NewTst | PrevPg | NextPg |
"...a man who can by pure intuition comprehend ideas which are neither
contained in nor deducible from the foundations of our natural knowledge,
must necessarily possess a mind far superior to those of his fellow men,
nor do I believe that any have been so endowed save Christ.
To Him the ordinances of God leading men to salvation were revealed
directly without words or visions, ... Christ communed with
God mind to mind" - Spinoza, (TPT)
"...I therefore conclude, that the resurrection of Christ from the dead was
in reality spiritual, and that to the faithful alone, according to their
understanding, it was revealed that Christ was endowed with eternity, and
had risen from the dead (using dead in the sense in which Christ said, "let
the dead bury their dead"), giving by His life and death a matchless
example of holiness. Moreover, He to this extent raises his disciples from
the dead, in so far as they follow the example of His own life and death.
It would not be difficult to explain the whole Gospel doctrine on this
hypothesis." - Spinoza, (Letter 23)
The New Testament Gospel itself indicates that Jesus spoke
differently to the masses than to his own students and unfortunately what
he taught his students can only be gathered indirectly and in fragments.
Still, since Spinoza held Christ in such high regard,
and the New Testament Gospel is one of the
only places where he would have found Christ's words
(though possibly distorted by the writers), it seems worthwhile
including them for study.
Many Christian
Gnostic writings have become available in recent years and they may more
clearly represent the ideas behind Christ's private teachings.
Gnosis (the act of inner "Knowing") is contrasted with Faith and
Theology and seems to have much in harmony with Spinoza's ideas. The early
Christian Church did its best to destroy Gnostic writings
but fortunately some have survived (see the link to Gnostic writings above).
Jesus, like the Buddha was a man who had awaken from the ordinary dream
state in which men spend most of their lives. What is related in the
New Testament Gospel
is for the most part his interactions with the sleeping or
drowsy people around him. How does an "awake" and "aware" adult
speak to a child who has not yet experienced ordinary life?
Those among whom Jesus spoke publicly
were like ourselves, lost in a dream state and unexperienced in Eternal Life.
"And the disciples came, and said unto him, Why speakest thou unto them in parables? He answered and said unto them, Because it is given unto you to know the mysteries of the kingdom of heaven, but to them it is not given." Matthew 13:10-11.
Not that it was given to them by supernatural Divine means
but because they were
students of Jesus and had begun, in varying degrees, to understand their
own nature as it derives from God. The writings selected for the New Testament
reflect the already widening gap between the private teaching of Jesus and
the theology that surrounded his public teaching and
rapidly took over following his death.
I had often wondered why Spinoza didn't just come up with a
different term rather than use "God", or perhaps just use "Nature" without
equating the term with "God". One reason may be
that the "theological god" of the imagination is so prevalent
and it does reflect, in a confused way, the sense that most humans have of a
greater reality. By using the same term he forces us to distinguish our own
imagination from our understanding and to seek to clarify the two.
Had he made up or used some other
term we might just go back and forth between two imaginations
(one associated with "God" and the other, separate in the imagination,
associated with "SomeOtherTerm") never coming to a clear and adequate idea
of God.
|
The Gospels speak mainly of a possible inner evolution called "re-birth". This is their central idea. ... The Gospels are from beginning to end all about this possible self-evolution. They are psychological documents. They are about the psychology of this possible inner development --that is, about what a man must think, feel, and do in order to reach a new level of understanding. ... Everyone has an outer side that has been developed by his contact with life and an inner side which remains vague, uncertain, undeveloped. ... For that reason the teaching of inner evolution must be so formed that it does not fall solely on the outer side of man. It must fall there first, but be capable of penetrating more deeply and awakening the man himself --the inner, unorganized man. A man evolves internally through his deeper reflection, not through his outer life-controlled side. He evolves through the spirit of his understanding and by inner consent to what he sees as truth. The psychological meanings of the relatively fragmentary teaching recorded in the Gospels refers to this deeper, inner side of everyone. - Maurice Nicoll; The New Man |
SUBJECT | Matthew | Mark | Luke | John |
---|---|---|---|---|
Prologue to the gospel | Lk:1.1-4 | Jn:1.1-18 | ||
The promise of John the Baptist's birth | Lk:1.5-25 | |||
The salutation of Mary; Mary visits Elisabeth | Lk:1.26-56 | |||
The birth of John the Baptist | Lk:1.57-80 | |||
The birth of Jesus; the shepherds | Mt:1.18-25 | Lk:2.1-20 | ||
Visit of the wise men | Mt:2.1-12 | |||
Circumcision of Jesus; presentation in the temple | Lk:2.21-40 | |||
Flight into Egypt, Herod slays the babies of Bethlehem; return from Egypt | Mt:2.13-23 | |||
Jesus at twelve years of age | Lk:2.41-52 |
SUBJECT | Matthew | Mark | Luke | John |
---|---|---|---|---|
Of John the Baptist and his ministry | Mt:3.1-12 | Mk:1.1-8 | Lk:3.1-18 | Jn:1.19-34 |
John's imprisonment | Lk:3.19-20 | |||
The baptism of Jesus | Mt:3.13-17 | Mk:1.9-11 | Lk:3.21-22 | |
The genealogy of Jesus | Mt:1.1-17 | Lk:3.23-38 | ||
The temptation of Jesus | Mt:4.1-11 | Mk:1.12-13 | Lk:4.1-13 |
SUBJECT | Matthew | Mark | Luke | John |
---|---|---|---|---|
Jesus' first miracle (water made wine); Jesus visits Capernaum | Jn:2.1-12 | |||
Jesus cleanses the temple during the Passover | Jn:2.13-25 | |||
Nicodemus visits Jesus at night ("Except a man be born again") | Jn:3.1-21 | |||
Jesus remains and baptizes through his disciples, in Judea; John the Baptist again testifies to Jesus | Jn:3.22-4.3 | |||
Jesus converses with the woman of Samaria ("living water") | Jn:4.4-42 | |||
Jesus arrives in Galilee; his first preaching there | Mt:4.12-17 | Mk:1.14-15 | Lk:4.14-15 | Jn:4.43-45 |
Jesus' first rejection at Nazareth | Lk:4.16-30 | |||
The miraculous catch of fish, the call of the first disciples ("I will make you fishers of men") | Mt:4.18-22 | Mk:1.16-20 | Lk:5.1-11 | Jn:1.35-41 |
Jesus in the synagogue at Capernaum heals a demoniac | Mt:7.28-29 | Mk:1.21-28 | Lk:4.31-37 | Jn:7.46 |
Jesus heals Peter's mother-in-law and others | Mt:8.14-17 | Mk:1.29-34 | Lk:4.38-41 | |
Jesus departs from Capernaum | Mk:1.35-38 | Lk:4.42-43 | ||
A preaching journey in Galilee | Mt:4.23-25 | Mk:1.39 | Lk:4.44 |
SUBJECT | Matthew | Mark | Luke | John |
---|---|---|---|---|
Introduction | Mt:5.1-2 | Lk:6.20 | ||
The Beatitudes | Mt:5.3-12 | Lk:6.20-23 | ||
The Woes | Lk:6.24-26 | |||
The parables of salt and of light | Mt:5.13-16 | Mk:9.50 | Lk:11.33-36 ; Lk:14.34-35 | |
On the law | Mt:5.17-20 | Lk:16.16-17 | ||
On murder | Mt:5.21-26 | Lk:12.57-59 | ||
On adultery and lust | Mt:5.27-30 | |||
On divorce | Mt:5.31-32 | Lk:16.18 | ||
On swearing; on retaliation | Mt:5.33-42 | Lk:6.29-30 | ||
On love of one's enemies | Mt:5.43-48 | Lk:6.27-28, 32-36 | ||
On almsgiving, on prayer | Mt:6.1-8 | |||
The Lord's Prayer | Mt:6.9-15 | Lk:11.1-4 | ||
On fasting, on treasures in heaven | Mt:6.16-21 | Lk:12.33-34 | ||
The single eye | Mt:6.22-23 | Lk:11.34-36 | ||
On serving two masters | Mt:6.24 | Lk:16.13 | ||
On anxiety | Mt:6.25-34 | Lk:12.22-31 | ||
On judging | Mt:7.1-5 | Lk:6.37-42 | ||
"neither cast ye your pearls before swine" | Mt:7.6 | |||
God's answering of prayer ("seek, and ye shall find") | Mt:7.7-11 | Lk:11.9-13 | ||
The Golden Rule | Mt:7.12 | Lk:6.31 | ||
The narrow gate | Mt:7.13-14 | Lk:13.23-24 | ||
The test of a good man ("know them by their fruits") | Mt:7.15-20 | Lk:6.43-45 | ||
Warning against self-deception ("have we not prophesied in thy name?") | Mt:7.21-23 | Lk:6.46 ; Lk:13.26-27 | ||
Hearers and doers of the Word ("built his house upon a rock") | Mt:7.24-27 | Lk:6.47-49 | ||
The end of the Sermon ("he taught them as one having authority") | Mt:7.28-29 | Jn:7.46 |
SUBJECT | Matthew | Mark | Luke | John |
---|---|---|---|---|
The healing of a leper | Mt:8.1-4 | Mk:1.40-45 | Lk:5.12-16 | |
The healing of a centurion's servant | Mt:8.5-13 | Lk:7.1-10 | Jn:4.46-54 | |
The healing of the widow's son at | Lk:7.11-17 | |||
The nature of discipleship ("let the dead bury their dead") | Mt:8.18-22 | Lk:9.57-62 | ||
The healing of the paralytic at Capernaum | Mt:9.1-8 | Mk:2.1-12 | Lk:5.17-26 | Jn:5.8-9 |
The call of Levi (Matthew) | Mt:9.9-13 | Mk:2.13-17 | Lk:5.27-32 | |
The question about fasting ("Neither do men put new wine into old bottles") | Mt:9.14-17 | Mk:2.18-22 | Lk:5.33-39 | |
Jesus heals the man at Bethesda in Jerusalem; the testimony to Jesus | Jn:5.1-47 | |||
Two blind men healed | Mt:9.27-31 | |||
The healing of a dumb demoniac | Mt:9.32-34 | Mk:3.22-27 | Lk:11.14-23 | |
The sending out of the twelve disciples | Mt:9.35-10.6 | Lk:10.1-16 | Jn:1.42 ; Jn:4.35 | |
The fate of the disciples | Mt:10.17-25 | Mk:13.9-13 | Lk:21.12-17 | Jn:13.16 ; Jn:14.26 ; Jn:15.20 |
Exhortation to fearless confession ("What I tell you in darkness, that speak ye in light") | Mt:10.26-33 | Lk:12.2-12 | Jn:14.26 | |
Division in households ("I came not to send peace, but a sword") | Mt:10.34-36 | Lk:12.49-56 | ||
Conditions of discipleship | Mt:10.37-39 | Lk:14.25-33 | Jn:12.25 | |
End of the discourse to the disciples | Mt:10.40-11.1 | Lk:10.16 | Jn:5.23 ; Jn:12.44-45 | |
John's question to Jesus | Mt:11.2-6 | Lk:7.18-23 | ||
Jesus' words about John ("What went ye out into the wilderness to see?") | Mt:11.7-19 | Lk:7.24-35 | ||
Woes on the cities of Galilee | Mt:11.20-24 | Lk:10.13-15 | ||
Jesus' thanksgiving to the Father | Mt:11.25-27 | Lk:10.21-22 | Jn:3.35 ; Jn:7.29 ; Jn:10.14-15 ; Jn:17.2 | |
Comfort for the heavy laden | Mt:11.28-30 | |||
Plucking ears of grain on the sabbath | Mt:12.1-8 | Mk:2.23-28 | Lk:6.1-5 | Jn:5.10 |
The healing of the man with a withered hand | Mt:12.9-14 | Mk:3.1-6 | Lk:6.6-11 | |
Jesus heals the multitudes | Mt:12.15-21 | Mk:3.7-12 | Lk:6.17-19 | |
The call of the twelve | Mt:10.1-4 | Mk:3.13-19 | Lk:6.12-16 | Jn:1.42 |
The woman with the ointment | Mt:26.6-13 | Mk:14.3-9 | Lk:7.36-50 | Jn:12.1-8 |
The ministering women | Lk:8.1-3 | |||
Accusations against Jesus, a house divided | Mt:12.22-37 | Mk:3.20-30 | Lk:11.14-23 | Jn:7.20 ; Jn:8.48,52 |
Against seeking for signs | Mt:12.38-42 | Mk:8.11-12 | Lk:11.29-32 | |
The return of the evil spirit | Mt:12.43-45 | Lk:11.24-26 | ||
Jesus' true relatives ("Who is my mother? and who are my brethren?") | Mt:12.46-50 | Mk:3.31-35 | Lk:8.19-21 | Jn:15.14 |
Jesus teaches by parables: the sower, the tares, the seed growing secretly the mustard seed, the leaven,the hidden treasure, the pearl, the net cast into the sea, the householder | Mt:13.1-52 | Mk:4.1-34 | Lk:8.4-18 ; Lk:10.23-24 ; Lk:13.18-21 | Jn:12.40 |
The stilling of the storm | Mt:8.23-27 | Mk:4.35-51 | Lk:8.22-25 | |
The Gadarene demoniac | Mt:8.28-34 | Mk:5.1-20 | Lk:8.26-39 | |
Jairus' daughter and a woman's faith | Mt:9.18-26 | Mk:5.21-43 | Lk:8.40-56 | |
Jesus is again rejected at Nazareth | Mt:13.53-58 | Mk:6.1-6 | Jn:4.44 ; Jn:6.42 ; Jn:7.5,15 ; | |
The sending out of the twelve | Mt:9.35 ; Mt:10.1-11,14 | Mk:6.6-13 | Lk:9.1-6 | |
Herod thinks Jesus is John, risen | Mt:14.1-2 | Mk:6.14-16 | Lk:9.7-9 | |
The death of John | Mt:14.3-12 | Mk:6.17-29 | ||
The return of the twelve and the feeding of the 5,000 | Mt:14.13-21 | Mk:6.30-44 | Lk:9.10-17 | Jn:6.1-14 |
Walking on the water | Mt:14.22-33 | Mk:6.45-52 | Jn:6.15-21 | |
Jesus' discourse on the bread of life | Jn:6.22-71 | |||
Healings at Gennesaret | Mt:14.34-36 | Mk:6.53-56 | ||
What defiles a man | Mt:15.1-20 | Mk:7.1-23 | ||
The Syrophenician woman | Mt:15.21-28 | Mk:7.24-30 | ||
Healing of many; healing of the deaf | Mt:15.29-31 | Mk:7.31-37 | ||
The feeding of the 4,000 | Mt:15.32-39 | Mk:8.1-10 | ||
The Pharisees seek a sign | Mt:16.1-4 | Mk:8.11-13 | Lk:11.29_32 ; Lk:12.54-56 | Jn:6.30 |
A discourse on leaven | Mt:16.5-12 | Mk:8.14-21 | Lk:12.1 | |
The blind man at Bethsaida | Mk:8.22-26 | Jn:9.1-7 | ||
Peter's confession at Caesarea Philippi; first prediction of the Passion | Mt:16.13-23 | Mk:8.27-33 | Lk:9.18-22 | Jn:6.68-69 ; Jn:20.21-23 |
The conditions of discipleship | Mt:16.24-28 | Mk:8.34-9.1 | Lk:9.23-27 | Jn:12.25 |
The transfiguration | Mt:17.1-8 | Mk:9.2-8 | Lk:9.28-36 | Jn:1.14 |
The coming of Elijah | Mt:17.9-13 | Mk:9.9-13 | ||
The epileptic boy healed | Mt:17.14-21 | Mk:9.14-29 | Lk:9.37-43a | Jn:14.9 |
The second prediction of the Passion | Mt:17.22-23 | Mk:9.30-32 | Lk:9.43b-45 | Jn:7.1 |
The temple tax | Mt:17.24-27 | |||
The dispute about greatness | Mt:18.1-5 | Mk:9.33-37 | Lk:9.46-48 | Jn:3.3,5 ; Jn:12.44-45 ; Jn:13.20 |
The strange exorcist | Mk:9.38-41 | Lk:9.49-50 | ||
On temptations | Mt:18.6-9 | Mk:9.42-48 | Lk:17.1-2 | |
Concerning salt | Mt:5.13 | Mk:9.49-50 | Lk:14.34-35 | |
The lost sheep | Mt:18.10-14 | Lk:15.1-10 | ||
On reproving one's brother | Mt:18.15-20 | Lk:17.3 | Jn:20.23 | |
On reconciliation ("how oft shall my brother sin against me, and I forgive him?") | Mt:18.21-22 | Lk:17.3-4 | ||
The parable of the unmerciful servant | Mt:18.23-35 | |||
Jesus goes to Jerusalem at the feast of Tabernacles; His discourses there | Jn:7.1-53 | |||
A woman taken in adultery is brought before Jesus | Jn:8.1-11 | |||
Jesus declares Himself the light of the world; unbelieving Jews attempt to stone Him | Jn:8.12-59 | |||
Jesus heals a beggar blind from birth | Jn:9.1-41 | |||
The Good Shepherd | Jn:10.1-21 |
SUBJECT | Matthew | Mark | Luke | John |
---|---|---|---|---|
The Samaritan villagers | Lk:9.51-56 | |||
The nature of discipleship | Mt:8.8-22 | Lk:9.57-62 | ||
The sending out of the seventy | Mt:9.35-10.16 | Lk:10.1-16 | Jn:4.35 ; Jn:5.23 | |
The return of the seventy | Lk:10.17-20 | Jn:12.31 | ||
Jesus' gratitude to the Father | Mt:11.25-27 | Lk:10.21-22 | Jn:10.15 ; Jn:17.2 | |
The blessedness of the disciples ("...many prophets and kings have desired to see those things which ye see, and have not seen them;...") | Mt:13.16-17 | Lk:10.23-24 | ||
The lawyer's question | Mt:22.34-40 | Mk:12.28-31 | Lk:10.25-28 | |
The parable of the good Samaritan | Lk:10.29-37 | |||
Mary and Martha | Lk:10.38-42 | Jn:11.1-3 | ||
The friend at midnight | Lk:11.5-8 | |||
The answer to prayer | Mt:7.7-11 | Lk:11.9-13 | ||
The Beelzebub controversy | Mt:9.32-34 ; Mt:12.22-30 | Lk:11.14-23 | ||
The blessedness of Jesus' mother | Lk:11.27-28 | |||
The sign for this generation | Mt:12.38-42 ; Mt:16.1-4 | Mk:8.11-12 | Lk:11.29-32 | |
Concerning light | Mt:5.14-16 ; Mt:6.22-23 | Lk:11.33-36 | ||
Discourse against the Pharisees | Mt:23.1-36 | Mk:12.37-40 | Lk:11.37-12.1 | |
Exhortation to fearless confession | Mt:10.19-20, 20-33 ; Mt:12.32 | Mk:4.22 ; Mk:8.38 | Lk:12.2-12 | Jn:14.26 |
The parable of the rich fool | Lk:12.13-21 | |||
Cares about earthly things ("Lay not up for yourselves treasures upon earth") | Mt:6.16-21, 25-34 | Lk:12.22-34 | ||
Watchfulness and faithfulness | Mt:24.43-51 | Mk:13.32-33 | Lk:12.35-46 | Jn:13.4-5 |
The servant's wages | Lk:12.47-48 | |||
Interpreting the present time | Mt:10.34-36 ; Mt:16.1-4 | Lk:12.49-56 | Jn:12.27 | |
Agreement with one's accuser | Mt:5.25-26 | Lk:12.57-59 | ||
Repentance or destruction | Lk:13.1-9 | |||
Healing of the woman with a spirit of infirmity | Lk:13.10-17 | |||
Parables of the mustard seed, of the leaven | Mt:13.31-33 | Mk:4.30-32 | Lk:13.18-21 | |
Exclusion from the kingdom | Mt:7.13-14 ; Mt:25.10-12 ; Mt:7.22-23 | Lk:13.22-30 | ||
The departure from Galilee | Lk:13.31-33 | |||
The lament over Jerusalem | Mt:22.37-39 | Lk:13.34-35 | ||
The healing of a man with dropsy | Lk:14.1-6 | |||
Teaching on humility | Lk:14.7-14 | |||
The parable of the great supper ("many are called, but few are chosen") | Mt:22.1-14 | Lk:14.15-24 | ||
The cost of discipleship | Mt:10.26-33, 37-39 | Lk:14.25-35 | ||
The lost sheep and the lost coin | Mt:18.12-14 | Lk:15.1-10 | ||
The prodigal son | Lk:15.11-32 | |||
The unjust steward | Mt:6.24 | Lk:16.1-13 | ||
The hypocrisy of the Pharisees | Lk:16.14-15 | |||
About the law and about divorce | Mt:5.17-20, 31-32 ; Mt:11.12-13 | Lk:16.16-18 | ||
The rich man and Lazarus | Lk:16.19-31 | |||
On causing sin | Mt:18.6-9 | Mk:9.42-48 | Lk:17.1-2 | |
On forgiveness | Mt:18.15, 21-22 | Lk:17.3-4 | ||
On faith | Mt:17.20 | Lk:17.5-6 | ||
The servant's wages | Lk:17.7-10 | |||
The healing of ten lepers | Lk:17.11-19 | |||
On the kingdom of God | Mt:24.23-25 | Mk:13.21-23 | Lk:17.20-21 | |
The day of the Son of man | Mt:24.26-28, 37-41 | Lk:17.22-37 | ||
The parable of the unjust judge | Lk:18.1-8 | |||
The parable of the Pharisee and the publican | Lk:18.9-14 |
SUBJECT | Matthew | Mark | Luke | John |
---|---|---|---|---|
Marriage and divorce | Mt:19.1-12 | Mk:10.1-12 | ||
Jesus blesses the children | Mt:19.13-15 | Mk:10.1316 | Lk:18.15-17 | Jn:3.3, 5 |
The rich young man | Mt:19.16-30 | Mk:10.17-31 | Lk:18.18-30 | |
The parable of the laborers in the vineyard | Mt:20.1-10 | |||
The third prediction of the Passion | Mt:20.17-19 | Mk:10.32-34 | Lk:18.31-34 | |
Jesus and the sons of Zebedee | Mt:20.20-28 | Mk:10.35-45 | Lk:22.24-27 | |
The healing of Bartimeus | Mt:20.29-34 | Mk:10.46-52 | Lk:18.35-43 | |
Zacchaeus | Lk:19.1-10 | |||
The parable of the pounds | Mt:25.14-30 | Lk:19.11-27 |
SUBJECT | Matthew | Mark | Luke | John |
---|---|---|---|---|
The entry into Jerusalem, prediction of the destruction of Jerusalem; Jesus in the temple | Mt:21.1-17 | Mk:11.1-11 | Lk:19.28-46 | Jn:12.21-50 ; Jn:2.13-15 |
Jesus keeps the feast of Dedication at Jerusalem | Jn:10.22-39 | |||
Jesus goes to Bethany; raises Lazarus from the dead | Jn:10.40-11.44 | |||
A meeting of the chief priests and Pharisees | Jn:11.45-53 | |||
Jesus at Ephraim; the coming of the Passover | Jn:11.54-57 | |||
The cursing of the fig tree | Mt:21.18-19 | Mk:11.12-14 | ||
The cleansing of the temple | Mt:21.12-13 | Mk:11.15-19 | Lk:19.45-48 | Jn:2.13-17 |
The meaning of the withered fig tree | Mt:21.20-22 | Mk:11.20-26 | Jn:14.13-14 | |
The question about authority | Mt:21.23-27 | Mk:11.27-33 | Lk:20.1-8 | Jn:2.18 |
The parable of the two sons | Mt:21.28-32 | |||
The parable of the wicked tenants | Mt:21.33-46 | Mk:12.1-12 | Lk:20.9-19 | |
The parable of the marriage feast (great supper) | Mt:22.1-14 | Lk:14.16-24 | ||
Question concerning tribute to Caesar | Mt:22.15-22 | Mk:12.13-17 | Lk:20 20-26 | Jn:3.2 |
Question concerning the resurrection | Mt:22.23-33 | Mk:12.18-27 | Lk:20.27-40 | |
The great commandment | Mt:22.34-40 | Mk:12.28-34 | Lk:10.25-28 | |
About David's son | Mt:22.41-46 | Mk:12.35-37 | Lk:20.41-44 | |
Woes against the Pharisees | Mt:2.31-36 | Mk:12.37-40 | Lk:20.45-47 ; Lk:11.37-52 | |
The lament over Jerusalem | Mt:23.37-39 | Lk:13.34-35 | ||
The widow's gift | Mk:12.41-44 | Lk:21.1-4 | ||
Prediction of the destruction of the temple | Mt:24.1-3 | Mk:13.1-4 | Lk:21.5-7 | |
The signs of the parousia | Mt:24.4-8 | Mk:13.5-8 | Lk:21.8-11 | |
The beginning of the troubles | Mt:24.9-14 | Mk:13.9-13 | Lk:21.12-19 | Jn:14.26 ; Jn:15.21 ; Jn:16.2 |
The desolation sacrilege | Mt:24.15-22 | Mk:13.14-20 | Lk:21.20-24 | |
The culmination of the troubles | Mt:24.23-25 | Mk:13.21-23 | Lk:17.20-23 | |
The day of the Son of man | Mt:24.26-28 | Lk:17.23-24, 37 | ||
The parousia of the Son of man | Mt:24.29-31 | Mk:13.24-27 | Lk:21.25-28 | |
The parable of the fig tree | Mt:24.32-33 | Mk:13.28-29 | Lk:21.29-31 | |
The time of the parousia | Mt:24.34-36 | Mk:13.30-32 | Lk:21.32-33 | |
Mark's ending to the discourse | Mk:13.33-37 | |||
Luke's ending to the discourse | Lk:21.34-36 | |||
The need for watchfulness | Mt:24.37-41 | Lk:17.26-27, 34-35 | ||
Watchfulness and faithfulness | Mt:24.42-51 | Lk:12.39-46 | ||
The parable of the ten maidens | Mt:25.1-13 | |||
The parable of the talents | Mt:25.14-30 | Lk:19.12-27 | ||
The last judgment | Mt:25.31-46 | Jn:5.28-29 | ||
A summary of the days spent in Jerusalem | Lk:21.37-38 |
SUBJECT | Matthew | Mark | Luke | John |
---|---|---|---|---|
The empty tomb | Mt:28.1-10 | Mk:16.1-11 | Lk:24.1-12 | Jn:20.1-18 |
The bribing of the Roman soldiers | Mt:28.11-15 | |||
Jesus appears to the two men on the road to Emmaus | Mk:16.12-13 | Lk:24.13-35 | ||
Jesus appears in Jerusalem | Lk:24.36-49 | |||
Jesus appears to the disciples twice | Jn:20.19-29 | |||
Jesus appears at the sea of Tiberias | Jn:21.1-24 | |||
Jesus' appearance on the mountain in Galilee | Mt:28.16-20 | Mk:16.14-16 | ||
Signs to accompany believers | Mk:16.17-18 | |||
The Ascension | Mk:16.19 | Lk:24.50-53 | ||
The disciples go out into the world to preach | Mk:16.20 | |||
John's conclusion to the gospel | Jn:20.30-31 ; Jn:21.25 |
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Slack padding. |