In NT studies, “Synoptic” refers to the Gospels
of Matthew, Mark, and Luke, which, due to their similarities, can be
compared side by side (synoptic = seeing together). Although
coined earlier, the term “Synoptic” did not become the
commonly used reference to the first three Gospels until the
nineteenth century.
Synoptical
comparisons reveal texts that are similar in wording (e.g., Matt.
19:13–18 // Mark 10:13–16 // Luke 18:15–17),
order (e.g., Matt. 12:46–13:58 // Mark 3:31–6:6a //
Luke 8:19–56), and parenthetical material (e.g., Matt. 9:6 //
Mark 2:10 // Luke 5:20). Most interestingly, the Synoptics agree
in their quotation of the OT even when they differ from the Hebrew OT
text itself (compare Matt. 3:3 // Mark 1:3 // Luke 3:4 to
Isa. 40:3). Beyond such similarities, significant differences prevail
that raise difficult questions. How, for example, could Mark escape
any reference to the Sermon on the Mount (including the Lord’s
Prayer), which holds such a prominent position in Matthew?
Relationships
among the three Gospels.
Due to these and other factors, multiple theories on the Synoptic
Gospels’ relationship to one another have arisen. Yet none have
found universal acceptance. Historically, based primarily on
Augustine’s claim, the church affirmed Matthew as the first
Gospel, with Mark as his abridgment and Luke as employing both. The
German text critic J. J. Griesbach developed this thesis of
Matthean priority in his 1774 Synopsis, arguing that Luke was the
first to use Matthew, and Mark was drawing from both. The Griesbach
Hypothesis continues to have advocates.
Matthew
covers the substance of 97.2 percent of Mark’s 661 verses,
while 88.4 percent reappear in Luke. Although such statistics
could be explained as Mark’s combination and abbreviation of
Matthew and Luke, in fact Matthew generally shortens Mark where they
cover the same material. In search of explanations that better
validate the evidence, NT scholars proposed the Two Source
Hypothesis, arguing that Mark wrote first, and that Matthew and Luke
drew from Mark and from another, unknown source (which scholars call
“Q,” from German Quelle, meaning “source”).
H. J. Holzmann gave significant credence to this theory in 1863,
and after B. H. Streeter’s persuasive publication in 1924
it became the leading theory. Rather than the reverse, it seems
easier to understand Matthew and Luke as expansions of Mark’s
narrative, just as evidence suggests that they “cleaned up”
Mark’s poorer Greek and more difficult readings. Furthermore,
although Matthew and Luke often disagree with each other both
verbally and in their order of events, they rarely agree with one
another against Mark. This suggests that in the triple tradition
(passages in all three Synoptic Gospels), Matthew and Luke are not
borrowing from each other but are independently using Mark.
The
suggestion of the unknown source Q (which could be either written or
oral) proved necessary to make sense of the significant agreements
between Matthew and Luke in material not covered by Mark. Streeter
suggested further that the material that was unique to Matthew and
Luke respectively came from sources designated as “M” and
“L.”
Although
the Two Source Hypothesis remains the working theory preferred by
most scholars, others claim that the issue is far from unresolved. To
reconstruct the precise development of the Synoptic Gospels has
proven extremely difficult. Each Gospel may have been influenced by a
variety of sources. Rather than being well defined, the process
likely was fluid, bringing together commonly known and accepted
memorizations of specific Jesus sayings, repeated retellings of
specific sequences of events (shorter and longer) that had turned
into strings of established tradition among early churches, written
records made by disciples such as Matthew, oral preaching of apostles
such as Peter, accounts possibly from Mary the mother of Jesus (cf.
Luke 2:19), and other things.
Mark’s
Gospel has historically been considered a written condensation of
Peter’s preaching, but as C. H. Dodd showed in his 1936
Apostolic Preaching and Its Developments, Mark shaped his Gospel
according to a common apostolic pattern observable in the speeches in
Acts. Except for a few parables and the action-filled apocalypse in
chapter 13, Mark’s Gospel consists almost exclusively of
descriptive narrative that delineates the power and purpose of Jesus,
the Son of God. Mark is kerygma, preaching about Jesus. Q, or the
material common to Matthew and Luke absent in Mark, consists almost
exclusively of teaching material, Jesus sayings.
It is didachē, teaching from Jesus.
Distinctives
of each Gospel.
Griesbach’s “synoptic” approach of placing these
three Gospels side by side for comparison has prompted new scholarly
approaches such as redaction criticism and has provided beginning
students with a helpful way to recognize specific emphases of each
Gospel. As noted above, Mark is a fast-paced narrative (“immediately”
occurs nine times in chap. 1 alone) with vivid picturesque detail
(e.g., 14:51–52). Matthew writes for a Jewish audience. He
weaves his narrative around five major teaching discourses (chaps.
5–7; 10; 13; 18; 24–25) while highlighting Jesus’
relationship to Abraham (chap. 1), his mission to “the lost
sheep of Israel” (chaps. 10; 15), and his birth and death as
the “King of the Jews” (chaps. 2; 27) and using the
Jewish expression “kingdom of heaven.” Luke, while
portraying the comprehensive scope of Jesus’ mission by
relating Jesus directly to Adam and God (3:38) and placing the events
in secular history (chap. 2), reveals a special interest in the
downtrodden (women, poor, children, Samaritans), prayer (nine
prayers), the Holy Spirit, and joyfulness.