
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


Most Christians were taught to trust the Gospels without ever being shown why they should. The historical evidence is stronger than you think.
New Testament scholar Lydia McGrew explains what she calls the "reportage model," a case that the Gospel authors weren't just passing along stories. They were close to the facts, trying to get them right, and highly successful. She walks through the kind of evidence that's hard to explain any other way.
🔓 Get the full unedited interview with Lydia McGrew, including her argument that John's long speeches could be real memories and why she thinks Luke's anointing story is a completely different event than the other Gospels describe. https://faithlabshow.com/premium
By Nate Hanson & Shelby Hanson4.6
561561 ratings
Most Christians were taught to trust the Gospels without ever being shown why they should. The historical evidence is stronger than you think.
New Testament scholar Lydia McGrew explains what she calls the "reportage model," a case that the Gospel authors weren't just passing along stories. They were close to the facts, trying to get them right, and highly successful. She walks through the kind of evidence that's hard to explain any other way.
🔓 Get the full unedited interview with Lydia McGrew, including her argument that John's long speeches could be real memories and why she thinks Luke's anointing story is a completely different event than the other Gospels describe. https://faithlabshow.com/premium

19,521 Listeners

577 Listeners

1,137 Listeners

1,101 Listeners

4,460 Listeners

1,496 Listeners

3,295 Listeners

5,159 Listeners

1,951 Listeners

1,263 Listeners

572 Listeners

1,029 Listeners

684 Listeners

1,455 Listeners

135 Listeners