chapter 1. 1. tacitus 2. suetonius 3. pliny the younger 4. josephus

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The Historical Jesus Chapter 1

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Page 1: Chapter 1.  1. Tacitus  2. Suetonius  3. Pliny the Younger  4. Josephus

The Historical JesusChapter 1

Page 2: Chapter 1.  1. Tacitus  2. Suetonius  3. Pliny the Younger  4. Josephus

A. Historical Sources

1. Tacitus

2. Suetonius

3. Pliny the Younger

4. Josephus

Page 3: Chapter 1.  1. Tacitus  2. Suetonius  3. Pliny the Younger  4. Josephus

B. Scripture

1. COVENANT (a.k.a. “Testament”) A. Definition: the open-ended contract of love between God and human beings.

B. Hebrew Scripture▪ Central focus of Hebrew Scripture = God’s love for the Jewish people▪ Fill in the worksheet to recall the major events in

Hebrew Scripture▪ HW assignment

Page 4: Chapter 1.  1. Tacitus  2. Suetonius  3. Pliny the Younger  4. Josephus

B. Scripture (continued)

1. COVENANT (continued) C. New Testament▪ Jesus IS the new testament▪God’s promise of love for all humanity

Page 5: Chapter 1.  1. Tacitus  2. Suetonius  3. Pliny the Younger  4. Josephus

B. Scripture (continued)

2. INSPIRATION Definition: The guidance given by the

Holy Spirit to the human authors of Sacred Scripture so they wrote what God wanted written for our benefit.

Human authors of Scripture use their unique talents and insights to address a particular audience▪ Different authors highlight different

theological themes

Page 6: Chapter 1.  1. Tacitus  2. Suetonius  3. Pliny the Younger  4. Josephus

B. Scripture (continued)

3. CANON A. Definition: The official list of the

inspired books of the Bible.

B. Number of Books in the Catholic canon▪ Hebrew Scripture = 46▪ New Testament = 27▪ TOTAL = 73

Page 7: Chapter 1.  1. Tacitus  2. Suetonius  3. Pliny the Younger  4. Josephus

B. Scripture (continued)

3. CANON (continued) C. Criteria for inclusion in the canon▪ 1. Apostolic Origin▪Writings were inspired by apostolic witnesses

▪ 2. Widespread Acceptance▪Writings were circulated and well-received by various parts of the church

Page 8: Chapter 1.  1. Tacitus  2. Suetonius  3. Pliny the Younger  4. Josephus

B. Scripture (continued)

3. CANON (continued) C. Criteria for inclusion in the canon

(continued)▪ 3. Conformity to the Rule of Faith▪Writings reflect the truth about Jesus and his teachings▪ Consistent with one another

Page 9: Chapter 1.  1. Tacitus  2. Suetonius  3. Pliny the Younger  4. Josephus

B. Scripture (continued)

3. CANON (continued) D. New Testament Canon Background▪ 27 books▪ Written over the course of 50 years▪50 C.E. – 100 C.E.▪ Written in Greek▪ Written by many different authors▪ Contains many different types of writing▪Gospels , personal letters, homilies/sermons, symbolic writings

Page 10: Chapter 1.  1. Tacitus  2. Suetonius  3. Pliny the Younger  4. Josephus

B. Scripture (continued)

3. CANON (continued) E. Parts of the New Testament Canon▪1. Gospel = Good News▪ Jesus himself is the Gospel of God’s love and salvation for all humanity▪Preaching about Jesus is also the Gospel ▪4 written versions of the Gospel

Page 11: Chapter 1.  1. Tacitus  2. Suetonius  3. Pliny the Younger  4. Josephus

B. Scripture (continued)

3. CANON (continued) E. Parts of the New Testament Canon

(continued)

▪Gospels (4)▪The only books of the NT that narrate Jesus’ life, preaching, works, death, and Resurrection.

▪Evangelist – a person who proclaims the Good News of Jesus Christ. “The four Evangelists” refers to the authors of the 4 Gospels: Matthew, Mark, Luke, & John.

Page 12: Chapter 1.  1. Tacitus  2. Suetonius  3. Pliny the Younger  4. Josephus

B. Scripture (continued)

3. CANON (continued) E. Parts of the New Testament Canon

(continued)

▪2. Acts of the Apostles (1)▪Narrates the spread of the Gospel after Jesus’ Resurrection▪Written by same author as Luke’s Gospel“Luke volume 2”▪Focus on Peter & Paul

Page 13: Chapter 1.  1. Tacitus  2. Suetonius  3. Pliny the Younger  4. Josephus

B. Scripture (continued)

3. CANON (continued) E. Parts of the New Testament Canon

(continued)

▪3. Pauline Epistles (13)▪Letters written to support and educate Christian communities or individuals▪Some written by Paul himself, some written by his disciples▪Examples: 1&2 Corinthians, Romans, Galatians

Page 14: Chapter 1.  1. Tacitus  2. Suetonius  3. Pliny the Younger  4. Josephus

B. Scripture (continued)

3. CANON (continued) E. Parts of the New Testament Canon

(continued)

▪4. Hebrews (1)▪Called a letter, but more like a sermon/homily

Page 15: Chapter 1.  1. Tacitus  2. Suetonius  3. Pliny the Younger  4. Josephus

B. Scripture (continued)

3. CANON (continued) E. Parts of the New Testament Canon

(continued)

▪5. Catholic Epistles (7)▪“catholic” = universal▪Letters written for all believers/the entire church▪Examples: James, 1 & 2 Peter, Jude

Page 16: Chapter 1.  1. Tacitus  2. Suetonius  3. Pliny the Younger  4. Josephus

B. Scripture (continued)

3. CANON (continued) E. Parts of the New Testament Canon

(continued)

▪6. Revelation (1)▪Highly symbolic work▪Apocalyptic style▪Written to encourage persecuted Christians

Page 17: Chapter 1.  1. Tacitus  2. Suetonius  3. Pliny the Younger  4. Josephus

B. Scripture (continued)

3. CANON (continued)Create a graphic organizer or outline

of the New Testament canon.For each of the 6 sections include:

The section titleA brief description (think: bullet point) of the

sectionA drawing that illustrates a characteristic or

the content of the sectionA list of the books in that section (in the order

they appear in the NT)

Page 19: Chapter 1.  1. Tacitus  2. Suetonius  3. Pliny the Younger  4. Josephus

C. The Formation of the Gospels

Summary of each stage in notesTimeline of 3 stages

Label each of the 3 stages on the timeline and color-code each stage

“0” 10 20 30 40 50 60 70 80 90 100 110 120

Page 20: Chapter 1.  1. Tacitus  2. Suetonius  3. Pliny the Younger  4. Josephus

D. Interpretation of the NT

Agree or Disagree? Scripture means whatever we personally think it means.

Some things in Scripture aren’t true.

Page 21: Chapter 1.  1. Tacitus  2. Suetonius  3. Pliny the Younger  4. Josephus

D. Interpretation of the NT

(continued)

1. Catholic Perspective The Bible should be read both prayerfully and critically.▪ Looking at the literary and historical context of the Scripture texts

Page 22: Chapter 1.  1. Tacitus  2. Suetonius  3. Pliny the Younger  4. Josephus

D. Interpretation of the NT (continued)

2. Key Questions: What religious, social, cultural, and

historical realities influenced the Scripture writer?

For whom was the text being written? How might the author have adapted his material to help this particular audience understand the message?

What literary device is used? How should we interpret the passage in light of that device?

Example: Luke 3:7-9

Page 23: Chapter 1.  1. Tacitus  2. Suetonius  3. Pliny the Younger  4. Josephus

D. Interpretation of the NT (continued)

3. 2 Senses of Scripture 1. Literal Sense▪What does the text actually mean?

2. Spiritual Sense▪What does the text mean for believers?

Example: Matthew 15:10-11

Page 24: Chapter 1.  1. Tacitus  2. Suetonius  3. Pliny the Younger  4. Josephus

E. Sources of the NT

1. Source Criticism Tries to determine what source(s) the writer used to compose his work

2. The Synoptic Gospels “synoptic” = seen together Synoptic Gospels = Matthew, Mark, & Luke

Page 25: Chapter 1.  1. Tacitus  2. Suetonius  3. Pliny the Younger  4. Josephus

E. Sources of the NT (continued)

♥ = encyclopedia ☼= article ◘ = website ∞ = interview

Student 1 Student 2 Student 3

♥ ♥ ♥ ♥ ☼ ☼ ♥ ♥ ∞ ∞ ∞ ♥♥ ♥ ♥ ♥ ☼ ♥ ♥ ☼ ☼ ☼ ♥ ♥ ♥ ♥ ♥ ♥ ◘ ♥ ◘ ◘ ∞ ∞ ☼ ♥ How many sources did each student use? How many total sources are there? What do all 3 have in common? What is common to 2 out of the

3? What is unique about any student’s work?

Page 26: Chapter 1.  1. Tacitus  2. Suetonius  3. Pliny the Younger  4. Josephus

E. Sources of the NT (continued)

3. The Four Source Theory Mark was written first

Luke & Matthew used Mark as a source (♥)

Luke & Matthew also used “Q” as a source (☼)

Luke & Matthew each had their own unique source▪Special Luke – “L” (◘)▪Special Matthew – “M” (∞)

Page 27: Chapter 1.  1. Tacitus  2. Suetonius  3. Pliny the Younger  4. Josephus

E. Sources of the NT (continued)

Draw a diagram to illustrate the 4 source theory. Include: Mark, Matthew, Luke, Q, M, L

Take into account: Mark was the first Gospel written Matthew and Luke used Mark Matthew and Luke used the “Q” source Matthew used a unique source “M” Luke used a unique source “L”

Page 28: Chapter 1.  1. Tacitus  2. Suetonius  3. Pliny the Younger  4. Josephus

E. Sources of the NT (continued)

4. The Q Source From the German word “quelle” which

means “source”

Lost source that contained many of Jesus’ sayings

Page 29: Chapter 1.  1. Tacitus  2. Suetonius  3. Pliny the Younger  4. Josephus