Dr. Rick Griffith • Singapore Bible College • BibleStudyDownloads.org

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Dr. Rick Griffith • Singapore Bible College • BibleStudyDownloads.org The Synoptic Problem Dr. Rick Griffith • Singapore Bible College • BibleStudyDownloads.org

THAT STRANGE SOUNDING WORD… SYNOPTIC: 1 2 MATTHEW MARK JEWS ROMANS TO: AS: WHAT HE: TO: AS: WHAT HE: KING SERVANT SAID DID "TO SEE TOGETHER" SYNOPTIC: "TO SEE TOGETHER" 3 LUKE GREEKS Now comes that word that's a strange one to many... //// SYNOPTIC…meaning… //// … "TO SEE TOGETHER"…add these words to that triangle shape on your study help. //// It is a term from Greek roots that means seeing a group of things together... from the same general perspective. One word that, again, helps organize and categorize the enormous factual base that makes up our Bible. TO: AS: WHAT HE: GOD/MAN FELT 3 20

THE SYNOPTICS: "TO SEE TOGETHER" 51a THE SYNOPTICS: "TO SEE TOGETHER" 1 2 MATTHEW MARK JEWS ROMANS TO: AS: WHAT HE: TO: AS: WHAT HE: KING SERVANT SAID DID ∑ 3 4 LUKE JOHN GREEKS CHURCH Follow the arrows as they link together the gospels of MATTHEW, MARK and LUKE. Again…you'll notice that JOHN is not among them. Those three are the so-called SYNOPTIC Gospels...THEY ARE SEEN TOGETHER...in that these works take on that ground-level view of the human history of Jesus Christ just as he walked about Palestine in the days of his ministry. The Man…and his Mission among his People. //// On the other hand…the Gospel of John –– seen here with the familiar mathematical SUMMA sign –– represents the summation of all that Jesus Christ MEANT –– the sum of all that he preached and demonstrated –– both publicly and privately. Seeing the Lord clearly as God Himself, John raises our spiritual horizon in ways that the first three gospels do not. TO: AS: WHAT HE: TO: AS: WHAT HE: GOD/MAN GOD FELT MEANT 21 1

OVERLAPS IN THE GOSPELS 51b OVERLAPS IN THE GOSPELS 2 3 4 1 MATTHEW MARK 7% unique! Baptism Lord's Supper Birth Genealogy 5000 fed Passion LUKE JOHN Each of the Gospels say things that the others don't... //// MATTHEW was believed by the early church to have written first... //// MARK shares a lot of material with Matthew, such as Christ's baptism and supper... //// LUKE also has much overlap with Matthew and Mark, such as Christ's baptism and supper—but only Matthew and Luke record Christ's birth and genealogy. However, the fourth… //// JOHN, stands alone in terms of its material. Only 8% of it repeats stories from the others—such as the feeding of the 5000, and, of course, His death and resurrection. //// But the remaining 92% of JOHN you will find only in JOHN. 92% unique! 16

JOHN: SUMMING UP THE MESSAGE 1 2 MATTHEW MARK JEWS ROMANS TO: AS: WHAT HE: TO: AS: WHAT HE: KING SERVANT SAID ∑ DID 3 4 LUKE JOHN GREEKS CHURCH So, in summation, then…John wrote to UNBELIEVERS THROUGH THAT NEW ORGANISM, THE CHURCH, envisioning Christ as God Himself… But what did John SAY that Jesus meant in his preaching? TO: AS: WHAT HE: TO: AS: WHAT HE: GOD/MAN GOD FELT MEANT 22

The Synoptic Problem Matthew, Mark & Luke in a nutshell: 49 The Synoptic Problem Matthew, Mark & Luke in a nutshell: How do we explain their similarities? How do we explain their differences?

Synoptic Similarities 49 Synoptic Similarities NIV Study Bible, 1471 Matthew, Mark and Luke are noticeably similar, while John is quite different. How do the first three Gospels agree? Language Material they include General order of the events and sayings from Christ's life The math facts: 91 percent of Mark is found in Matthew 53 percent of Mark is found in Luke Such agreement raises questions as to the origin of the Synoptic Gospels. Did the authors rely on a common source? Were they interdependent?

Marcan Priority Diagrammed 51 51 Mark 661 Marcan Priority Diagrammed 1068 1149 Matthew 500 Luke 350 Numbers indicate the verses in each proposed source 235 M 333 Q L 564

Dating the Synoptic Gospels 49 Dating the Synoptic Gospels Adapted from the NIV Study Bible, 1431 MARK MATTHEW LUKE MARK MATTHEW LUKE ASSUMPTION A: ASSUMPTION B: Matthew and Luke used Mark as a source Matthew and Luke did not use Mark as a source View #1 View #1 Mark written in the 50s or early 60s Mark could have been written anytime between 50 and 70 (1) Matthew written in late 50s or the 60s Taught in this class View #2 (2) Luke written 59-63 Mark written 65-70 View #2 (1) Matthew written early 50s (see Matthew notes) Mark written 65-70 (1) Matthew written in the 70s (2) Luke written 59-63 (see Luke notes) (2) Luke written in the 70s

What's the Synoptic Verdict? Guilty and Not Guilty

Solutions to the Synoptic Problem 49 Solutions to the Synoptic Problem Questions like these constitute what is known as the Synoptic Problem. Several solutions have been advanced: The use of oral tradition. Some have thought that tradition had become so stereotyped that it provided a common source from which all the Gospel writers drew. The use of an early Gospel. Some have postulated that the Synoptic authors all had access to an earlier Gospel, now lost. The use of written fragments. Some have assumed that written fragments had been composed concerning various events from the life of Christ and that these were used by the Synoptic authors. Mutual dependence. Some have suggested that the Synoptic writers drew from each other with the result that what they wrote was often very similar. NIV Study Bible, 1431

Solutions to the Synoptic Problem 49 Solutions to the Synoptic Problem The use of two major sources. The most common view currently is that Mark and a hypothetical document, called Quelle (German for "source") or Q, were used by Matthew and Luke as sources for most of the materials included in their Gospels. The priority and use of Matthew. Another view suggests that the other two Synoptics drew from Matthew as their main source. A combination of most of the above. This theory assumes that the authors of the Synoptic Gospels made use of oral tradition, written fragments, mutual dependence on other Synoptic writers or on their Gospels, and the testimony of eyewitnesses.  NIV Study Bible, 1431

When I Think They Were Written… 51a When I Think They Were Written… 2 3 4 1 MATTHEW MARK JEWS ROMANS The A.D.40s TO: TO: A.D. 64-68 AS: KING AS: SERVANT WHAT HE: SAID WHAT HE: DID LUKE JOHN A.D. 57-59 GREEKS A.D. 69 AFTER THE SYNOPTICS CHURCH Now…what about the dates of the writing of these crucial documents? And here we are left to our best scholarly guesses. There will ALWAYS be argument here. But some of the best guesses, based on decades of academic research and study are these – in suggested order… //// MATTHEW…composed sometime during the A.D. 40s… //// LUKE is suggested as next, between the years A.D. 57 and 59 A.D… //// Mark…in the next decade…between 64 and 68… //// and finally…John's Gospel…around A.D. 69….but certainly after the Synoptics were set down. Again, you will always find disagreement on these dates. However, these dates are from the research of well-known Christian scholars and teachers. TO: TO: AS: GOD/MAN AS: GOD FELT WHAT HE: MEANT WHAT HE: 4 27

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