richardMdBorn wrote:GoodK wrote:richardMdBorn wrote:What are the important things we don't not know about Luke?GoodK wrote:richardMdBorn wrote:Do you think that the writer of Luke/Acts is an unknown author?GoodK wrote:and I think that real authors are more reliable than unknown authors. I don't think the gospels should count as evidence at all.
Yes I do.
I'll have to spend more time on this question, but before I do, who wrote Luke/Acts? Can we agree that the authorship is unknown?Bruce Metzger, The New Testament its background, growth and content,The chief source for our knowledge of the primitive church is the anonymous treatise known as the Acts of the Apostles, which now stand s in the NTY as an appropriate link between the preceding four Gospels and the following 21 letters. Because it is dedicated to Theophilus, the same person to which the Gospel of Luke is addressed (Acts 1:1; Lk 1:1-4), and because the style and vocabulary of both books are strikingly similar, it is generally held that the two were written by the same author. According to early tradition this was Luke, a physician and companion of the apostle Paul (Col. 4:14, II Tim. 4:11; Philemon. 24). From the way in which Paul mentions Luke, seeming to differentiate him from those who are Jewish background (Col. 4:11 compared to verses 12-14), it appears that Luke is of Gentile birth. If so, he is the only known Gentile whose writings are included in the Bible. According to a tradition preserved in a second-century prologue to the third Gospel, Luke was a Syrian of Antioch, who became a Christian convert in mid-life after the church had been established at Antioch.
170.
According to Church tradition seems to be the answer based on the quote above. Is that right?