Thanks for watching. If you're interested in an alternate view, here's a forthcoming essay you could consult: Murray J. Smith, “Anonymous or Apostolic? Receiving the Gospels as Apostolic Testimony to Jesus,” in Does it Matter Who Wrote the Bible? The Pastoral Implications of Pseudonymity and Anonymity in the New Testament, ed. D. B. Capes (Eugene, OR: Pickwick, 2024), 127-65.
The gospel's authors are anonymous and Mark is the only one that is original. The other three are redactions and embellishments of it.
Thanks for watching. If you're interested in an alternate view, here's a forthcoming essay you could consult: Murray J. Smith, “Anonymous or Apostolic? Receiving the Gospels as Apostolic Testimony to Jesus,” in Does it Matter Who Wrote the Bible? The Pastoral Implications of Pseudonymity and Anonymity in the New Testament, ed. D. B. Capes (Eugene, OR: Pickwick, 2024), 127-65.
@@ClarityandBrevity No thanks, I'll get my biblical interpretations from non religiously motivated scholars and academics.