Dictating something to a scribe or someone still means that they are the ones who wrote it and not the scribe. Today we even have many celebrities and famous people "write" autobiographies of themselves but with the help of a ghost writer. The ghost writer will get credit and acknowledgement, but it's not their book, the beeok was written by the person who dictated their story to the writer
The Gospel of Matthew was written in the first century A.D. Same century when Matthew was around. Also the Gospel of Matthew was written between 60-70 AD. Matthew died (though debated) around 68 AD. It adds up that Matthew wrote it.
Mathew is so cute
Matthew so suspects Juda.
How dare he be mean to Mathew!
Judas
Funny thing is, historically, Matthew didn't write the Gospel of Matthew. Later church traditions claimed it was Mathew without a shred of evidence.
Dictating something to a scribe or someone still means that they are the ones who wrote it and not the scribe. Today we even have many celebrities and famous people "write" autobiographies of themselves but with the help of a ghost writer. The ghost writer will get credit and acknowledgement, but it's not their book, the beeok was written by the person who dictated their story to the writer
@@Runningtaco And you have independent verifiable proof that Matthew dictated his account to a scribe?
Okay, so who wrote the Gospel of Matthew? You must know who did since you apparently know who didn’t.
@@brycerudge7170 Scholars don't know. The 4 Gospels were all anonymous.
The Gospel of Matthew was written in the first century A.D. Same century when Matthew was around. Also the Gospel of Matthew was written between 60-70 AD. Matthew died (though debated) around 68 AD. It adds up that Matthew wrote it.