In his influential work, The Synoptic Problem: A Critical Analysis (1976), William R. Farmer makes the following observations as they pertain to the history, nature and relationship between the Synoptic Gospels:
First, he traces the historical issues about how the Griesbach hypothesis was rejected to the adaptation of the two-source theory; this was due in contention against the Tubingen School hypothesis. He maintains that Matthew is the earliest Gospel to be written, followed by Luke, and Mark precedes the second Gospel. In other words, he rejects the priority of the Gospel of Mark that is now embraced by the majority of NT scholars. Luke is dependent upon Matthew for its general order and form of his Gospel (201). Mark is an abridged version of Matthew and Luke. In this case, the order is as follows: Matthew, Luke, Mark.For literary evidence clearly demonstrates Mark's reliance on and familiarity with Matthew's and Luke's Gospels. On the other hand, he suggests that Matthew and Luke probably used one or more written sources in producing their Gospels. Luke used Matthew, he argues. In conclusion, Farmer notes, "The similarity between Matthew, Mark, and Luke is such as to justify the assertion that they stand in some kind of literary relationship to one another... (202) There are eighteen and only eighteen fundamental ways in which three documents, among which there exists some kind of direct literary dependence, may be related to one another" (208).
Robert Stein (my former Biblical Hermeneutics teacher), in his helpful introduction to the Synotpic Gospels ("Studying the Synoptic Gospels: Origin and Interpretation," 2001), reiterates the old argument for Markan priority, this time with more precision. First, Stein outlines four common features that stand out in his investigation of the the Synoptic problem: (1) Agreement in wording, (2) Agreement in Order, (3) Agreement in Parenthetical Material, and (4) Usual Literary Agreements. This positin, in essense, assumes that the Gospels of Mark, Matthew and Luke respectively reflect some common literary [inter-] dependence in terms of their sayings/words used, their order of reported accounts, events, an discourses, and their parenthetical notes underlined by the three Evangelists. As for a Markan priority, Stein argues that Mark is the shortest Gospel (The Argument from Length), Mark exhibits a poorer writing style (The Argument from Grammar), Mark's redundancy (repetition) is also an issue. Moreover, Mark's reading is harder than the other two Gospels (excluding John), his descriptions of the disciples are sufficiently negative, the Gospel of Mark demonstrates primitive theology of the earliest Christianity, the argument from redactionism, the argument from literary agreements, and the arguments from verbal agreements and order as we have already remarked, all contribute to the priority of Mark (19-97). That the Gospel according to Mark was the first to be written.
Tuesday, January 6, 2009
Farmer and Stein on the Relationship Between the Synoptics
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Celucien L. Joseph
at
1/06/2009 07:33:00 PM
Labels: NT Scholars, NT Studies Issues, The Four Gospels, The Synoptic Gospels
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5 comments:
Thanks for that summary, Lou. I was working on a notion last summer that Matthew took notes occasionally, which Mark and Luke used as source material, after which Matthew himself decided to craft a more complete composition, having developed more particular motivations for doing so in the first years after Paul's Caesarean imprisonment (when Luke also researched and began writing).
If you're curious, an index is here. I'd appreciate hearing your first reaction on this, especially with all the Farmer and Stein so fresh in your mind. And I'll owe you one...
Bill,
Thanks for your feeback. Unfortunately Matthew's priority is not embraced by most NT scholars today. I dont find the evidence too convincing that Mark wrote first. Have you read Ellis' "The Making of the NT Documents." He argues that each one of the four Evangelists took notes during the four missions (Jacobean, Petrine, Johannine, and Pauline) underlined in the NT, which would later gave birth to our four Gospels, and the rest of the NT corpus.
I'll be glad to take a look at your index. I would love to talk to you more about this isue.
I assume you mean our local and famous E.Earl, and unfortunately I've not read any of his works yet. But now I will!
Thanks, Lou
Bill,
It is our local Ellis at SWBTS ( my former NT professor). What are waiting for? How come you dont read Ellis:)He's a giant NT scholar.
By the way, would you like to borrow my copy ("The Making of the NT Documents")? I could bring it to you with the other book. What do you think?
Take care Bill
Lou
Somehow I never heard about him until earlier this year. I'm not really voracious as a reader, and I've had a classical and/or chronological focus for so long.
I'd love to borrow, if you can ever e-mail me with some meet-up coordinates! Time and space can be a real drag... ;)
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