evidence the secret Gospel of Mark yet virtually dismiss all the unanimous evidence of the church fathers.
No, I'm not comparing their level of wealth. I'm simply saying Lazarus' family had some money by considering all the evidence that points towards them being financially secure.It’s only to say this can’t be used to infer they had the same level of wealth as Joseph of Arimathea which is what you seem to imply when you say Lazarus was buried in a cave with a stone “similar to Jesus.�
Lazarus does not mention how all the apostles were called, so leaving out John would not be "insulting".Yes but that seems odd if Lazarus wrote the fourth Gospel. Wouldn’t we expect Lazarus to mention this event? Only John, himself, could omit this without any accusation of insulting John.
He was one of the chosen twelve and intimate with the other apostles. To write an account of Jesus and his ministry and fail to mention the twelve seems to me to be strange. This must certainly have been insulting to the other unnamed apostles if they knew John wrote it.Not sure why that’s significant, let alone would rule out John.- Fourth gospel never lists the names of the apostles
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Well, the other apostles were not as understanding and gracious.Well, it’s not as though John claimed to be worthy of sitting at the hand of Jesus. John merely makes the request. An understandable request coming from a young man eager to make a name for himself.
Elevating himself as "the disciple whom Jesus loved" does not seem consistent with what you are suggesting.Further, I’m working under the assumption the author John was much older, wiser, and as a result more mature than the John described in the New Testament.
I had made another post about it and I was just summarizing all my posts. But yes, that was already discussed before.Is this an accidental repeat from above?- In Luke, John is not mentioned to have visited the tomb
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The point I was making was why mention the "two other of his disciples" if it was John? These people would be a superfluous detail if John was the author. If the author was Lazarus, then he was one of these two other disciples. Granted, this evidence is not strong, but it's another detail that makes reading the fourth gospel make more sense if Lazarus was the author.Agreed. But how does that rule out John? This seems consistent with the idea that John wanted to avoid directly naming himself.- John 21:2 mentions other disciples
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True. But, it's strongly implied. Many translations translate it with home and only one translates it as household.In the Greek text, however, the word for “home� which is οἰκι�α or οἶκος does not appear. John 19:27 ends with ̓�διος (one’s own). The disciple took Jesus’ mother as his own, into his own family. There’s no literal house here.
I have some more thoughts about it, but it's still a bit nebulous.As an additional note. I don’t feel you’ve adequately addressed the argument made by JehovahsWitness regarding the contradiction in changing from using the name Lazarus to "the disciple whom Jesus loved.�
If John was the author, why would he only use this phrase in the last half of the book?Frankly, in my view, that argument alone is enough to sink the entire theory that Lazarus wrote the Gospel of John with the intention of remaining anonymous.
Please present the evidence from the church fathers on why they attribute the author to John so we can review it in this thread.Further crippling the theory is the fact that it requires one to completely disregard the historical evidence from the church fathers who attribute the Gospel of John to John.
But Ἰε�ουσαλήμ is used by earlier Gospel writers in reference to the earthly historical Jerusalem. In fact all three synoptic writers use both Ἱε�οσόλυμα and Ἰε�ουσαλήμ to reference the earthly Jerusalem. Mark uses both forms in the same chapter (11). None of the Gospel writers reference a new Jerusalem come down from heaven however. That image only shows up in Revelations. It’s only the Gospel of John which is careful to use only Ἱε�οσόλυμα in his Gospel never using Ἰε�ουσαλήμ there to reference an earthly Jerusalem. Now this would be a compelling argument against John authoring both the fourth Gospel and Revelations if the context of Jerusalem in Revelations was also an earthly one. In that case, we’d have the author of the Gospel only using Ἱε�οσόλυμα to reference the earthly Jerusalem and the author of Revelations only using the different form Ἰε�ουσαλήμ to reference the same earthly Jerusalem. This would be very difficult to explain under the hypothesis that the same author wrote both works. But because the Jerusalem found in Revelations is a new Jerusalem come down from heaven this problem is avoided. The argument then can no longer be used to support the idea that Revelations and the fourth Gospel had different authors. In fact, we see there may be a reason to think there is a single author for both works as the Gospel author is the only author careful to use only Ἱε�οσόλυμα to reference and earthly Jerusalem.otseng wrote:Possibly. However, Ἰε�ουσαλήμ is not used to reference a New Jerusalem outside of Revelation, so there would be no particular reason readers of Revelation should identify Ἰε�ουσαλήμ with the New Jerusalem. John could've used either word and the meaning would be the same to readers.Goose wrote:When John uses Ἱε�οσόλυμα in his Gospel he is referring to the earthly Jerusalem, the historical Jerusalem, an actual place. In the three occasions Ἰε�ουσαλήμ is used in Revelations it is referring to the new Jerusalem, a Jerusalem come down from heaven.
Exactly. Different purposes even among the Gospels themselves. John states his purpose explicitly...Of course, these writings have different purposes. The gospels relate the story of Jesus and the disciples. The epistles were written to encourage and address issues with fellow believers.But I could apply the same logic to 1 Peter and ask the same question. If Peter was one of the three chosen ones to participate at these major events, why did he not mention them if he wrote his first letter?
That last bit is a matter of opinion. And it’s an opinion which seems to be derived from looking at an incomplete set of pieces to the puzzle. I think if we take a much broader view and look at the entire body of evidence for authorship we begin to see the Lazarus theory is much more problematic, if not outright falsified by the external evidence, than the traditional John theory.I agree that any single argument from silence does not prove anything. However, taken as a whole, the pieces fit together better with Lazarus as the author.
It seems strange if one assumes the title "the disciple whom Jesus loved" was intended to elevate by implying some extra special relationship with Jesus. As though Jesus loved him more than the other disciples. Or that Jesus loved only him. But I think that’s a false assumption. If Jesus loved all his disciples, then he loved the disciple who wrote the fourth Gospel. If Jesus loved the disciple who wrote the fourth Gospel then he was the "the disciple whom Jesus loved." So rather than being a claim of elevation above the other disciples it can also be seen as a claim to be no different than any other disciple since they all could equally claim to be loved by Jesus and thus also claim to be “the disciple whom Jesus loved.� Indeed, anyone of us, who is a disciple, could claim to be “the disciple whom Jesus loves� and it would be just as true as John’s statement. We are all one in Christ and equally loved by Him.It would seem strange for him to feel awkward about this and also identify himself as "the disciple whom Jesus loved", which would elevate him above all the other apostles.
Yes but it doesn’t follow that because the earlier Gospel writers revealed this contentious issue that John would then feel comfortable directly mentioning and reopening the issue. In fact if we assume that John matured and was tempered by the Holy Spirit in his later years we can see where he might deliberately avoid bringing up these issues.The other gospels are regarded to have been written prior to the fourth gospel. So, these other gospels have already revealed this "contentious" issue.
But that presumes John must convey the events in the same manner as the synoptic writers in order to convey the same underlying message. That’s not necessarily the case. John could take a thematic approach to his Gospel revealing the underlying message of event A, B, and C through other means such as making a theological declaration or reporting other instances which had the same underlying message.I agree these themes are common, but these themes are found throughout the gospels and in the ministry of Jesus. So, saying John wrote about these themes does not show he is indirectly referencing these specific events.
But that has been addressed in other arguments. The point is that John leaves open the door that there are many more things he could have mentioned. In other words, he is implying that he hasn’t covered it all. So, the events you point to that John doesn’t mention are potentially accounted for by the fact John acknowledges his Gospel is not the complete story.A door that is so wide open to include any possible event would not address why the fourth gospel does not mention these three specific events.
Wait. What? You were asking about Luke’s Gospel not mentioning John. You said nothing about John’s Gospel here.Not sure what you mean. In the fourth gospel, only two men were at the tomb - Peter and TDWJL. Why would any other apostle need to be mentioned?
Correct. Peter is also mentioned alongside John in Luke. Peter is also mentioned by himself in both Luke’s Gospel and Acts. Sometimes only Peter is mentioned as observing an event even though the context necessarily demands John is also present to witness the same event (e.g. Peter’s observation of the crowd Acts 3:12). The point was Peter is prominent with Luke so there’s no surprise that Luke might only mention Peter at a critical point in the narrative such as discovering the empty tomb.In Acts, John is quite often mentioned alongside Peter.
Luke does mention Peter and John together in his Gospel. Luke also mentions Peter by himself in the Gospel. There doesn’t seem to be a discernible pattern.So, why would Luke mention Peter and John together in Acts, but not in his gospel?
And your answer to that question was that Lazarus “was a youth and considered to be inconsequential.� To which I responded, “But that theory doesn’t hold. Luke mentions the impetuous youth Mark in the book of Acts. No reason for Luke not to mention Lazarus, the disciple whom Jesus loved. The disciple who eventually wrote a Gospel under your theory.�The basic question is why is Lazarus not mentioned in the synoptic gospels, regardless of who wrote the fourth gospel.
Because he thought it was a powerful resurrection story? And because Lazarus was John’s friend. Jesus, when speaking to his disciples, refers to Lazarus as “our friend Lazarus sleeps� (John 11:11).If the fourth gospel was written by John, then why would only he write about Lazarus?
Because they felt they had powerful resurrection stories in the resurrections stories they did report? Why do the Gospels omit any resurrection? Why do Matthew, Mark, and John omit the raising of the widow’s son in Nain (Luke 7:11-17)? Why do Mark, Luke, and John omit the raising of the Saints in Matthew?And why would the other gospels omit this seemingly important event of Lazarus being raised from the dead?
Yes but some Bible versions make it quite clear in the foot notes that the ending of Mark 16:9ff is not in the earliest manuscripts and missing from others.Yes, I'm assuming the Bible that is commonly published is authoritative and not assuming we should reject certain passages.
But I’m not prepared to simply grant that for the sake of argument because we have very good textural evidence that suggests this verse should not be in the Bible in the first place. The verse (Mark 16:14) you are arguing from on this particular point is found in an ending of Mark that is widely held to be probably not authentic. This is hardly controversial even among the most conservative evangelical scholars. In light of this, I think you need to mount a serious argument for why this verse should be regarded as authentic. Not merely expect that it be granted authentic for the sake of argument. Until you are able to do that, I feel I can safely sweep this one under the rug. The simple fact you are having to argue from these dubious passages does not bode well for the Lazarus hypothesis.I agree several parts can be considered questionable if they are authentic, but for sake of argument I'm assuming the entire Bible can be used as evidence.
But this doesn’t follow logically or by experience. A man named Robert tells a love story about a man who also happens to be named Robert. We intuitively understand the first Robert, the story telling Robert, is not telling a story about himself but rather another man named Robert. There’s no need for the story telling Robert to make a distinction such as “Robert the mechanic.� It’s understood it’s a different Robert. Otherwise the story telling Robert would just refer to the character in the first person if he was telling a story about himself.Actually, I see it as the opposite. During the life of John the apostle, I'm sure he talked about John the Baptist with other people. Since their names are the same, I doubt John would've just referred to him as John since it would be confusing. If he talked with people and referred to him as John the Baptist, and not just John, then more likely it would also carry over to his writings.
Right because the synoptics weren’t written by John. They spoke directly about two different Johns, John the disciple and John the Baptist. Two Johns which had enough pedigree that either one could simply be referred to as John. The synoptic authors, therefore, had to make the distinction otherwise there would be confusion. Just like I had to make the distinction above between the story telling Robert and the Robert in the story. Why? Because I’m the one telling the story of two different Roberts whereas if I were Robert telling the story of another Robert I need only refer simply to Robert. Carrying this over, only if the author of John was John could he simply refer to John the Baptist as only John without worry of confusing his audience as to which John. In other words, the context of how “John� is used in the fourth Gospel strongly suggests the author must have been John the disciple.Now, admittedly, this is a weak argument. But, I do find it interesting the word Baptist is only found in the synoptic gospels.
Yes but those details regarding the preparation for Passover aren’t terribly important. In fact, that there were meal preparations is implied by the mere fact they were having the Passover.I don't think it's a terribly weak argument, especially considering he devotes 5 chapters to describe that evening. He has gone into such detail of that evening, yet is completely silent on events that we know John was there from the other gospels.
Not really. One simply need assume that different people report different things for different reasons.To explain all these "silences" for John, one needs to propose many hypothetical reasons why John would exclude them.
I don’t think it is simpler with Lazarus as the author. Your argument here, as far as I can see, regarding the Passover preparations (and other events) is that Lazarus doesn’t mention the details because he wasn’t there to witness them. If this is basic gist of your argument it implies that Lazarus would only mention those details for which he was present to witness. Of course this is hugely problematic since we see that the Gospel of John reports many events for which Lazarus could not possibly have been present or witnessed. So I don’t think the Lazarus hypothesis is in a better position to explain why some events are mentioned and some are not.If it was Lazarus, the answer is much simpler.
I’m not sure this is an admission from the High Priest that he did not know John was a follower of Jesus as much as a question intended to challenge the authority by which Peter and John were teaching/acting. It’s the very same question the religious leaders put to Jesus (Matthew 21:23, Mark 11:28). Moreover, a few verses before in Acts it seems the religious leaders were already concerned John and Peter were preaching in the name of Jesus.I'm not so sure the religious leaders had taken note of them as followers of Jesus. They had to ask Peter and John the following:
Act 4:5-7
And it came to pass on the morrow, that their rulers and elders and scribes were gathered together in Jerusalem; and Annas the high priest was there, and Caiaphas, and John, and Alexander, and as many as were of the kindred of the high priest. And when they had set them in the midst, they inquired, By what power, or in what name, have ye done this?
Fair enough but earlier you argued Lazarus’s resurrection was such a “seemingly important event� that it prompted you to ask why the synoptic Gospel writers omit this event and fail to mention him. On the other hand you argue Lazarus was “considered inconsequential by the gospel writers� and this is why he wasn’t mentioned. So was Lazarus important or not?My hypothesis is that he was considered inconsequential by the gospel writers, not by everybody. Obviously he was not considered inconsequential by the religious leaders since they sought to kill him.
Where are you getting this because the text says very little about Lazarus?Even before this, he did not seem to care about the possibility of his death.There are further problems. We have Lazarus, who the Jews were earlier trying to kill, simply walking in and out of the presence of the high priest’s courtyard without a care in the world it seems.
This appears to be a classic case of Begging the Question. It assumes the fourth Gospel was written by Lazarus in order to make the argument here.otseng wrote:If the fourth gospel was written by Lazarus, we also see Lazarus and Peter together in:Goose wrote:Where do we ever see Lazarus and Peter together?
- John 13:24 - Peter asked him to ask Jesus who would betray him
- John 20:3 - Peter and Lazarus at the tomb of Jesus
- John 21 - Peter asked Jesus what about this man (Lazarus)
Yes, so it can’t be used as an argument that John was illiterate.Right, it's what the religious leaders perceived.
Okay. I realize you haven’t said you dismiss the evidence of the church fathers. My point is more of an anticipatory one. You will have to eventually dismiss the evidence of the church fathers as being wrong in order to hold to Lazarus.Never said I dismissed any evidence of the church fathers.
I will do that in a separate post once I feel we’ve addressed the current arguments well enough. These posts are already quite long.Please go ahead and present the evidence from the church fathers that the fourth gospel was written by the apostle John.
That’s fine. I’m certainly willing to grant Lazarus’ family probably had some money. But of course so did John’s. So no reason to think Lazarus was any more educated than John. And no reason to rule John out as too poor to have an education of any kind.No, I'm not comparing their level of wealth. I'm simply saying Lazarus' family had some money by considering all the evidence that points towards them being financially secure.
Fair point.Lazarus does not mention how all the apostles were called, so leaving out John would not be "insulting".
Humility.If John wrote it, why would he omit himself and yet mention how others were called?
John does mention the “twelve� on several occasions.He was one of the chosen twelve and intimate with the other apostles. To write an account of Jesus and his ministry and fail to mention the twelve seems to me to be strange.
How could it be insulting to them when John doesn’t even mention himself directly?This must certainly have been insulting to the other unnamed apostles if they knew John wrote it.
Precisely. Which would be a good reason why an older mature John would seek to avoid writing his Gospel in such a way that it could potentially reopen contentious issues.Well, the other apostles were not as understanding and gracious.
Mar 10:41
And when the ten heard it, they began to be much displeased with James and John.
But that’s granting the assumption John was “elevating himself� is true. I don’t think it is for the reasons I gave above. I think the Holy Spirit had many years to work on John and bring him to maturity.Elevating himself as "the disciple whom Jesus loved" does not seem consistent with what you are suggesting.Further, I’m working under the assumption the author John was much older, wiser, and as a result more mature than the John described in the New Testament.
But again John could also be one of the other disciples as well. I don’t see how the Lazarus hypothesis makes more sense here.The point I was making was why mention the "two other of his disciples" if it was John? These people would be a superfluous detail if John was the author. If the author was Lazarus, then he was one of these two other disciples. Granted, this evidence is not strong, but it's another detail that makes reading the fourth gospel make more sense if Lazarus was the author.
If John was writing this is easy to answer. He was being humble. It’s harder to answer if it was Lazarus. Why would Lazarus not mention John by name? John was a key inner circle disciple.But, this brings up the question, why is John not mentioned by name in the fourth gospel?
Of course John could have, it wasn’t unprecedented in that era to write in the third person. But Lazarus could have done that as well. Why switch from Lazarus to the disciple whom Jesus loved?John could've written the gospel and written about himself in the third person and still could have remained anonymous as the author.
I don’t see a contradiction here.If it's claimed he was humble by not mentioning himself by name, then this is contradictory to labeling himself "the disciple whom Jesus loved".
How could John, an inner circle disciple, not be relevant? Only John, by omitting a direct reference to himself, could omit directly naming other disciples without fear of insulting them. You can’t make that argument with Lazarus because he directly names himself. Indeed, he tells the story of his own resurrection.If Lazarus was the author, then he did not consider John to be either signifiant or relevant. Just like Matthew, James (son of Alphaeus), James (son of Zebedee), and Simon (the Canaanite), which none of these are also mentioned by name.
But you are still assuming a literal house is meant by home. Home, house, household can all have the meaning of family or a social unit living together. There simply is no literal house mentioned in John 19:27.True. But, it's strongly implied. Many translations translate it with home and only one translates it as household.In the Greek text, however, the word for “home� which is οἰκι�α or οἶκος does not appear. John 19:27 ends with ̓�διος (one’s own). The disciple took Jesus’ mother as his own, into his own family. There’s no literal house here.
https://www.blueletterbible.org/kjv/jhn ... es_1016027
Where exactly should it have been used in the “first half�? This same argument applies to Lazarus though. Why would Lazarus not mention himself as the "the disciple whom Jesus loved� in the “first half� of the fourth Gospel?No matter who the author is, it's peculiar the phrase is only used in the last half of the book. Why should this phrase only be used in the last half?
But this doesn’t work. Lazarus doesn’t appear until chapter 11. If Lazarus was relevant to the “first half� of the book why does he first appear so late at chapter 11 which is arguably just past the half way point?I think it has something to do with the structure of the book. As I mentioned, the first half of the book ends with Lazarus resurrecting from the dead and the second half ends with Jesus resurrecting from the dead. "Lazarus" was no longer relevant to the second half of the book so this name was no longer used.
This appears to be mistaken. In chapter 12:2, 9 , after Lazarus had been resurrected, we see Lazarus being referred to as Lazarus. If your theory held water why doesn’t Lazarus begin to use the title "the disciple whom Jesus loved� at 12:2? This is exactly the place we would expect Lazarus to do so if your theory was sound.After he was resurrected, he was no longer "Lazarus", but became "the disciple whom Jesus loved".
Where else would you suggest it should have been used if John were the author and why?If John was the author, why would he only use this phrase in the last half of the book?
Actually the same is said of the rich man in Mark 10 (the other gospels call him a rich young ruler). That actually opens up an interesting realm of speculation if secret Mark were authentic, as it would seem that the rich young man loved by Jesus is the same rich young man who loves Jesus later in the same chapter. If so it would seem that after being disappointed at being told to sell his possessions he died, but was literally given a second chance when Jesus raised him. His habit of going about clad in nothing but a linen cloth would then presumably be because he'd done as Jesus said, and sold everything else he had.otseng wrote: There is only one man that the Bible explicitly says Jesus loved.