1992
DOI: 10.1017/s0028688500023055
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A Paradigm Perplex: Luke, Matthew and Mark

Abstract: In their recent survey of the synoptic problem E. P. Sanders and M. Davies argue that a complicated solution must be held to be the most likely, and conclude,Mark probably did sometimes conflate material which came separately to Matthew and Luke (so the Griesbach hypothesis), and Matthew probably did conflate material which came separately to Mark and Luke (the twosource hypothesis). Thus we think that Luke knew Matthew (so Goulder, the Griesbachians and others) and that both Luke and Matthew were the original… Show more

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Cited by 5 publications
(12 citation statements)
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“…The works of Downing, Derrenbacker, Neville, Mattila, MacEwen and Kirk have all examined the major hypotheses from this perspective. 31 Derrenbacker's work has highlighted that either/or distinctions between literary and oral paradigms do not correlate with compositional practices in antiquity. This underscores Mattila's call to put the evangelists' work into a credible context, even if it pushes source critics into more complex compositional models than they might prefer.…”
Section: Testing the Major Hypotheses On The Basis Of Contemporary Comentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The works of Downing, Derrenbacker, Neville, Mattila, MacEwen and Kirk have all examined the major hypotheses from this perspective. 31 Derrenbacker's work has highlighted that either/or distinctions between literary and oral paradigms do not correlate with compositional practices in antiquity. This underscores Mattila's call to put the evangelists' work into a credible context, even if it pushes source critics into more complex compositional models than they might prefer.…”
Section: Testing the Major Hypotheses On The Basis Of Contemporary Comentioning
confidence: 99%
“…exact location) is a level that has seldom obtained within the world’s print cultures, and is probably not one that Goulder implied. In spite of allowing for a more practical understanding of what ‘rolling up’ a roll means, Downing ridicules Goulder’s suggestion that Luke could pick up a roll from the floor and find the place where he left off as ‘apparently so simple an action’ (1992: 20). When understood according to what ‘rolling up a roll’ really means, however, it is a very simple action, as simple as opening a codex to a bookmarked page.…”
Section: Downing Versus Gouldermentioning
confidence: 99%
“…When understood according to what ‘rolling up a roll’ really means, however, it is a very simple action, as simple as opening a codex to a bookmarked page. 6 The suggestion that Luke alternates between Mark and Matthew hardly represents a case of ‘los[ing] all touch with first-century reality’, as Downing claims (1992: 20), and Luke really had no need to mark his place other than by simply rolling the spindles together. And things would become all the easier for Luke if we allow him as much table space as Juvenal assumes his readers to have.…”
Section: Downing Versus Gouldermentioning
confidence: 99%
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