I
John, who also am your brother, and companion in tribulation, and in
the kingdom and patience of Jesus Christ, was in the isle that is called
Patmos, for the word of God, and for the testimony of Jesus Christ.
//Many readers of my book conclude that I believe John the Apostle wrote
the book of Revelation, and that this John was also John of Gischala
from Josephus’s writings.
No.
I should set the record straight. I do not believe this, nor should
you. In fact, I’m horrible at believing stuff. Which works out just fine
for this line of work, because in writing as a Bible scholar, it’s
important for me to be able to suspend any beliefs I do have, and report
as objectively as possible.
What
I believe is that I have highlighted and presented a reasonable
answer to the question of Revelation’s authorship. Nothing more.
So who do I think
wrote the book? Well, I’m a numbers guy, and as for John of Gischala’s
chances, it’s mostly a matter of measuring the possibility of
coincidence, given the clues. After this study, I’d guess there’s a 50%
chance John of Gischala wrote or dictated it. I’d guess there’s a 40%
chance John the Apostle did. Perhaps there’s a 40% chance neither wrote
it. I’d estimate a 25% chance it was written as or about
John the Apostle, or perhaps hoped that authorship by this John would be
assumed, though not truly written by him. I’d give it a similar 25%
chance that it was in many ways inspired by the real-life
experiences of John of Gischala, though not written by him. Put them all
together, and you get a reasonable chance that authorship has been
determined, and a decent chance the two Johns are the same.
Tomorrow, I will surely change my mind slightly. Such is the nature of ongoing scholarship.
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