james said:
i read and have heard from educated christian scholars, that the gospel was sent down as word, not a book, and this can be used as an argument when talking sbout the new testament, i read once taht someone was trying to disprove it, but one person said, but it was not told to be written ,jesus didnt say write it, he preeched it. hearing this and watching a programme taht said the new testament was not fully written until about 100 ad i thought, do we know what the true meaning of the gospel is, becasue the one we could be looking at in the bible could just be pick and mix. and the bible is written 'according' to people, doesnt this show that it was written not at the time of jesus or that it was what other people had written it what they wanted?
Here's one way of looking at it:
The Gospel was something the early Christians personally experienced, and was not written down on paper, as a written account of the Gospel did not exist at the time. The faith was spread orally by people simply explaining how they felt about Christ and what he meant to them. It came from deep within their heart and soul. But they knew that the faith couldn't be handed down from generation to generation just by word of mouth. It's a bit hard to convey your experiences to another person, so they chose a number of written texts that future generations could read if they wanted to learn about the Gospel.
The purpose of the New Testament is to remind us of what these early Christians experienced. The NT explains what these early Christians experienced. The NT doesn't define the Gospel in solid, concrete terms. It simply explains what it meant to people back then. The Gospel is something you experience personally, but not something anyone is supposed to define.
Not all written texts were written to convey this experience. There are those texts that were written by people who honestly and genuinely experienced the Gospel. But there were also others who simply wrote fantastically-sounding ideas that didn't really come from a genuine experience of the Gospel.
The fake documents were perhaps those that didn't come from a real experience of the Gospel, but people who had big-shot ideas and egos to fulfil. It's possible that some did have a "genuine experience" of some sort, but an experience that wasn't an experience of the Gospel.
The question of how we can tell which ones are fake and which ones are genuine depictions of the Gospel is perhaps also a question of whether we experience, from reading a text, a reinforcement of what the Gospel is supposed to mean. If all the texts in the NT come from people with a genuine experience of the Gospel, then what we have in the Bible is something we can really work with.
No solid answers here. The idea that the Gospel revolves around what you experience is one way of looking at it.
It's my view that the Gospel must be personally experienced. Getting people to follow a creed, to follow doctrine is pointless if it isn't personal and doesn't mean anything to the people who are told to believe in it. In that sense, creeds and doctrines can be dangerous, and experience is the only real measure of "truth." Creeds and doctrine don't lead to a personal experience of the Gospel. Experience is the only way to really understand the Gospel. We can pick on the details, but it's more important that we have a feel for what the Gospel is supposed to mean.