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How Were the Gospels Written? The most difficult intellectual problem in human history. Experience with Jesus. Sources. Peter. Matt. Luke. John. Mark. Traditional view. How Were the Gospels Written? The most difficult intellectual problem in human history. Experience with Jesus. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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Matt Luke John Mark Source s Peter Traditional view Experience with Jesus How Were the Gospels Written? The most difficult intellectual problem in human history
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Page 1: Matt

Matt Luke JohnMark

Sources Peter

Traditional view

Experience with Jesus

How Were the Gospels Written?The most difficult intellectual problem in human history

Page 2: Matt
Page 3: Matt

Matt Luke JohnMark

Sources Peter

Traditional view

Experience with Jesus

How Were the Gospels Written?The most difficult intellectual problem in human history

ProblemsToo many differences: Lord’s prayer (69 & 143), Beatitudes (65)Too many similarities: Isaiah quote (24)

Page 4: Matt

Mark Q

Matt Luke

Experience with Jesus

Peter

Two-Source Theory

“Matthew and Luke used Mark and Q to write their gospels.”

John

Page 5: Matt

Two-Source Theory

“Matthew and Luke used Mark and Q to write their gospels.”

The two-source theory depends on two ideas:1. Mark was the first gospel2. There was a document called Q. (Q existed.)

Page 6: Matt

1.Mark is the first gospelA. Mark is shorter.

1068

661

1149

Matt Mark Luke

Later works tend to be longer.

Page 7: Matt

1.Mark is the first gospelA. Mark is shorter.

1068

661

1149

Matt Mark Luke

1)Matthew contains 92% of Mark, but Mark only contains 50% of Matthew

Later works tend to be longer.

Page 8: Matt

1.Mark is the first gospelA. Mark is shorter.

1068

661

1149

Matt Mark Luke

1)Matthew contains 92% of Mark, but Mark only contains 49% of Matthew

606 500

Later works tend to be longer.

Page 9: Matt

1.Mark is the first gospelA. Mark is shorter. Later works tend to be longer.

1068

661

1149

Matt Mark Luke

1)Matthew contains 92% of Mark, but Mark only contains 49% of Matthew

2)Luke contains 48% of Mark, but Mark contains only 28% of Luke

606 500

325 325

Page 10: Matt

1.Mark is the first gospelA. Mark is shorter. Later works tend to be longer.B. Mark’s order is primary

Page 11: Matt

1.Mark is the first gospelA. Mark is shorter. Later works tend to be longer.B. Mark’s order is primary

Sometimes they all agree (pericope 83)

Page 12: Matt

1.Mark is the first gospelA. Mark is shorter. Later works tend to be longer.B. Mark’s order is primary

Sometimes Matthew and Mark agree against Luke (pericope 81)

Page 13: Matt

1.Mark is the first gospelA. Mark is shorter. Later works tend to be longer.B. Mark’s order is primary

Sometimes Mark and Luke agree against Matthew (pericopes 94-5)

Page 14: Matt

1.Mark is the first gospelA. Mark is shorter. Later works tend to be longer.B. Mark’s order is primary

But Matthew and Luke never agree against Mark

Page 15: Matt

1.Mark is the first gospelA. Mark is shorter. Later works tend to be longer.B. Mark’s order is primaryC. Matthew and Luke improve Mark’s style

1)They improve his vocabulary 240

Page 16: Matt

1.Mark is the first gospelA. Mark is shorter. Later works tend to be longer.B. Mark’s order is primaryC. Matthew and Luke improve Mark’s style

1)They improve his vocabulary 2402)They remove the historical present 187

Page 17: Matt

1.Mark is the first gospelA. Mark is shorter. Later works tend to be longer.B. Mark’s order is primaryC. Matthew and Luke improve Mark’s style

1)They improve his vocabulary 2402)They remove the historical present 1873)They remove the Aramaic sayings 95

Page 18: Matt

1.Mark is the first gospelA. Mark is shorter. Later works tend to be longer.B. Mark’s order is primaryC. Matthew and Luke improve Mark’s style

1)They improve his vocabulary 2402)They remove the historical present 1873)They remove the Aramaic sayings 954)They remove redundancies 49

Page 19: Matt

1.Mark is the first gospelA. Mark is shorter. Later works tend to be longer.B. Mark’s order is primaryC. Matthew and Luke improve Mark’s style

1)They improve his vocabulary 2402)They remove the historical present 1873)They remove the Aramaic sayings 954)They remove redundancies 49

2.Q existed

1068

661

1149

Matt Mark Luke

606 500

325 325

Page 20: Matt

1.Mark is the first gospelA. Mark is shorter. Later works tend to be longer.B. Mark’s order is primaryC. Matthew and Luke improve Mark’s style

1)They improve his vocabulary 2402)They remove the historical present 1873)They remove the Aramaic sayings 954)They remove redundancies 49

2.Q existedA. Quelle means source in German

1068

661

1149

Matt Mark Luke

606 500

325 325

Page 21: Matt

1.Mark is the first gospelA. Mark is shorter. Later works tend to be longer.B. Mark’s order is primaryC. Matthew and Luke improve Mark’s style

1)They improve his vocabulary 2402)They remove the historical present 1873)They remove the Aramaic sayings 954)They remove redundancies 49

2.Q existedA. Quelle means source in GermanB. Q means 250 non-Markan verses that Matthew and Luke share

1068

661

1149

Matt Mark Luke

606 500

325 325

Q

Q

Page 22: Matt

1.Mark is the first gospelA. Mark is shorter. Later works tend to be longer.B. Mark’s order is primaryC. Matthew and Luke improve Mark’s style

1)They improve his vocabulary 2402)They remove the historical present 1873)They remove the Aramaic sayings 954)They remove redundancies 49

2.Q existedA. Quelle means source in GermanB. Q means 250 non-Markan verses that Matthew and Luke shareC. These verses are practically identical, yet they appear in different

contexts in Matthew and in Luke.

661

Matt Mark Luke

606 500

325 325

Q

Q


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