Millard, argues that written reports about Jesus could have been made during his lifetime
When it comes to conjecture, i reply sure...."could have been made" but if there had wouldn't someone also write that down "recorded by Isaac at the time Yeshua spoke"
A quick ask of Ai...
Two thousand years ago, people primarily used wax tablets and papyrus scrolls to record information.
Wax Tablets (Tabulae): Romans used wooden frames filled with wax, inscribing notes with a metal stylus. These were ideal for drafting speeches or taking quick notes because the wax could be smoothed over and reused.
Papyrus: For permanent records, scribes used reed pens and ink on papyrus scrolls.
Shorthand: To keep up with live speeches, Romans developed Tironian notes, an early system of shorthand that allowed scribes to record spoken words in real time.
No direct physical evidence or contemporary manuscripts exist of anyone taking live notes during the Sermon on the Mount. Most scholars believe the teachings were preserved through oral tradition and later compiled by the Gospel writers decades after the event.
While the Romans used shorthand (Tironian notes) during that era, there is no historical record of a scribe being present to document the sermon in real time. The Beatitudes appear in different forms and contexts in the Gospels of Matthew and Luke, suggesting they were gathered from shared oral sources or a lost written collection of sayings known as the Q source.
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Back to me...recording of planned speeches or events would have been insuring your scribes (not only literate but ttained in shkrthand) brought their metal stylus and wax tablets (how many do we need, bring them all) that task is not one person but many. And then take it back home before it is lost to the heat, and get the crew with papyrus scrolls to record it.
Idk what world history is but ours say in 1776 the tech had advanced so far as they were still resharpening feather tips and dipping them in ink to try to record...