Reasons for thinking that no notes were taken while Jesus and apostles were teaching?

Longfellow

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What are some reasons for thinking that it's possible that no one was writing notes about the teachings of Jesus and the apostles while they were teaching, or that it's possible that those were not recopied as needed, until the gospels were written? Considering what I've read about writing practices at the beginning of the first century, that seems inconceivable to me.
 
Reading and Writing in the Time of Jesus, by Alan Millard, argues that written reports about Jesus could have been made during his lifetime and that some among his audiences and followers may very well have kept notes, first-hand documents that the Evangelists could weave into their narratives. Here's a list of arguments that I've found against that:
- Low literacy rate.
- Dominance of oral tradition.
- Weakness of archaeological evidence.
- Writing not mentioned in first-century traditions.
- Rabbinic prohibition against writing oral law.

If anyone can think of or find any other arguments against Millard's view, please post them.
 
If God has the power to create the universe and life, he should also have the power to have the Bible written in the way he intends. However the Bible was written, it is still relevant two thousand years later. My only conclusion is that God had the power of edit. What is written, is written.
 
Update on my thoughts about this: What seems most likely to me now is that the sources for writing the gospels were mostly written, and accurate reproductions of notes written by disciples during the time that Jesus and the apostles were teaching. That says nothing about the accuracy of those notes when they were first written, or about how well the gospels represent them, but it might put some limits on how much people can honestly think was fabricated.
 
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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.

.....

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...
 
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.

.....

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...
Tell me: Do you honestly and sincerely think that it’s at all possible that during the entire time that Jesus and the apostles were teaching, *no one * was writing down what they thought that Jesus and the apostles were saying and doing, and what was happening around them?
 
Tell me: Do you honestly and sincerely think that it’s at all possible that during the entire time that Jesus and the apostles were teaching, *no one * was writing down what they thought that Jesus and the apostles were saying and doing, and what was happening around them?
What have we got with your note takers?

We got a pretty infamous stories about frankincense and myrh....of course those stories are about following a star...and while the implication to most they showed up at birth in a manger...and scholars say not really.

We got a few other stories between birth and 13...those obviously not taken at the time but made up / recalled later....then what 30?

And in three years the Son of G!d got a couple chapters....upgraded to four when Q turns into 3 of the four and then the claim for years was that was proof of truth since the synoptics had so many similarities!

Me thinks the sin is the optics or disinformation based on conjecture declared as gospel so much of which later discredited with investigation.

Don't get me wrong, the beatitudes and gospel of Thomas have some great thought which have helped our world progress (albeit slowly) the past couple thousand years.
 
What have we got with your note takers?

We got a pretty infamous stories about frankincense and myrh....of course those stories are about following a star...and while the implication to most they showed up at birth in a manger...and scholars say not really.

We got a few other stories between birth and 13...those obviously not taken at the time but made up / recalled later....then what 30?

And in three years the Son of G!d got a couple chapters....upgraded to four when Q turns into 3 of the four and then the claim for years was that was proof of truth since the synoptics had so many similarities!

Me thinks the sin is the optics or disinformation based on conjecture declared as gospel so much of which later discredited with investigation.

Don't get me wrong, the beatitudes and gospel of Thomas have some great thought which have helped our world progress (albeit slowly) the past couple thousand years.
I agree that if there were notes about the wise men or about his childhood, they probably were not taken at the times that they allegedly happened. :D
 
I see now that what I'm saying is actually not controversial. No one is willing to even say that it might possibly not be true. There were people taking notes about what Jesus and the apostles were saying and doing, as it was happening, and those notes were recopied as needed, until the gospels were written. "Oral only" does not actually mean oral only. When pressed, scholars say that it actually means mostly oral, with some written memory aids.
 
I see now that what I'm saying is actually not controversial. No one is willing to even say that it might possibly not be true
I pretty much believe there were as many notes taken at the events as there were pictures taken.

While someone may have gone home and got out their quill and papyrus to write down what they remember was said or done... I dont believe there were live note takers at the event.

Judas may have had some method to record where he spent money.
 
I pretty much believe there were as many notes taken at the events as there were pictures taken.

While someone may have gone home and got out their quill and papyrus to write down what they remember was said or done... I dont believe there were live note takers at the event.

Judas may have had some method to record where he spent money.
Thank you.
 
When I first started posting about this, it was only to find out if there were any reasons to doubt it, not to try to convince anyone. Now I’ve decided to try to explain my reasons for what I’m thinking, that some disciples were taking notes all the time that Jesus and the apostles were teaching, and that those notes were recopied as needed, until the gospels were written.

The lowest estimate that I’ve seen for literacy js 3%. That’s 3 out of every hundred. Some people say that was only the elite, as if no one who could write ever became a disciple, but Paul was obviously able to write, and he was a disciple. Besides that, anyone who wants to can learn to write in a phonetic language in a few months at most, well enough for anyone who can read to be able to read it. There were writing materials that would certainly have been available to some disciplines. That means that it was certainly possible for some disciples to write notes, and if they could, certainly some of them would, not only because of how important it would be to them to have them in writing, but because disciples writing notes about what their masters were teaching them was part of the culture.

I’m currently organizing documentation for writing practices at the beginning of the first century, and all the arguments that I can find against what those authors have said. None of the arguments that I’ve seen are not actually arguments against what I’m saying, and half or more actually confirm it.
 
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