The Four Gospels: a Quick Overview | Whiteboard Bible Study
The first four books of the Bible's New Testament cover the story of one person: Jesus of Nazareth. These books are called "gospels," and are named after their (traditional) authors. But what is a "gospel," and why do we have four of them? The gospels are four books in the Bible that tell the story of Jesus. They cover this story from a variety of perspectives, but they all hit on a few major points: 1. A person named Jesus is endorsed by God. 2. Jesus works miracles and teaches people. 3. Jesus is unjustly executed. 4. Jesus rises from the dead—validating his claims. To followers of Jesus, this is good news—which is what the word "gospel" means. Jesus' followers preserved four documents about his life, death, and resurrection in the Christian Bible: the gospels of Matthew, Mark, Luke, and John. This video gives a high-level introduction to each of these gospels. Learn more at: https://overviewbible.com/four-gospels/

The Gospel of Matthew: Overview | Whiteboard Bible Study

Every Gospel Explained: Why God Didn't Write Just One

Who Wrote the Gospels?

Did the Gospels Copy Each Other?

Why are there 4 Gospels? And what's the difference? (Video 8: "Bible Study for Beginners" series)

Genesis: a Quick Overview | Whiteboard Bible Study

Gospel of Matthew Summary: A Complete Animated Overview (Part 1)

The 66 Books of the Bible: a Quick Overview

The Gospel

Orthodox vs Catholic vs Protestant

The 4 Gospels Explained - Theological Bible Study Notes & Teaching

Why did God give us four Gospels? | Matthew Mark Luke and John | GotQuestions.org

Why do Catholics and Protestants have different books in their Bibles?

Why Jesus Caught Exactly 153 Fish — The Number No Scholar Can Ignore

Leviticus: A Quick Overview | Whiteboard Bible Study

Every Gospel Explained: Why God Gave Us Four Portraits of Jesus

What the First Word of Genesis Actually Says in Hebrew

Differences Between The Four Gospels In The Bible (Matthew, Mark, Luke, John)

How John is different from Matthew, Mark, and Luke --- And Why It Matters

