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11 answers

Yes except maybe Luke but most jewish theologions will tell you that He knew so much about Jewish custom that His mother or father had to be Jewish, that is fine with me, as the apostle Paul said we are either a believer or a unbeliever to God, for He is no respector persons. Praise the Lord. 1 Corinthians 12:13, For by one Spirit are we all baptized into one body, whether we be Jews or Gentiles, whether we be bond or free; and have been all made to drink into one Spirit. In the eyes of God we are all the same, we are all descendents from Adam.

2007-12-14 14:30:56 · answer #1 · answered by victor 7707 7 · 1 0

Almost all were Jews except for Luke, who wrote the gospel of Luke.

Paul was a Jew, a highly educated Jew. He wrote about 2/3 of the New Testament through the power of the Holy Spirit.

Do visit a United Pentecostal church. They have got the real thing. The power of God is upon them and they practise genuine Christianity.

2007-12-14 14:19:23 · answer #2 · answered by Simple 7 · 0 0

All of the author were Jewish except the author who wrote both the Gospel of Luke and the book of Acts. He appears to have been an Asian Gentile convert.

Paul was a Jew, by he was born and raised outside of Israel.

All the others were Israeli born Jews.

2007-12-14 14:28:54 · answer #3 · answered by dewcoons 7 · 1 0

Yes, with the possible exception of Luke. We don't know where he was born, or much of anything else except that he was a doctor and one of Paul's best friends.

Paul was born in what's now Turkey but he called himself a Jew on several occasions.

Matthew, Mark, and John were Jewish, as was James and Peter. Jude, who wrote the next-to-last book, was the half-brother of the Lord Jesus Himself.

Good question!

2007-12-14 14:29:41 · answer #4 · answered by Brother Jonathan 7 · 2 0

Did you know a Jew also wrote White Christmas, and several other famous Christmas songs, for show biz?

Damn, we give the world our talents in writing, business, science, mathematics , arts etc, and all we get in return is oppression and genocide, LOL.

Yea probably most-to almost all were Jewish. Christianity wasn't really a religion until 300-ish CE, in the council of Nicea, where it was recognized as a separate religion.

2007-12-14 14:15:14 · answer #5 · answered by Ultra N 1 · 1 0

All except for Luke. The question throughout history is who were the writers for those manuscripts who did not give a name.

You can still conclude that the writers were Jewish/Jewish-Christians based on the writings themselves, but who they possibly were would depend on how you see the gospel dating issue.

2007-12-14 15:08:52 · answer #6 · answered by mapleleaf 2 · 0 0

Jewish by birth or jewish converts who then became Christians?

Luke may have been Greek or a Greek speaking Jew.


Likewise Mark?

2007-12-14 14:42:29 · answer #7 · answered by JeeVee 6 · 0 0

Luke was Greek and Paul was ethnically Turkish, religiously Jewish. I think the rest of them were Jewish, though. Good question.

2007-12-14 14:10:38 · answer #8 · answered by Acorn 7 · 3 0

All were Jewish except Luke. Luke was Greek. Paul was Jewish. Peter, John, James, Matthew, and Mark were all Jewish as well.

2007-12-14 14:10:59 · answer #9 · answered by Chris 4 · 2 2

come on! the FABRICATORS of "the new testament" are the Pisos, from Italy, for the umpteenth time see ...well forget it, you refuse to listen because your belief system can't conceive of the truth of this

2007-12-14 14:53:26 · answer #10 · answered by dumbme 2 · 0 2

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