Intro to NT
Intro to Synoptics
1st Century Rome
1st Century Judaism
Infancy Narratives
100

The number of books in the New Testament

27

100

The meaning of Gospel

Good News

100

When Judea became a Roman province

63 B.C.

100

The body of Jewish rulers

Sanhedrin

100

Compares the conception and birth of Jesus and John the Baptist

Luke

200

The language used to write the New Testament

Greek

200

The meaning of synoptic

Together view or seeing together

200

This role/position was typically worshiped as a God

Emperor

200

They prescribed strict adherence to the Law

Pharisees

200

Admits to investigating previous accounts of the life of jesus

Luke

300

The four main genres in the New Testament

Gospels, Acts, Epistles, Revelation

300

The books known as the Synoptic Gospels

Matthew, Mark and Luke

300

They rejected the need for religion, pursuing pleasure instead

Epicureans

300

They were more liberal in their approach to the Law and didn't believe in the resurrection

Sadducees

300

This Genealogy begins with Abraham and ends with Jesus

Matthew's

400

The approximate time window when the New Testament was written

40-95 A.D.

400

The challenge faced by gospels that are both very similar and yet different 

Synoptic Problem

400

Believed the universe was a world soul, guided by God's mental activity (logos)

Stoics

400

Radicals looking to gain independence from Roman rule

Zealots

400

In Luke's infancy narratives, he makes typological comparisons between Mary and .....

Ark of the Covenant

500

Mark and an unknown source referred to as "Q"

The sources of the two-source theory

500

Roman peace, Roman roads, moral and spiritual bankruptcy, common Greek language

Positive conditions for spread of the gospel

500

A group which prescribed strict adherence to the Law and chose to live separately from mainstream Judaism

Essenes

500

The greeting of the Angel to Mary as "full or grace", supports this Catholic doctrine regarding Mary

Immaculate Conception

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