Site Navigation
Categories:
Synoptic problem
Biblical criticism
Problems
Articles needing additional references from December 2007
Wikipedia articles needing clarification

Summary Of: Synoptic problem

The synoptic problem concerns how this interrelation came to be and the nature of the interrelationship itself... brief overview of current speculative solutions to the Synoptic Problem including scholarly thought first proposed in the 1800s and traveling back through traditional church history... they are quite peripheral to the Synoptic Problem as to how the canonical gospels are interrelated... This area of the synoptic problem has thus been riddled with reversible and inconclusive arguments... The Importance of the Synoptic Problem for Interpreting the Gospels...

Encyclodia Page On: Synoptic problem

These Are Links To Other Documents
| citations | verification | reliable references | challenged | The Two-Source hypothesis suggests that the Gospel of Mark was written first.  Meanwhile, there was a second source, which scholars refer to as the Q document. The Gospels of Matthew and Luke were then written independently,  each using Mark and Q as a source. | | Two-Source hypothesis | Gospel of Mark | Q document | canonical gospels | Mark | Matthew | Luke | Synoptic Gospels | The Bible | | Biblical canon | books | Tanakh | Torah | Nevi'im | Ketuvim | Old Testament | Hebrew Bible | New Testament | New Covenant | Deuterocanon | Antilegomena | Chapters & verses | Apocrypha | Jewish | OT | NT | authorship | Panbabylonism | Jewish Canon | Old Testament canon | New Testament canon | Mosaic authorship | Pauline epistles | Johannine works | Translations | manuscripts | Septuagint | Samaritan Pentateuch | Dead Sea scrolls | Targums | Peshitta | Vetus Latina | Vulgate | Masoretic text | Gothic Bible | Luther Bible | English Bibles | Biblical studies | Dating the Bible | Biblical criticism | Higher criticism | Textual criticism | Novum Testamentum Graece | NT textual categories | Documentary hypothesis | Historicity‎ | Internal Consistency | Archeology | Hermeneutics | Pesher | Midrash | Pardes | Allegorical | Literalism | Prophecy | Inerrancy | Infallibility | Criticism | Islamic | Qur'anic | Gnostic | Judaism and Christianity | Law in Christianity | view | talk | | Bible portal | two-source hypothesis | Q | Gospel of Thomas | Holtzmann's | Burnett Hillman Streeter | Four-Source Hypothesis | Farrer hypothesis | Griesbach hypothesis | Augustinian hypothesis | John Wenham | Roman Catholic | Aramaic | Greek | Griesbach hypothesis | Christian | Bible | inspired | Holy Spirit | John the Baptist | pericopes | Almost all of Mark's content is found in Matthew, and much of Mark is similarly found in Luke.  Additionally, Matthew and Luke have a large amount of material in common that is not found in Mark. | Lachmann | Markan priority | Augustinian hypothesis | Griesbach Hypothesis | Q | clarify | Jewish | Two-source hypothesis | Q document | B.H. Streeter | PDF | KB | Categories | Synoptic problem | Biblical criticism | Problems | Articles needing additional references from December 2007 | Wikipedia articles needing clarification |
This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Synoptic problem".