are surprisingly similar."
It's a delightful cartoon and I suspect I will be using it in class too. But it's clearly not a cartoon designed by an academic. The saintly character on the right is the eponymous "Young Jesus" and an academic would never make Jesus contemporary with the evangelists. And New Testament scholars would not dream of characterizing John's Gospel as "surprisingly similar" to the Synoptics. This teacher might just deserve an F herself for not paying careful enough attention to the contents of the evangelists' book reports. Unless, of course, the younger author of the Fourth Gospel was inclined to be somewhat more "Synoptic" than he became in his maturity.
Well, some do think that John used the Synoptics - and that he was just better at disguising plagiarism than some of his fellow Gospel authors! :)
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ReplyDeleteOr maybe after getting caught for plagiarism as a child, John turned from his wicked ways, while his classmates sadly did not change their ways... :-)
ReplyDeleteYour comments were more entertaining than the tagline! Well done.
ReplyDeleteNazaroo
Funny. The kid on the right looks more like a 'Thomas' to me. Which might explain the halo.
ReplyDeleteYes, that's what I thought when I first saw it. I thought it was a clever take on the whole Thomas as the fifth Gospel thing. But then again, I think I can demonstrate that Thomas has been copying too (forthcoming book to that effect!).
ReplyDeleteI think it's a beaut little book and reiterates the 'modern' view that Jesus was human - very, very human. Given that fact, his achievements, understandings, teachings are truly awae-inspiring. The book covers a lot of bits about his life we were never taught at Sunday School, but always secretly wondered about.
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