(871) Ease of creating scripture
By Michael Runyan ~ S uppose you are a scholar living around 90 AD and want to write a gospel of Jesus. You don’t know anything about Jesus, but you have copies of the gospels of Mark, Matthew, and Luke to use as source material. Much of what you write is copied from the previous gospels, although you make small changes in style and editing, sometimes inserting subtle changes in the order and progression of events and in the dialogue. However, you want your story to stand out in some way, so you decide to invent a pleasant story to make Jesus seem even more spectacular than he’s been presented previously. Here is the new material you add to your gospel: Andrew 12: 10-24 The next day, Jesus and his disciples entered Kursi on the east coast of the Sea of Galilee. Jesus commanded his disciples to say nothing to anyone as he was fatigued from the previous day’s travel and large crowds. But as they entered the city, a man who walked with a limp recognized him