Simon Gathercole on the Historical Reliability of the Geography in the Gospels

In his 1993 book on The Roman Near East published by Harvard University Press, Fergus Millar—now emeritus professor of ancient history at Oxford University—wrote:


The Gospels provide an extremely vivid, and in geographical terms quite extensive, view of what the area of Jewish settlement was in Jesus’ time.


Not everyone believes or knows that, though.


Simon Gathercole—Reader in New Testament Studies and Director of Studies at Fitzwilliam College, Cambridge University—recently gave a lecture at Lanier Theological Library in Houston, Texas, on “The Journeys of Jesus and Jewish Geography.”


Here is a description:


The Gospels in the New Testament contain a remarkable amount of geographical information, especially in the quantity of references to areas, towns, and villages that Jesus (and John the Baptist) visited.


Are these genuine or fictitious?


Some Jesus skeptics have doubted the existence of places like Nazareth and Capernaum.


Even many New Testament scholars are unaware of the evidence for Gospel sites.


Strikingly, however, a huge proportion of the place-names in the Gospels are paralleled in Jewish literature outside the New Testament, even down to some of the small villages.


This illustrated lecture will examine the historical evidence, some already known, some presented for the first time, for the places in the Gospel.  It will show how this evidence has clear implications for the reliability of the Gospel narratives.


You can watch the lecture below (and view the slides here):



Gathercole finds attestations of the places in the canonical Gospels in three locations: (1) Old Testament, (2) Josephus, (3) Rabbinic literature.


OT

Jerusalem

Jericho

Tyre

Sidon

Bethlehem

Ephraim

Arimathaea


Josephus

Cana

Capernaum

Gadara

Caesarea

Philippi

Bethsaida

Tiberia

Emmaus


Rabbis

Bethphage

Sychar

Gennesaret

Naim/n

Chorazin

Magdala

Gergesa

Nazareth


Unattested

Magadan

Dalmanutha

Bethany

Aenon

Salim


He closes by comparing the Gospels with both Josephus and Apocrypha.



Gospels: 22 out of 27 places attested = 81%
Josephus: 35 out of 44 places attested = 80%

Apocryphal Gospels:



absence of geographical detail
mistakes of geographical detail

See also Peter Williams’s Lanier lecture on new evidence that the Gospels were based on eyewitness testimony:



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Published on March 27, 2017 03:07
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