7/27/2019 Chronologische Indeling Van Het Nieuwe Testament
1/3
chronologische indeling van het Nieuwe Testament
Niet aan elk geschrift in het Nieuwe Testament kan met evenveel zekerheid een datering
gegeven worden. De indeling van [Marcus] Borg die zoveel mogelijk de consensus volgt
is dus niet de enig mogelijke.
1 Tessalonicenzen (ca. 50)Galaten (50-55)
1 Korintirs (ca. 54)
Filemon (ca. 55)
Fillipenzen (ca. 55)
2 Korintirs (ca. 55-58)
Romeinen (ca. 58)
Marcus (ca. 70)
Jakobus (70-90)
Kolossenzen (80-90)
Mattes (80-95)
HebreenJohannes (ca. 90)
Efezirs (ca. 90)
Openbaring (90-100)
Judas (ca. 100)
1-3 Johannes (ca. 100)
Lucas-Handelingen (100-120)
2 Tessalonicenzen (ca. 100)
1 Petrus (90-100)
1-2 Timotes, Titus (100-120)
2 Petrus (120-150)
Cor Hoogerwerf
A chronological New Testament is different from and yet the same as the New Testament
familiar to Christians. It contains the same 27 documents, but sequences them in the
chronological order in which they were written.
The familiar New Testament begins with the Gospels and concludes with Revelation for
obvious reasons. Jesus is the central figure of Christianity and so the New Testament beginswith Matthew, Mark, Luke and John. Revelation is about "the last things" and the second
coming of Jesus, so it makes sense that it comes at the end. Revelation and the Gospels
function as bookends for the New Testament. Everything else comes between: Acts, 13 letters
attributed to Paul, and eight attributed to other early Christian figures.
A chronological New Testament sequences the documents very differently. Its order is based
on contemporary mainstream biblical scholarship. Though there is uncertainty about dating
some of the documents, there is a scholarly consensus about the basic framework.
It begins with seven letters attributed to Paul, all from the 50s. The first Gospel is Mark (not
Matthew), written around 70. Revelation is not last, but almost in the middle, written in the
7/27/2019 Chronologische Indeling Van Het Nieuwe Testament
2/3
90s. Twelve documents follow Revelation, with II Peter the last, written as late as near the
middle of the second century.
A chronological New Testament is not only about sequence, but also about chronological
context -- the context-in-time, the historical context in which each document was written.
Words have their meaning within their temporal contexts, in the New Testament and the Bibleas a whole.
Seeing and reading the New Testament in chronological sequence matters for historical
reasons. It illuminates Christian origins. Much becomes apparent:
Beginning with seven of Paul's letters illustrates that there were vibrant Christian
communities spread throughout the Roman Empire before there were written Gospels.
His letters provide a "window" into the life of very early Christian communities.
Placing the Gospels after Paul makes it clear that as written documents they are not the
source of early Christianity but its product. The Gospel -- the good news -- of and
about Jesus existed before the Gospels. They are the products of early Christiancommunities several decades after Jesus' historical life and tell us how those
communities saw his significance in their historical context.
Reading the Gospels in chronological order beginning with Mark demonstrates that
early Christian understandings of Jesus and his significance developed. As Matthew
and Luke used Mark as a source, they not only added to Mark but often modified
Mark.
Seeing John separated from the other Gospels and relatively late in the New Testament
makes it clear how different his Gospel is. In consistently metaphorical and symbolic
language, it is primarily "witness" or "testimony" to what Jesus had become in the life
and thought of John's community.
Realizing that many of the documents are from the late first and early second centuries
allows us to glimpse developments in early Christianity in its third and fourth
generations. In general, they reflect a trajectory that moves from the radicalism of
Jesus and Paul to increasing accommodation with the cultural conventions of the time.
Awareness of the above matters not just for historical reasons but also for Christian reasons.
American Christianity today is deeply divided. At the heart of the division, especially among
Protestants, is two very different ways of seeing the Bible and the New Testament. About half
of American Protestants belong to churches that teach that the Bible is the inerrant "Word of
God" and "inspired by God."
The key word is "inerrant." Christians from antiquity onward have affirmed that the Bible is
"the Word of God" and "inspired" without thinking of it is inerrant. Biblical inerrancy is an
innovation of the last few centuries, becoming widespread in American Protestantism
beginning only a hundred years ago. It is affirmed mostly in "independent" Protestant
churches, those not part of "mainline" Protestant denominations. Catholics have never
proclaimed the inerrancy or infallibility of the Bible, even as many have not been taught much
about the Bible.
Biblical inerrancy is almost always combined with the literal and absolute interpretation of the
Bible. If it says something happened, it happened. If the Bible says something is wrong, it iswrong.
7/27/2019 Chronologische Indeling Van Het Nieuwe Testament
3/3
For Christians who see the Bible this way, whatever Paul wrote to his communities in the first
century is absolutely true for all time. For them, whatever the Gospels report that Jesus said
and did really was said and done by him. So also the stories of the beginning and end of his
life are literally and factually true: he was conceived in a virgin without a human father, his
tomb really was empty even though it was guarded by Roman soldiers, and his followers saw
him raised in physical bodily form.
These Christians are unlikely to embrace a chronological New Testament. It would not only
change the way the see the Bible and the New Testament, but also make them suspect and
probably unwelcome in the Christian communities to which they belong.
There are also many Christians, as well as many who have left the church, for whom the
inerrancy of the Bible and its literal and absolute interpretation are unpersuasive, incredible,
impossible to believe. For these Christians, as well as others interested in the origins of
Christianity, a chronological New Testament, I trust, can be interesting, helpful and
illuminating.
Top Related