Schroedinger said:
Paging emytaylor to discredit you, asap
I thought you knew who to page?
CharlieB said:
just wanted to chime in on this debate by saying that:
The bible is NOT the core of Christianity (YA'RLY)
Why? Because the Church pre-dates the Bible. For the first several hundred years of the Church’s existence the Bible DID NOT exist.
The key thing is that living Church, the communion of people under the leadership of bishops and with guidance of the holy trinity is what drives the church.
You can question the bible, but you can't score athiest brownie points by citing stories written thousands of years ago.
Weh? I suppose it depends on the definitions, but let's say that the church started around Jesus' death.
Whilst there is a
lot of discussion among papyrologists, Biblical scholars, Form Critics, etc etc regarding the authorship and dating of the early Gospels, the problem of Markan Priority, the "Q" Source, etc etc, I think most mainstream scholars would happily date the Gospel of Mark to between 50-80AD. I'd say 95% of well-respected scholars say that it is circa 70AD.
We could have a big discussion about the dating of it (our class spent about four weeks on the dating of the Synoptic Gospels), but that's pretty much the crux of the matter.
Given that Jesus' death was probably near the end of Pilate's prefecture (26-36AD), that means that the earliest forms of the New Testament were definitely around at the latest 40 or so years after Jesus' death. If my opinion mattered, I would say that Mark and the Q-document were first recorded in the authors' retirement so to speak, so probably 25-30 years after Jesus' death. Judging by the evidence, the Gospels were spread, textually, soon thereafter. There are rubbish dumps in southern Egypt (which was like the end of the world for people in the NT's time) from 200AD which have NT fragments; so you would be hard-pressed substantiating what you just said.
If you would like to argue that these fragments don't constitute a Bible, that's just silly use of the modern word. These Gospels were circulated at a very early date, and equate to the closest thing to a Bible.
TL;DR version: New Testament Gospels existed and were circulated quite soon after Jesus' death.