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The Synoptic Problem: A Way through the Maze

di Mark Goodacre

Serie: Biblical Seminar (80)

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992276,890 (4)2
A lively, readable and up-to-date guide to the Synoptic Problem, ideal for undergraduate students. Arguably the greatest literary enigma in history, the Synoptic Problem has fascinated generations of scholars who have puzzled over the agreements, the disagreements, the variations, and the peculiarities of the relationship between the first three of our canonical Gospels. Yet the Synoptic Problem remains inaccessible to students, soon tangled up in its apparent complexities. But now the author offers a way through the maze, with the promise of emergence at the end, explaining in a lively and refreshing style what study of the Synoptic Problem involves, why it is important and how it might be solved. This is a readable, balance and up-to-date guide, ideal for undergraduate students and the general reader.… (altro)
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Dr. Mark Goodacre clearly presents and argues for a solution to the Synoptic Problem that does not require a hypothetical "Q" gospel. Written as an introduction to the subject of Gospel origins, it is accessible to anyone with a mind open to rational critical thinking.

I was a fan of the Q hypothesis since my college years in the early 1980s, and found the "But wait! There's more!" nature of the quest to refine the content of Q to be a fascinating journey of discovery. Unfortunately, the once-upon-a-time existence of a long lost Q document has become an article of faith rather than a scholarly hypothesis. Those whose honest inquiry into gospel origins question this new orthodoxy are subject to Inquisition and re-education or excommunication from the increasingly peevish followers of Q Theory (no longer the Q hypothesis).

Mark Goodacre is a good-natured scholar, and "The Synoptic Problem: A Way Through the Maze" is not a strident expose of the circular reasoning and self-contradictions to be found in Q studies today. The pros and cons of each alternative solution to the Synoptic Problem are laid out. The priority of the Gospel of Mark, as opposed to Q, makes good literary and historical sense. With apologies - "First comes Mark, then comes Matthew, then comes Luke in a baby carriage". There need not be a secret lover named Q to complicate the family tree. Is that a spoiler? I pray not. ( )
  bribri56 | Feb 2, 2024 |
This is an excellent overview of the Synoptic Problem with a proposed solution which bypasses the need for a Q document. Goodacre is intrigued by this mystery, stating that the “Synoptic Problem is probably the most fascinating literary enigma of all time.” He provides a fair analysis of why scholars tend to favor Q as a solution, but then dismantles the arguments in favor the Farrer Theory.

The Synoptic Problem seeks to explain the similarities between Matthew, Mark and Luke, which are simply too similar to have been written indepently. But what is the relationship between the three? Which gospel(s) copied from which, why did portions of the gospel story get left out in the copying, and where did any new material come from?

While Q is the assumed missing link in the Two-Source Theory (which states that Matthew and Luke relied on Mark and an as-yet unfound sayings gospel known as Q), the Farrer Theory also assumes Markan priority but then goes in a different direction. It proposes that Luke actually relied on Matthew and Mark, with no need for another source. The idea is that Luke found Matthew’s work largely unacceptable and picked over those additions to Mark that he found in line with his own emphasis while discarding other material. After admitting that the solution is far from proven, Goodacre appeals to Occam’s Razor, choosing what he feels is the less complex solution. If you’re familiar with the divisions titled Mark, Q, M and L, the idea here is that M and Q are Matthew’s additions to Mark, but Q doesn’t derive from an earlier source … it merely represents that portion of Matthew’s additions that Luke chose to retain in his own rewrite.

Written with clarity and numerous examples, but without digging deeper than necessary to portray the issues, this is the best book I’ve read yet about the Synoptic Problem.

Originally published in 2001 by T&T Clark International, this book is now placed in the public domain and made available by the Internet Archive.

T&T Clark International, © 2011

ISBN: 0-567-080-560 ( )
1 vota DubiousDisciple | Jul 31, 2014 |
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A lively, readable and up-to-date guide to the Synoptic Problem, ideal for undergraduate students. Arguably the greatest literary enigma in history, the Synoptic Problem has fascinated generations of scholars who have puzzled over the agreements, the disagreements, the variations, and the peculiarities of the relationship between the first three of our canonical Gospels. Yet the Synoptic Problem remains inaccessible to students, soon tangled up in its apparent complexities. But now the author offers a way through the maze, with the promise of emergence at the end, explaining in a lively and refreshing style what study of the Synoptic Problem involves, why it is important and how it might be solved. This is a readable, balance and up-to-date guide, ideal for undergraduate students and the general reader.

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