This is a matter of some debate. On the face of it, the answer would be Matthew and John. However, many scholars would say that ascribing these books to actual apostles is wrong - they would say that they were written by followers of Matthew of John and contain the stories and teachings of these two apostles, but that the apostles themselves did not write these books.
Luke is written by a physician friend of Paul, and claims to a thoroughly researched account of all that Jesus said and did. Luke derives its apostolic authority from Paul.
Mark is held to be the first gospel written and may have been written by the Mark who accompanied Paul on his missionary journeys. The ancient tradition held that Mark is associated with Peter - perhaps he was Peter's interpreter in Rome - and Mark obtains its apostolic heritage from Peter.
Quite a few gospels are known to have been written, most of them attributed to various of the apostles although biblical scholars say that none of the apostles really wrote any of the gospels. Only four gospels were selected for inclusion in the Bible - Matthew, Mark, Luke and John.
Matthew and Mark are the only 2 Apostles of Gospels.
-----------------------There were many gospels written, and four of these were selected for inclusion in the New Testament - the gospels now known as Matthew, Mark, Luke and John. These gospels were originally written anonymously and only attributed by the Church Fathers to the apostles whose names they now bear, later in the second century. However, scholars say that there is no good reason to believe that these gospels were really written by the apostles, and in fact they could not have been written by eyewitnesses to the events they portray. The gospels were written in completely different styles and contain some passages that define very different theologies, so they were certainly written by separate authors.So: the four gospels of the Bible had four different authors, but we do not actually know who they were.
Of the 4 Evangelists who are credited with writing the 4 Gospels, only Matthew and John were Apostles. Mark accompanied Peter in his travels while Luke, an historian and doctor, accompanied Paul.
Hundreds of gospels were written, but only 4 (Gospels of Matthew, Mark, Luke, & John) were chosen to be in the Bible.
Quite a few gospels are known to have been written, most of them attributed to various of the apostles although biblical scholars say that none of the apostles really wrote any of the gospels. Only four gospels were selected for inclusion in the Bible - Matthew, Mark, Luke and John.
Acts of the Apostles.
Matthew and Mark are the only 2 Apostles of Gospels.
-----------------------There were many gospels written, and four of these were selected for inclusion in the New Testament - the gospels now known as Matthew, Mark, Luke and John. These gospels were originally written anonymously and only attributed by the Church Fathers to the apostles whose names they now bear, later in the second century. However, scholars say that there is no good reason to believe that these gospels were really written by the apostles, and in fact they could not have been written by eyewitnesses to the events they portray. The gospels were written in completely different styles and contain some passages that define very different theologies, so they were certainly written by separate authors.So: the four gospels of the Bible had four different authors, but we do not actually know who they were.
The book that comes after the Gospels in the New Testament is the Acts of the Apostles.
The Gospels came to be written by man....through God....the gospels are the life of Jesus Christ from birth to his years of ministering to God to his gruesome death....
The 4 Apostles of the Gospels.
Of the 4 Evangelists who are credited with writing the 4 Gospels, only Matthew and John were Apostles. Mark accompanied Peter in his travels while Luke, an historian and doctor, accompanied Paul.
A:The four New Testament gospels are traditionally attributed to the apostles Matthew, Mark, Luke and John, although they were originally anonymous. They were only attributed to the apostles whose names they now bear, later in the second century. However, modern scholars say that there is no good reason for those attributions and that we do not really know who wrote any of the gospels. We could not say whether one of them was written by a teacher.
It was written by the 12 apostles
Acts (Acts of the Apostles) is the book following the Gospels in the Bible. It details the first years of the early church as it became established after the Resurrection of Christ.
A:There were literally dozens of early Christian gospels, some of which were written as if by apostles and some written anonymously, but none actually written by a known apostle of Jesus. Of these, four were included in the New Testament canon. These were originally anonymous, but eventually came to be attributed to Matthew, Mark, Luke and John.