The Case For Jesus: The Biblical And Historical... May 2026

He contends that the Gospels are not "folklore" or myths (like the "Telephone game") but are intentional first-century biographies .

Dr Brant Pitre’s (2016) is a popular-level work of Christian apologetics that challenges the widespread scholarly view that the Gospels were originally anonymous and historically unreliable. The Core Arguments The Case for Jesus: The Biblical and Historical...

He demonstrates that Jesus’ claims to divinity are present in all four Gospels—not just John—and can only be understood by looking through a first-century Jewish lens . Critical and Reader Reception He contends that the Gospels are not "folklore"

He argues that the Gospels were never anonymous, citing that no anonymous ancient manuscripts of Matthew, Mark, Luke, or John have ever been found. Critical and Reader Reception He argues that the

Pitre argues for an earlier dating of the Gospels (pre-62 or 70 AD), suggesting they were written while eyewitnesses were still alive.

The book is widely praised by Christian scholars and lay readers for its accessibility and clarity, though it faces pushback from secular or skeptical critics.