Why are there so many gospels (27 I think) that were left out of the Bible? I remember a while ago there was talk about the Gospel of Judas, but that died out quickly it seems. How were the 4 current gospels chosen to be placed in the Bible and what makes the other's unworthy? To me this seems like in the early church there was some picking and choosing to make sure the Bible didn't contradict itself (though it still does quite a bit) and that this elimination of books would be reason against believing the Bible is divinely inspired. I'm not completly sure on the origin of the Bible though, so my thoughts might be off. I'd appreciate it if someone could enlighten me.
Hi, well, it is a complex answer to your questions. I know that guy made a giant copy and paste. Prior to St. Irenaeus, there were no people who used the names "Matthew, Mark, Luke, and John" for the 4 gospels in the bible we have. Irenaeus named them, after he chose them as the 4 gospels for christians to read. The reason he chose 4 was because he thought there were 4 winds in the earth and it should be uniform to it. Also, because they were so similar, that helped his choice. The problem is that Mark is so much shorter in words than Matthew, Luke and John. There was also a document named "Q" which was where the 4 gospels got their sources for the teachings Jesus had.
Given the specific mention of Jerusalem's destruction in Mark 13, which occurred in 70 AD, then it makes sense to suggest that Mark's gospel was written at some time after 70 AD. This means that Matthew, Luke and John must have come after 70 AD as well, since they borrow from Mark. The thing is that christians have admitted that Mark was a 3rd generation author (meaning after 3 generations of christians, the author wrote the story). This means it is not an eyewitness account. Therefore, we have to conclude that neither are any of the other 3 gospels.
As far as why they kept the 4 gospels but didn't include others is political. The "canon" ultimately was decided by Constantine. Although there are a variety of Christians in history who have decided that some books were "inspired" and others were not. Martin Luther hated the book of James and changed what he didn't like in Romans (by adding "alone" to faith). The coptic christians had a letter called 3rd Corinthians. The catholics used the Gospel of James as their source for the Immaculate conception (the life of Mary before Jesus). The reason catholics didn't include the gospel of James was because if they put it before the other gospels, it would give Mary pre-eminence over Jesus, which they didn't want to do. So, they were stuck with leaving it out, but using its concepts.
Also, there are apocryphal books which Christians have divided over.
Ultimately, this leads to the question....why would an all powerful and all knowing god use the DUMBEST method of conveying a message? Don't forget, the church fathers admitted to changing what they wanted. If they were so willing to forge the writings of Josephus when referring to Jesus, how much more would they do it with scripture? The best we have are copies of copies of copies, which have interpolations, false prophecies, pseudo-authorship, and then they are poorly translated on top of it.
There are some translations which are better than others of course.
The entire process of writing scripture was to notate oral tradition and stories onto a more permanent format. However, because the "paper" they wrote on didn't last very long as far as quality goes, they had to make exact copies of it to keep it going. That is what scribes did. The one thing you don't want to do however is assume that the christian tradition and orthodoxy is automatically correct. An example of christian tradition is the idea that Paul wrote all the epistles attributed to him. Yet, only 8 of the 13 letters can be verified to being the same author. In other words, if Paul did write more than 1 letter, there are only 8 that can be verified. That means 5 of them are pseudo-graphs (false authorship). It was a habit of early religious leaders in christianity to use an apostle's pen name to make it seem authoritarian. Even the new testament warns about people pretending to be apostles who send letters. So, some of this truth is found directly in the bible.
So, I hope that helps and my advice is to take a college course on religion, where you can learn the process of canonization of the bible. Make sure it is a non-religious school, so there is a neutral bias and only the facts are presented.
Have a good day.