No, Lazarus did not write the Gospel of John. The Gospel of John is traditionally attributed to the apostle John, not Lazarus.
A:Like all the New Testament gospels, John's Gospel was written in Greek Koine.
The Gospel of John.
John Conran has written: 'A journal of the life and gospel labours of John Conran'
The four gospels in the New Testament of the Bible were written by different authors. The Gospel of Matthew was written by Matthew, a disciple of Jesus. The Gospel of Mark was written by Mark, who was a companion of Peter. The Gospel of Luke was written by Luke, a companion of the apostle Paul. The Gospel of John was written by John, one of Jesus's disciples.
We can not say exactly which year each of the New Testament gospels was written, but we can come close. Scholars say that Mark's Gospel was written approxmately 70 CE. Matthew's Gospel is believed to have been written during the 80s CE, although Raymond E Brown (''An Introduction to the New Testament'') cautions to allow a few years either side of that decade. Luke's gospel was written in the 90s of the first century, or early in the second century. John's Gospel was written early in the second century.
The three epistles attributed to John are regarded as comming from the same community as the Gospel According to John, and to have been written shortly after John's Gospel. Thus the Second Epistle of John would have been written fairly early in the second century.
The Gospel of John is traditionally attributed to the Apostle John, one of Jesus' disciples. The three epistles of John are also traditionally believed to have been written by the same author, although the identity of the author is not explicitly mentioned within the texts themselves.
No. John's Gospel was written for all men in all ages that they might believe. It is universal in its intended audience.
John never says "believe in the Gospel of John". John says that his gospel was written: "that you may believe that Jesus is the Christ, the Son of God, and that believing you may have life in His name". .....................John20:31
The Gospel According to St John is the most anti-Jewish of the canonical gospels. In the early 90s of the first century, there was a final split between mainstream Judaism and Christianity, resulting in the Jews being required to revile others (Christians) in the synagogues. Since John's Gospel was probably written in the first decade of the second century, this would be the main reason for the anti-Jewish tenor of John's Gospel.
A:John's Gospel was loosely based on Luke's Gospel, which was in turn based on Mark's Gospel, while there are good grounds for believing that Matthew, also based on Mark, was written some time before Luke. Thus, John was the last New Testament gospel to be written, and is dated to the early decades of the second century.