Stapel said:Furthermore, you seem to assume that the letters of John are written by John the Baptist?
I've never heared that theory before. It seems rather unlikely that letters written in 100 AD come from the hand of someone born around 0 AD, don't you think?
Not a letter of John that he was citing, but the Gospel of John, which quotes John the Baptist at this point.
Jesus probably did make mistakes. One obvious example that leaps to mind is Mark 13:1-2 where he predicts that not one stone of the Temple will be left standing: you can visit Jerusalem today and see the Wailing Wall, a fairly hefty piece of said Temple that still stands. Of course, you could say that Jesus was referring to some time in the distant future when it will all have fallen down, in which case that's not a very useful prediction, as it surely applies to all such structures.
Another well-known example from the same chapter is Mark 13:30, where Jesus states that the coming of the Son of Man in power will occur before the death of "this generation". Well, I don't think there are any apostles still around, and it doesn't seem to have happened.
What is really notable is not that Jesus should have made mistakes but that the Christian church should have taken this fact in its stride fairly well and carried on anyway. You can trace the changing attitudes to the imminence of the anticipated return of Christ through the New Testament, starting with an early book like 1 Thessalonians, then looking at the later Synoptics, then John 21, then 2 Peter... they show a gradual "adaptation", shall we say, of Jesus' original statements. Jesus' mistakes are only a problem if you have an exaggerated understanding of who Jesus was.