The Gospel of John is a theological, not historical text or Gospel. When compared to the texts of Matthew, Mark, and Luke the Gospel of John portrays an entirely different order of key events from the other texts.
One example is the story of the cleansing of the temple in John 2:13-24. In the Gospel of John, it portrays this story as occurring at the beginning of Jesus' alleged ministry. This contradicts the setup of the story in the other texts that put it towards the end of Jesus' alleged ministry. Christians who don't see that this is talking about the same story do not have the reading comprehension to see this for what it is. When Christians approach this story with pre-conceived ideas that there aren't any contradictions in the Gospels and they all harmonize together, they commonly arrive at the conclusion there were two temple cleansings that took place. Pre-conceived bias distorts Christian's reading comprehension in such a case.
Lets dig into this then. If we're taking these things as historical accounts, a temple cleansing at the beginning of a Jesus ministry horrendously contradicts it happening before the end of a Jesus ministry. Christians try to reconcile this by claiming there were two episodes of Jesus cleansing the temple, but none of the texts say there were two episodes of that and it would've been a pretty big ordeal to have recorded both. Instead of recognizing this as a contradiction, you appeal to this pre-conceived idea that the texts all harmonize together and any contradiction is just a misunderstanding, and to go with John as a final authority. Each of the four texts presents one temple cleansing as having happened, and since there's an irreconcilable difference in the placement of when it was supposed to have happened, Christians make up a notion that there were actually two of these events. That's not being intellectually honest. That's trying to twist everything to fit pre-conceived ideas that there aren't contradictions.
No it doesn't.
Next you're going to tell me Jesus' lineages can't possibly be harmonized and there must be a horrible mistake.
If you'd humble yourself before the Most High, you'd at least have a chance of learning something. Without that? All bets are off.
The possibility that anything exists beyond your own ability eludes you.
How doesn't a temple cleansing at the beginning of a Jesus ministry not contradict it happening before the end of a Jesus ministry?
Do you think the genealogy in Matthew is historically accurate or symbolic?
By humbling myself before the Most High, you mean to just shut up and blindly accept whatever you and other men say.
You refuse to read what's written, and prefer to just make shit up.
Good luck with that.
Are you incapable of answering those questions?