Jason Gastrich
New Member
Jesus was given fermented wine which was also called vinegar. According to the Greek words, in all of the gospels, this is consistent. Mark mentions myrrh and Matthew mentions gall being mixed with this fermented wine. These are synonymous because both came from a tree and were used for the same purposes.Originally posted by Charles Meadows:
Jason,
Was it vinegar or wine with myrrh?
Simply because John didn't mention it being mixed, this isn't a contradiction. It is an omission and expected from a different person's perspective.
Mark 15:25 says the third hour.At what hour of the day was Jesus crucified?
John 19:14 clearly says it was "about the sixth hour." In this verse, there are even distinct Greek words used for "about," "sixth" and "hour." John forgot his watch, so he had to estimate.
All of these accounts mention an inscription that was written in Latin, Greek, and Hebrew. Mark and Luke record it saying "The King of the Jews." Matthew records, "Jesus the King of the Jews." John records, "Jesus of Nazareth, King of the Jews." These differences are negligible and are not contradicting. A disagreement or contradiction would be one saying, "Jesus of Lebanon, King of the Greeks." All of the gospels record similar and congruent statements.EXACTLY what did the inscription on the cross say?
Citation: these answers were taken from my full rebuttal to The Skeptic's Annotated Bible; which is an exhaustive atheist commentary on the Bible. See here for more answers: http://skepticsannotatedbible.org (e.g. free sample, examples, etc.).
God bless,
Jason