The Synoptic Problem Flashcards
What is it?
Similarity between MML. Synoptic means ‘seen together’ and when passages are placed side by side they are very similar
How is it supported by agreement in wording
When they describe the same episode they share 50% of the same Greek words used to describe it but this is only 10% with John
In introducing JTB, M and M share 90% of their Greek words, including very precise terms such as with Mark 1:6 and Matthew 3:4
Jesus and his disciples spoke Aramaic, so it is unlikely that M and M would use exactly the same words and phrases in Greek to translate the original Aramaic description of JTB
How does is it supported by parenthetical material
All Gs contain this and John contains the most. Parenthetical material in the S are often identical
Parenthesis is something used in writing, not in speech, so this can’t be due to the evangelists being eyewitnesses to the same conversations. For instance, both Mark 13:14 and Matthew 24:15 say (let the reader understand) and this parenthetical statement is clearly and deliberately addressed to the reader and not the listener, so has clearly been composed by the author, not some earlier eyewitnesses. The odds are low that M and M would use the exact same phrase to make the exact same point in writing their story
This use of identical parenthetical material is good evidence that one text had copied another rather than coming up with the same passage independently
How is it supported by Luke’s Prologue
Begins by saying it has taken material from other sources…
‘just as they were handed down to us by those who from the first were eyewitnesses’ (Luke 1:2)
Luke admits right at the start that he’s using material that was handed down rather than creating a gospel from scratch
Evaluate the solution that they are independent versions of the same story
Some Christians argue MML all independently came up with their own gospels, either as eyewitnesses or reporting on oral tradition
They explain S similarities like this
Evangelists were describing the same historical events so they obviously describe them in the same ways
OR… The evangelists were inspired by the holy spirit so write in the same way
First solution is historically naive, even though they describe some things in similar ways, they describe other things in different ways. Why would they do this? John’s wording doesn’t match the wording of the Synoptics (it is 92% unique) does this mean that John describes completely different events from the Synoptics? We need a different explanation for why the S are so similar
The notion of divine inspiration faces the same problem, why would the paraclete inspire the evangelists to use the same language and describe the same details sometimes but not others. Why would it inspire John to write things differently – or is John not inspired by the holy spirit
How has the Church traditionally attempted to explain the Synoptic Problem
A popular solution to the Synoptic problem is that they are interdependent: they have copied from one another. Church tradition states Matthew was the first to be written and Mark and Luke then copied passages from Matthew (with Mark cutting out details and Luke adding more in) This is the theory of Matthean Priority
Explain and evaluate the idea that it can be explained by a proto gospel
A different solution would be the existence of another proto-gospel. This is an early original gospel that the S are copying passages from. If they use the same proto gospel then this would explain the similarities. If John does not use this proto gospel for its material, then this would explain the differences in language and style
The issue is that no trace of a proto gospel can be found by archaeologists and there is no mention of the proto gospel by any early Christian writers like Irenaeus, Jerome and Augustine. Who all describe Matthew, mark and Luke as the earliest gospels
The Synoptic Problem is a problem for believing in the Bible
Christians claim the gospels are ‘inspired texts’ - they are revelation from God. The Synoptic problem suggests a more straightforward origin: they are copied from a lost proto gospel
If there was a lost proto gospel, then this would have been closer to the historical Jesus than the current gospels. This makes the Bible unreliable. Shows the NT books are ordinary literary texts, products of human error and judgement
The Synoptic Problem is not a problem for believing in the Bible
The Gospels are still inspired even if parts are copied. Luke clearly states it has used sources in its prologue. The S copied each other or Matthew was copied by Mark and Luke
If the NT writers were inspired by the holy spirit, then you would expect coherance and unity in writings and this is what you find
No evidence for a proto gospel; therefore more likely the S are a product of different eyewitness accounts
Explain what a proto gospel would have been like
A proto gospel is an early written version of the gospels that the S copy from. Says MML all had this in front of them; they all copied it and made some changes, adding details or ignoring passages that didn’t suit them
They would have been written in Aramaic but perhaps the evangelists had a Greek translation
Probably just included sayings (logia) of Jesus and the evangelists added in situations and settings
Represented the original preaching (kerygma) of Jesus and his disciples before it was altered by later generations of Christians
Strongest evidence for the proto gospel theory…
The strongest evidence for this is that Luke’s Prologue clearly states that people before him have ‘drawn up an account’ of Jesus’ ministry and that these people were ‘eyewitnesses’ but that that he is merely ‘writing an orderly account’ of this source
Biggest issue…
Biggest problem is that none of the earliest Christian writers refer to this proto gospel. Around 130 CE, Marcion of Sinope lists his personal canon of NT scripture but does not mention the proto gospel. Irenaeus refers to the canonical 4 gospels (the Tetramorph) in 180 CE, with no mention of any proto gospel. Early Christian writers mention several texts which have now been lost to us (such as the Gospel of the Ebionites) and some that were lost for centuries but have now been discovered by archaelogists (Gospel of Thomas) but they never mention the proto gospel or anything that sounds like it
Is the Gospel of Thomas the proto gospel?
Discovered in Nag Hammadi in 1945. Scholars suggested it could be the missing proto gospel. Does consist entirely of logica (sayings of Jesus) with no narrative or story to give them context and about half of these logica appear in the S
Thomas might have inspired John’s gospel more indirectly. Elaine Pagels points out that John seems to have passages that specifically contradict the logia in Thomas, as if he was trying to prove Thomas wrong. For instance, a logion in Thomas says that the light of God is born from within, but John says that the world does not recognise the light. Thomas appears as a character in John: he doubts the resurrection and is proven wrong. Suggests that Thomas was around before John
Doesn’t seem early enough to be a proto gospel. The copy discovered at Nag Hammadi dates from the 4th century CE and is translated from an original in the 2nd century CE, but a proto gospels would have to have been from the 50s or 60s CE
Could Matthew be the proto gospel
The earliest Church writers thought Matthew was the earliest gospel, with Mark and Luke copying. Also known as the Augustinian Hypothesis
According to this view Matthew was one of the 12 disciples and wrote in Aramaic or Hebrew. It was translated into Greek and this version was used by Mark and Luke, with Mark abbreviating Matthew to create a shorter Gospel but adding in some material based on the preaching of Peter and Luke using Matthew and Mark to create an expanded gospel
Theory makes sense and explains why the earliest Christian writers regard Matthew as the earliest gospel and why there’s no mention of an earlier proto-gospel. This is still the view taken by the Catholic Church
The main problem with this is that Mark misses out so much material from Matthew, such as the virgin birth, the lord’s prayer and the sermon on the mount. Seems illogical Mark would miss out such important details if he knew about them from Matthew. The earliest versions of Mark do not even contain descriptions about the resurrection. This has led to the alternative view of Marcan priority which instead suggests that Mark was the proto gospel
Implications of the proto gospel theory
If there is a lost proto gospel or if this is Thomas, then the NT is fundamentally unreliable. This is because this proto gospel would be a much more authentic version of Jesus’ sayings and teachings, which have been added to and distorted by the S
For instance, there is no apocalyptic element in Thomas – no teachings about the imminent end of the world, and this is present in the S. Also no crucifixion in Thomas. If Thomas is the proto gospel, then Jesus never taught that the world was going to end or predicted that he was going to be crucified. Instead his followers added these teachings to their gospels after the crucifixion, creating a religion very difficult to the one Jesus taught. However, the development of Christian ideas seems to be the opposite way around. Bart Ehrman points out that as time passes Christian writing becomes progressively less apocalyptic and more reconciled to the fact that there will not be an imminent parousia/apocalypse. If there is a proto gospel it is likely that it would be apocalyptic