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2 Timothy and the Letter to the Colossians was written by Paul. 1 Peter was written by a Jewish Christian convert.

From Irenaeus in the late second century until modern times, Christian tradition regarded Peter the apostle as author of this document. Since he was martyred at Rome during the persecution of Nero between A.D. 64 and 67, it was supposed that the letter was written from Rome shortly before his death. This is supported by its reference to "Babylon" (1 Peter 5:13), a code name for Rome in the early church.

Some modern scholars, however, on the basis of a number of features that they consider incompatible with Petrine authenticity, regard the letter as the work of a later Christian writer. Such features include the cultivated Greek in which it is written, difficult to attribute to a Galilean fisherman, together with its use of the Greek Septuagint translation when citing the Old Testament; the similarity in both thought and expression to the Pauline literature; and the allusions to widespread persecution of Christians, which did not occur until at least the reign of Domitian (A.D. 81-96). In this view the letter would date from the end of the first century or even the beginning of the second, when there is evidence for persecution of Christians in Asia Minor (the letter of Pliny the Younger to Trajan, A.D. 111-12).

Other scholars believe, however, that these objections can be met by appeal to use of a secretary, Silvanus, mentioned in 1 Peter 5:12. Such secretaries often gave literary expression to the author's thoughts in their own style and language. The persecutions may refer to local harassment rather than to systematic repression by the state. Hence there is nothing in the document incompatible with Petrine authorship in the 60s.

Still other scholars take a middle position. The many literary contacts with the Pauline literature, James, and 1 John suggest a common fund traditional formulations rather than direct dependence upon Paul. Such liturgical and catechetical traditions must have been very ancient and in some cases of Palestinian origin.

Yet it is unlikely that Peter addressed a letter to the Gentile churches of Asia Minor while Paul was still alive. This suggests a period after the death of the two apostles, perhaps A.D. 70-90. The author would be a disciple of Peter in Rome, representing a Petrine group that served as a bridge between the Palestinian origins of Christianity and its flowering in the Gentile world. The problem addressed would not be official persecution but the difficulty of living the Christian life in a hostile, secular environment that espoused different values and subjected the Christian minority to ridicule and oppression.
Peace and every blessing!

2007-05-05 19:28:48 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Paul wrote 2 Timothy & Collosians and Peter wrote 1 & 2 Peter.

2007-05-05 17:46:44 · answer #2 · answered by Martin S 7 · 2 0

Martin is correct, although his and your spelling leave something to be desired.

Paul wrote both letters to Timothy and Colossians, and Peter wrote the two letters from Peter.

Here is an easy way to tell who wrote which book in the New Testament:

The first four books where written by the guy whose name is used as the title of the Book.

Acts is really part 2 to the book of Luke, written by Luke.

All the books after the book of Acts and before Hebrews were written by the Apostle Paul.

All letters after Hebrews was written by the guy who the book was named after. And of course the full name of Revelation is the "Revelation to John", so it was written by John the beloved Disciple, same guy who wrote the Gospel of John and 1st, 2nd, and 3rd John.

John was the youngest of Jesus' disciples.

James was written not by James who was the original disciple of Jesus. That James was killed by the sword in Acts chapter 12 verse 2. That James was also the brother of John.

The books of James and Jude were written by Jesus' younger siblings, technically His half brothers. The sons of Mary and Joseph.

They were named in Mattnew 13:55-56.

Yes I know the RCC teaches otherwise, but this is one of many cases where the Bible is clearly calling the RCC wrong.

Pastor Art

2007-05-05 17:57:18 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Obviously God is answer.

You will find in each epistle the authorship in the first verse. For 2 Timothy, it is Paul; for Colossians, it is Paul and Timothy; and for 1 Peter it is Peter (Simon Simeon Peter).

2007-05-05 18:26:07 · answer #4 · answered by J. 7 · 0 0

2 Timothy was written by Paul
Colossians was written by Paul
1 Peter was written by Peter

2007-05-05 17:57:37 · answer #5 · answered by Serena 5 · 0 0

Paul

2007-05-05 17:47:48 · answer #6 · answered by (A) 7 · 0 0

See Martin S answer.

2007-05-05 17:48:27 · answer #7 · answered by Free To Be Me 6 · 0 0

look in the back of your bible

2007-05-05 17:50:48 · answer #8 · answered by debbie2243 7 · 0 1

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