Showing posts with label Michael J. Kruger. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Michael J. Kruger. Show all posts

Wednesday, July 24, 2013

10 Basic Facts About the NT Canon that Every Christian Should Memorize

New Testament scholar Michael J. Kruger has been working through a blog series entitled 10 Basic Facts About the New Testament Canon that Every Christian Should Memorize. Check out his book Canon Revisited: Establishing the Origins and Authority of the New Testament Books for more. Hear the interview with Michael Kruger here.
  1. The New Testament Books are the Earliest Christian Writings We Possess
  2. Apocryphal Writings Are All Written in the Second Century or Later
  3. The New Testament Books Are Unique Because They Are Apostolic Books
  4.   Some NT Writers Quote Other NT Writers as Scripture
  5.   The Four Gospels are Well Established by the End of the Second Century
  6.   At the End of the 2nd Century, the Muratorian Fragment lists 22 of 27 NT Books
  7.   Early Christians Often Used Non-Canonical Writings
  8.   The NT Canon Was Not Decided at Nicea—Nor Any Other Church Council
  9.   Christians Did Disagree about the Canonicity of Some NT Books
  10.   Early Christians Believed that Canonical Books Were Self-Authenticating
Enjoy.

Thursday, April 25, 2013

Michael Kruger Interview on the Canon of Scripture

In this audio, Jonathan Morrow of ThinkChristianly interviews Michael J. Kruger on the canon of scripture. Kruger's most recent book is Canon Revisited: Establishing the Origins and Authority of the New Testament Books. (Apologetics 315 interviewed Kruger here.) This is another helpful interview looking at the formation of the canon and why we have the books of the Bible that we do.

Interview Audio here. ThinkChristianly podcast here.
Michael Kruger's blog here.
Enjoy.

Thursday, December 13, 2012

10 Misconceptions About the NT Canon by Michael Kruger

New Testament scholar Michael J. Kruger has been working through a blog series entitled 10 Misconceptions About the New Testament Canon. This series exams some common beliefs out there in the academic (and lay-level) communities that prove to be problematic upon closer examination. Here is the complete list of posts over at his blog Canon Fodder. Check out his book Canon Revisited: Establishing the Origins and Authority of the New Testament Books for more. Hear the interview with Michael Kruger here.
  1. The Term “Canon” Can Only Refer to a Fixed, Closed List of Books
  2. Nothing in Early Christianity Dictated That There Would be a Canon
  3. The New Testament Authors Did Not Think They Were Writing Scripture
  4. New Testament Books Were Not Regarded as Scriptural Until Around 200 A.D.
  5. Early Christians Disagreed Widely over the Books Which Made It into the Canon
  6. In the Early Stages, Apocryphal Books Were as Popular as the Canonical Books
  7. Christians Had No Basis to Distinguish Heresy from Orthodoxy Until the Fourth Century
  8. Early Christianity was an Oral Religion and Therefore Would Have Resisted Writing Things Down
  9. The Canonical Gospels Were Certainly Not Written by the Individuals Named in Their Titles
  10. Athanasius’ Festal Letter (367 A.D.) is the First Complete List of New Testament Books
Enjoy.

Wednesday, November 14, 2012

Interview Transcript: Michael J. Kruger


The following transcript is from an Apologetics 315 interview with Michael J. Kruger. Original audio here. If you enjoy transcripts, please consider supporting, which makes this possible.

BA: Hello, this is Brian Auten of Apologetics 315. Today's interview is with Professor of New Testament, Dr. Michael J. Kruger. Dr. Kruger teaches at Reformed Theological Seminary in Charlotte, NC. His area of expertise is in the development of the New Testament canon, the Gospels, and the development of early Christianity. His latest book is Canon Revisited: Establishing the Origins, and Authority of the New Testament Books.

The purpose of today's interview is to learn more about the formation of the New Testament canon, the writing of the Gospels, and gain some insights from Dr. Kruger about understanding and defending the Gospel canon.

Well thanks for joining me for this interview, Dr. Kruger.

MK: Thanks, Brian. Good to be with you.

Monday, September 10, 2012

Apologist Interview: Michael J. Kruger

Today's interview is with Michael J. Kruger, Professor of New Testament at Reformed Theological Seminary in Charlotte, NC. He talks about his background in New Testament studies, his new book on the canon, Canon Revisited: Establishing the Origins and Authority of the New Testament Books, the nature of the Bible, the meaning and formation of the canon, criteria of canonicity and attributes of canonicity, "other gospels," the apocrypha, how we can know what books belong in the Bible, advice for Christian apologists, and more. Dr. Kruger's blog is here.

Full Interview MP3 Audio here (42 min)

Enjoy.
Subscribe to the Apologetics 315 Interviews podcast here or in iTunes.

Wednesday, July 18, 2012

Lectures on the Canon by Michael J. Kruger

Michael J. Kruger, author of Canon Revisited: Establishing the Origins and Authority of the New Testament Books, and professor of New Testament at Reformed Theological Seminary, Charlotte, NC presents four lectures on the origins and development of the Canon. These are part of the Kistemaker Lecture Series, RTS-Orlando, March 2012.

The Definition of ‘Canon’: Exclusive or Multi-Dimensional?
The Origins of Canon: Was the Idea of a New Testament a Late Ecclesiastical Development?
The Artifacts of Canon: Manuscripts as a Window into the Development of the New Testament
The Messiness of the Canon: Do Disagreements Amongst Early Christians Pose a Threat to Our Belief in the New Testament?

Enjoy.

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