The Project Gutenberg eBook of Sources of the Synoptic Gospels
Title: Sources of the Synoptic Gospels
Author: Carl S. Patton
Release date: June 10, 2012 [eBook #39967]
Language: English
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The volumes of the University of Michigan Studies are published by authority of the Executive Board of the Graduate Department of the University of Michigan. A list of the volumes thus far published or arranged for is given at the end of this volume.
University of Michigan Studies
HUMANISTIC SERIES
VOLUME V
SOURCES OF THE SYNOPTIC
GOSPELS
THE MACMILLAN COMPANY
NEW YORK · BOSTON · CHICAGO
ATLANTA · SAN FRANCISCO
MACMILLAN & CO., LIMITED
LONDON · BOMBAY · CALCUTTA
MELBOURNE
THE MACMILLAN CO. OF CANADA, LTD.
TORONTO
SOURCES
OF THE
SYNOPTIC GOSPELS
BY
CARL S. PATTON
FIRST CONGREGATIONAL CHURCH
COLUMBUS, OHIO
A THESIS SUBMITTED TO THE FACULTY OF THE DEPARTMENT OF
LITERATURE, SCIENCE, AND THE ARTS OF THE UNIVERSITY
OF MICHIGAN, FOR THE DEGREE OF
DOCTOR OF PHILOSOPHY
New York
THE MACMILLAN COMPANY
LONDON: MACMILLAN & COMPANY, LIMITED
1915
All Rights Reserved
Copyright 1915 By
Carl S. Patton
Printed August, 1915
Composed and Printed By
The University of Chicago Press
Chicago, Illinois, U.S.A.
PREFACE
The purpose of this study is twofold: first, to give some account of the investigations recently made in the Synoptic Problem, and the present status of scholarly opinion concerning it; secondly, upon the basis of such established results, to push the inquiry into certain items a step farther.
The first part of the work, including pages 3-120, tho largely occupied with results reached by many different scholars, and bringing the matter up to where the writer adds his own more personal contribution, is yet not a mere survey of results attained. The writer has expressed his own judgment freely thruout it, as to the merits of arguments of others, and as to the points involved in the discussion. But his more personal contribution lies in the analysis of the groundwork Q into the two recensions, Q Mt and Q Lk.
The one book constantly in the writer’s hands during the preparation of this study was A. Huck’s Synopse der drei ersten Evangelien.[1] Without some such parallel edition of the Greek Gospels constantly open before him, one can neither write nor read profitably upon the Synoptic Question. The question of originality, and of giving credit for arguments and suggestions derived from other students, in a study of this sort, is extremely difficult. In the minute comparison of passages in one Gospel with passages in another, many of the differences and resemblances noted are part of the working material of most writers upon the Synoptic Problem; when one has worked thru the analyses of other students, has made their results his own, and has also made his own observations upon the basis of them, it becomes almost impossible for him to say what part of the total result is due to himself and for what part he is indebted to others. The writer is more deeply indebted to Paul Wernle, Sir John Hawkins, and the authors of the Oxford Studies, than to anyone else. The latter book came out after this study had been completed but the results have been revised somewhat under its influence. I have attempted to give credit in footnotes for suggestions received from many sources, but many must have gone unnoticed.
I am under deep obligation to the kind friends who have encouraged and made possible the publication of this Study, particularly to Mr. William H. Murphy, of Detroit.
Carl S. Patton
First Congregational Church
Columbus, Ohio
August, 1914
CONTENTS
| PART I: GENERALLY ACCEPTED RESULTS OF SYNOPTIC STUDY | |
| Chapter I: The Dependence of Matthew and Luke upon Mark | |
| PAGE | |
| The Framework of Mark in Matthew and Luke | 3 |
| Up to Luke’s “Great Omission” | 3 |
| Luke’s “Great Omission” and Beyond | 7 |
| Luke’s “Great Interpolation”: Its Content | 8 |
| The Jerusalem Narrative | 10 |
| The Story of the Passion | 12 |
| The Priority of Mark | 13 |
| Luke’s Great Interpolation: Its Non-Use of Mark | 16 |
| Chapter II: The Order of Mark’s Gospel Compared with That of Matthew and That of Luke | |
| Order of Mark in Matthew and Luke | 19 |
| Table I: Showing Changes Made by Matthew and Luke in the Order of Marcan Material | 24 |
| Deductions from the Table | 28 |
| Chapter III: The Omissions of Matthew and Luke in the Marcan Narrative | |
| Omissions of Matthew and Luke in Mark | 30 |
| Omissions Made by Both Matthew and Luke | 30 |
| Omissions Made by Matthew in the Marcan Narrative | 31 |
| Omissions Made by Luke in the Marcan Narrative | 32 |
| Chapter IV: The Changes of Matthew and Luke in the Narrative of Mark | |
| Changes of Matthew and Luke in Mark | 37 |
| The Baptism of Jesus | 37 |
| The Calling of the First Disciples | 38 |
| Jesus in the Synagogue at Capernaum | 38 |
| The Healing of Peter’s Mother-in-Law | 38 |
| The Healing in the Evening | 39 |
| The Retirement of Jesus | 39 |
| The Calling of Peter | 40 |
| The Healing of the Leper | 41 |
| The Healing of the Paralytic | 41 |
| The Calling of Levi (Matthew) | 42 |
| The Question about Fasting | 42 |
| The Walk Through the Corn | 43 |
| The Man with the Withered Hand | 44 |
| The Crowd and the Healings | 44 |
| The Calling of the Twelve | 44 |
| The Pharisaic Accusation and Jesus’ Defense | 45 |
| The True Brotherhood of Jesus; the Parable of the Sower; the Purpose of the Parables | 45 |
| The Interpretation of the Parable of the Sower | 46 |
| A Group of Detached Sayings | 47 |
| The Parable of the Mustard Seed | 47 |
| The Storm on the Lake | 47 |
| The Gadarene Demoniac | 48 |
| The Daughter of Jairus and the Woman with the Issue of Blood | 49 |
| The Initial Preaching in Nazareth | 51 |
| The Sending out of the Disciples | 51 |
| The Judgment of Herod concerning Jesus | 52 |
| The Death of the Baptist | 53 |
| The Return of the Disciples and the Feeding of the Five Thousand | 54 |
| The Walking on the Sea | 55 |
| The Return to Gennesaret | 56 |
| About the Things That Defile | 56 |
| The Canaanitish Woman | 57 |
| The Feeding of the Four Thousand | 57 |
| The Demand for a Sign | 57 |
| The Saying about Yeast | 57 |
| The Confession of Peter, and the First Prediction of Sufferings | 58 |
| The Demands of Discipleship | 58 |
| The Transfiguration | 59 |
| The Discussion about Elijah | 59 |
| The Healing of the Epileptic Boy | 60 |
| The Second Prediction of Sufferings | 60 |
| The Strife about Rank | 61 |
| Minor Passages | 61 |
| Summary of Matthew’s and Luke’s Treatment of the Marcan Narrative | 70 |
| Chapter V: Have We the Gospel of Mark in Its Original Form? | |
| Have We Mark in Its Original Form? | 72 |
| Discussion of the Analysis of Mark by Wendling and von Soden | 74 |
| Conclusions of von Soden and Wendling Compared | 83 |
| Matthew and Luke Used Our Mark as a Source | 88 |
| The Hypothesis of a Primitive Mark Superfluous; Simpler Explanations | 88 |
| Some Remarkable Verbal Resemblances | 93 |
| Chapter VI: Use of a Common Document by Matthew and Luke | |
| Use of a Common Document by Matthew and Luke | 97 |
| A Recent Attempt to Prove Matthew a Source for Luke | 100 |
| Chapter VII: the Existence and Content of Q | |
| Existence and Content of Q | 108 |
| Deductions from the Table | 109 |
| Table II: Material from Q in Matthew | 110 |
| Deductions from Table III | 115 |
| Table III: Material in Luke Taken from Q | 116 |
| The Necessity for a Further Extension of Q | 120 |
| PART II: ANALYSIS OF Q INTO QMt AND QLk | |
| Chapter I: Analysis of Q | |
| Analysis of Q | 123 |
| Q Originally an Aramaic Document, Used in Greek Translations by Matthew and Luke | 123 |
| The Analysis of Q into QMt and QLk | 126 |
| Chapter II: Q, QMt, and QLk, in the Double Tradition of Matthew and Luke | |
| Q, QMt, AND QLk in Matthew and Luke | 129 |
| The Preaching of John the Baptist | 129 |
| The Messianic Proclamation of the Baptist | 130 |
| The Temptation | 130 |
| “Blessed Are the Poor” | 131 |
| “Blessed Are They That Mourn” | 132 |
| “Blessed Are They That Hunger” | 132 |
| “Blessed Are The Persecuted” | 132 |
| A Saying about Salt | 133 |
| A Saying about Light | 133 |
| A Saying about the Law | 135 |
| “Agree with Thine Adversary” | 135 |
| About Non-Resistance and Love of Enemies | 135 |
| The Lord’s Prayer | 136 |
| A Saying about Treasures | 137 |
| A Saying about the Eye | 137 |
| About Double Service | 138 |
| About Care | 138 |
| About Judging | 139 |
| The Beam and the Mote | 139 |
| About Seeking and Finding | 139 |
| The Golden Rule | 140 |
| The Narrow Gate | 140 |
| The Tree and Its Fruits | 141 |
| Warning against Self-Deception | 141 |
| The Two Houses | 143 |
| The Centurion’s Son | 143 |
| “Many Shall Come from East and West” | 145 |
| Two Men Would Follow Jesus | 146 |
| “The Harvest Is Great” | 146 |
| “The Laborer Is Worthy of His Hire” | 146 |
| “Greet the House” | 147 |
| “More Tolerable for Sodom” | 147 |
| “Sheep among Wolves” | 148 |
| How to Act under Persecution | 148 |
| The Disciple and His Teacher | 148 |
| Exhortation to Fearless Confession | 149 |
| Strife among Relatives | 150 |
| Conditions of Discipleship | 150 |
| “He That Receiveth You” | 151 |
| The Question of the Baptist and Jesus’ Answer | 152 |
| The Woe upon the Galilean Cities | 152 |
| “I Thank Thee, O Father” | 152 |
| Jesus’ Defense against the Pharisees | 153 |
| “He That Is Not with Me” | 153 |
| Jonah and the Ninevites | 153 |
| A Speech about Backsliding | 154 |
| “Blessed Are the Eyes That See” | 154 |
| The Parable of the Yeast | 154 |
| The Blind Leading the Blind | 155 |
| A Saying about Faith | 155 |
| A Saying about Offenses | 156 |
| The Stray Sheep | 156 |
| About Forgiveness | 157 |
| Rewards for Discipleship | 157 |
| Against the Pharisees | 157 |
| “Whoso Humbles Himself” | 158 |
| Against the Pharisees | 158 |
| A Woe upon the Scribes | 159 |
| “I Send unto You Prophets” | 160 |
| The Lament over Jerusalem | 161 |
| The Day of the Son of Man | 161 |
| The Body and the Eagles | 161 |
| The Days of Noah | 161 |
| The One Taken, the Other Left | 162 |
| The Watching Servant | 162 |
| The True and False Servants | 162 |
| Results of the Preceding Investigation | 162 |
| Chapter III: Q in the Single Tradition Of Matthew (QMt) | |
| Q in the Single Tradition of Matthew | 166 |
| Two Beatitudes | 167 |
| Four More Beatitudes | 167 |
| “Ye Are the Light of the World” | 169 |
| “Let Your Light Shine” | 169 |
| Various Sayings from the Sermon on the Mount | 170 |
| A Saying about Offenses | 171 |
| The Commandment about Divorce | 171 |
| About Oaths | 172 |
| The Second Mile | 172 |
| Another Old Testament Commandment | 173 |
| About Alms-Giving | 173 |
| About Prayer | 174 |
| About Fasting | 175 |
| Pearls before Swine | 175 |
| The False Prophets | 176 |
| A Saying about Trees | 177 |
| “By Their Fruits” | 177 |
| An Oft-Repeated Formula | 177 |
| The Conclusion of the Story of the Centurion’s Servant | 178 |
| “I Will Have Mercy and Not Sacrifice” | 179 |
| The Healing of Two Blind Men | 179 |
| The Healing of a Dumb Man | 180 |
| Instructions to the Disciples | 180 |
| Further Instructions to the Disciples | 180 |
| A Saying about Elijah | 181 |
| “He That Hath Ears, Let Him Hear” | 182 |
| The Occasion of Pronouncing Woes upon the Galilean Cities | 182 |
| Reason Assigned for the Pronunciation of the Woes | 182 |
| “Come unto Me” | 183 |
| A Saying about the Law | 184 |
| An Old Testament Quotation | 184 |
| “Generation of Vipers” | 184 |
| A Saying about the Judgment | 185 |
| An Interpretation of the Sign of Jonah | 185 |
| The Weed in the Field | 185 |
| The Parables of the Treasure, the Pearl, the Fish-Net, and the Scribe Instructed in the Kingdom | 186 |
| Peter Walking on the Water | 187 |
| “To the Lost Sheep of the House of Israel” | 187 |
| A Summary of Jesus’ Healing Work | 188 |
| The Keys of the Kingdom of Heaven | 189 |
| An Insertion in the Story of the Transfiguration | 189 |
| “Whosoever Humbles Himself as This Little Child” | 189 |
| The Unforgiving Servant | 190 |
| About Eunuchs | 190 |
| The Laborers in the Vineyard | 190 |
| The Two Sons | 191 |
| The Wedding Feast | 191 |
| Against the Pharisees | 191 |
| The Parables of the Ten Virgins, the Talents, the Judgment | 191 |
| “Twelve Legions of Angels” | 192 |
| Chapter IV: Q in the Single Tradition of Luke (QLk) | |
| Q in the Single Tradition of Luke | 193 |
| The Preaching of John the Baptist | 193 |
| The Initial Preaching of Jesus in Nazareth | 194 |
| The Call of Peter | 194 |
| The Woes | 194 |
| The Reception of John’s Preaching | 195 |
| The Sinner in Simon’s House | 195 |
| A Would-Be Follower of Jesus | 196 |
| The Return of the Seventy | 196 |
| The Great Commandment | 197 |
| The Good Samaritan | 197 |
| Mary and Martha | 197 |
| The Parable of the Friend on a Journey | 198 |
| The Mother of Jesus Praised | 198 |
| “If Thine Whole Body Is Light” | 198 |
| The Parable of the Foolish Rich Man | 198 |
| The Exhortation to Watchfulness | 198 |
| “To Whom Much Is Given” | 199 |
| “I Came to Cast Fire upon the Earth” | 199 |
| The Galileans Slain by Herod | 199 |
| The Parable of the Fig-Tree | 200 |
| “Go Tell That Fox” | 200 |
| The Healing of the Dropsical Man | 201 |
| About Taking the Less Honorable Seats at the Table | 201 |
| Whom to Invite to a Feast | 202 |
| The Parable of the Dinner and the Invited Guests | 202 |
| Conditions of Discipleship | 203 |
| The Lost Sheep | 203 |
| The Lost Coin and the Prodigal Son | 203 |
| The Unjust Steward | 203 |
| A Criticism of the Pharisees | 204 |
| The Rich Man and Lazarus | 205 |
| “Unprofitable Servants” and the Healing of the Ten Lepers | 205 |
| About the Coming of the Kingdom of God | 205 |
| Matter Peculiar to Matthew or to Luke | 206 |
| Matter Peculiar to Luke | 210 |
| Did Luke’s Great Interpolation Originally Exist as a Separate Documentary Source? | 214 |
| Other Possible Sources for Material Peculiar to Luke | 217 |
| Conclusions Regarding Q Material in the Single Traditions of Matthew and Luke | 218 |
| Chapter V: Review of Q Material in Matthew, Luke, and Mark | |
| Review of Q in Matthew, Luke, and Mark | 221 |
| Considerations Favoring Analysis of Q into QMt and QLk | 221 |
| Table IV: Contents of Q Material in Matthew | 222 |
| Table V: Contents of Q Material in Luke | 224 |
| Passages Closely Similar, Yet With Divergences Too Great to Be Accounted for upon the Hypothesis of an Undifferentiated Q | 226 |
| With Matthew’s Q before Him, Luke Would Not Have Omitted So Much of It | 227 |
| The “Secondary Traits” Are in QMt and QLk, Not in Q | 230 |
| Chapter VI: Did Mark Also Use Q? | |
| Did Mark Also Use Q? | 234 |
| What Material Did Mark Take from Q? | 236 |
| The Messianic Announcement of the Baptist | 237 |
| The Baptism of Jesus | 237 |
| The Temptation of Jesus | 238 |
| The Beelzebul Controversy | 238 |
| Five Detached Sayings | 239 |
| The Parable of the Mustard Seed | 240 |
| The Sending Out of the Twelve | 241 |
| A Sign Refused | 241 |
| “Whosoever Will Follow Me” | 241 |
| “Whosoever Is Ashamed of Me” | 242 |
| About Offenses | 242 |
| About Salt | 243 |
| About Divorce | 243 |
| The First Who Shall Be Last | 243 |
| True Greatness | 244 |
| About Faith | 244 |
| Against the Pharisees | 244 |
| The Holy Spirit Speaking in the Disciples | 244 |
| Other Marcan Passages Considered, But Rejected | 244 |
| Table VI: Contents of Q Material in Mark | 246 |
| Do the Vocabulary and Style of Mark and Q, Respectively, Throw Any Light upon Their Literary Relationship? | 246 |
| Conclusions as to Mark’s Dependence upon Q | 248 |
| Chapter VII: the Original Order of Q | |
| Original Order of Q | 249 |
| Table VII | 250 |
| Table VIII | 250 |
| Table IX | 251 |
| Table X | 252 |
| Chapter VIII: Summary and Conclusions |
PART I
ACCEPTED RESULTS OF SYNOPTIC STUDY
CHAPTER I
THE DEPENDENCE OF MATTHEW AND LUKE UPON MARK
The one universally accepted result of modern study of the synoptic problem is the dependence of Matthew and Luke upon the Gospel of Mark.
Tho it is no longer necessary to demonstrate this use of Mark by Matthew and Luke, the relation among the three Gospels is not to be dismissed with a simple statement of this dependence. The Gospel of Mark is the one document possessed by us in substantially the same form in which it was used by Matthew and Luke. A consideration of how Matthew and Luke treated the sources which we no longer have before us will be influenced by the treatment which they accorded to this one source which we have. Our first work, therefore, is to observe, with some thoroness, the manner in which Matthew and Luke use the Gospel of Mark. If any proof is still required that Matthew and Luke did employ this Gospel, it will appear in the discussion.
FRAMEWORK OF MARK’S GOSPEL IN MATTHEW AND LUKE—UP TO LUKE’S “GREAT OMISSION”
Matthew and Luke begin with introductory matter of their own, occupying the first two chapters of their Gospels. With the appearance of John the Baptist their narrative begins to coincide with that of Mark. Luke in a manner characteristic of his Gospel attempts to supply historical details. Mark (i, 6) gives a fuller description of the personal habits and appearance of the Baptist; the others omit this, and pass to a description of his preaching (Mt iii, 7-10; Lk iii, 7-9). Luke adds a brief section (iii, 10-14) on this subject derived from some source of his own.
After these insertions of non-Marcan material, Matthew and Luke come back to the narrative of Mark, and recount (Mk i, 7-8; Mt iii, 11-12; Lk iii, 15-18) the messianic prediction of the Baptist, the baptism of Jesus (Mk i, 9-11; Mt iii, 13-17; Lk iii, 21-22), the temptation (Mk i, 12-13; Mt iv, 1-11; Lk iv, 1-13), and the initial appearance of Jesus in Galilee (Mk i, 14-15; Mt iv, 12-17; Lk iv, 14-15). Between the messianic preaching of the Baptist and the baptism of Jesus, Luke has inserted a notice of the arrest and imprisonment of John, and between the baptism and the temptation, his table of the ancestors of Jesus.[2] The large amount of closely parallel matter in Matthew and Luke, especially in their account of the Baptist’s preaching and their narrative of the temptation, shows their use of a common non-Marcan source; but the order of their narrative, as well as its wording, shows their use of Mark also. To his account of the initial appearance of Jesus in Galilee, Luke adds (iv, 16-30) an account of Jesus’ first preaching in Nazareth.
Matthew proceeds to tell with Mark (Mt iv, 18-22; Mk i, 16-20) of the calling of the first disciples. Luke postpones this, having a more detailed and interesting account of the call of Peter which he will introduce later (Lk v, 1-11). Mark (i, 21-28) then tells of Jesus’ preaching in a synagogue at Capernaum. This Matthew omits, but Luke (iv, 31-37) gives the story as Mark has it. Matthew here inserts his Sermon on the Mount and the healing of the nobleman’s daughter (Mt v, 1-viii, 13); he then comes back to the narrative of Mark, and with Luke tells (Mk i, 29-31; Mt viii, 14-15; Lk iv, 38-39) of the healing of Peter’s mother-in-law. The three evangelists then relate together (Mk i, 32-34; Mt viii, 16-17; Lk iv, 40-41), the story of the healings at evening. Luke and Mark add the story of Jesus’ retirement into a desert place (Mk i, 35-38; Lk iv, 42-43), which Matthew omits. Mark and Luke then add a brief statement of a preaching tour thru Galilee (Mk i, 39; Lk iv, 44); Matthew has already utilized this statement, somewhat enlarged, as introductory to his Sermon on the Mount (Mt iv, 23-25). Luke inserts (Lk v, 1-11) his account of the calling of Peter, postponed from its earlier position in Mark. The three then tell together the story of the healing of the leper and the paralytic, the call of Levi (called Matthew in Matthew), and the discussion about fasting (Mk i, 40-ii, 22; Mt viii, 1-4; ix, 1-17; Lk v, 12-39). Matthew (ix, 35-x, 16) inserts his account of the sending out of the twelve, which Mark and Luke give later. After this he comes back into agreement with the other two, and all three relate the incident of Jesus’ walking thru the corn on the Sabbath (Mk ii, 23-28; Mt xii, 1-8; Lk vi, 1-5), the healing of the withered hand (Mk iii, 1-6; Mt xii, 9-14; Lk vi, 6-11), and the healings in the crowd (Mk iii, 7-12; Mt xii, 15-21; Lk vi, 17-19).
At this point Luke has transposed two brief sections of Mark, because, it is evident, by so doing he secures a better introduction to his Sermon on the Level Place, which he now (Lk vi, 20-49) proceeds to give. By placing the account of the calling of the twelve (Mk iii, 13-19; Lk vi, 12-16) just before the account of the gathering of the throng (Mk iii, 7-12; Lk vi, 17-19) he secures his audience for his Sermon on the Plain; if the narrative had been given in reverse order, as by Mark, the sermon might appear to have been addressed to the twelve alone. After his Sermon on the Plain (Lk vi, 20-49) Luke adds the story of the widow’s son, the anointing in Simon’s house, and the ministering women (vii, 11-17, 36-50; viii, 1-3), not found in either Mark or Matthew, after which the three take up the same story again in the accusation of the scribes and the speech about Beelzebub, tho Luke’s order is here not that of the other two (Mk iii, 20-30; Mt xii, 22-37; Lk xi, 14-23). After the insertion of non-Marcan material by both Matthew and Luke, both return to Mark’s narrative in the story of the family of Jesus who had come to take him home (Mk iii, 31-35; Mt xii, 46-50; Lk viii, 19-21), the parable of the Sower, the speech about the purpose of the parables, the interpretation of the parable of the Sower, and the group of detached sayings (Mk iv, 1-25; Mt xiii, 1-23; Lk viii, 4-18); Matthew, however, omits three out of the four sayings at this point, because he has already incorporated them in his Sermon on the Mount.
Then follows in Mark alone (Mk iv, 26-29) the parable of the Seed that grew of itself, the only section of Marcan material thus far omitted by both Matthew and Luke. Then the parable of the Seed-Corn, which Luke omits but Matthew gives (Mk iv, 30-32; Mt xiii, 31-32).[3] Then come the storm on the lake, the story of the Gadarene demoniac, the healing of Jairus’ daughter, with the interpolation of the story of the woman with the hemorrhage (Mk iv, 35-v, 43; Mt viii, 23-34; ix, 18-26; Lk viii, 22-56), all in the same order. Then follows the rejection in Nazareth (Mk vi, 1-6; Mt xiii, 53-58); Matthew follows Mark in it, but Luke omits it because he has related a similar incident in his fourth chapter. Luke then follows Mark in relating the incident of the sending out of the twelve (Mk vi, 6-13; Lk ix, 1-6); Matthew has given it in an earlier location. The judgment of Herod concerning Jesus is then given by all three (Mk vi, 14-16; Mt xiv, 1-2; Lk ix, 7-9). Matthew gives with Mark (Mk vi, 17-29; Mt xiv, 3-12) the story of the Baptist’s death; Luke omits it, having concluded his story of John in connection with his account of the baptism of Jesus (Lk iii, 19-20). Then follow in all three the return of the disciples and the feeding of the five thousand (Mk vi, 30-44; Mt xiv, 13-21; Lk ix, 10-17). Thus far, several items of Mark’s narrative have been omitted now by Matthew and now by Luke, but only one fragment, the parable of the Seed Growing of Itself (Mk iv, 26-29), by both Matthew and Luke.
LUKE’S “GREAT OMISSION,” AND BEYOND
With Mk vi, 45, begins a section extending to Mk viii, 26, in which Matthew follows Mark closely, both in wording and in order (Mt xiv, 22-xvi, 12), except that Matthew omits Mark’s healing of the deaf stammerer (Mk vii, 31-37), inserts (Mt xv, 29-31) a summary of the healing narratives, and omits the healing of the blind man (Mk viii, 22-26). Luke omits the entire section. Luke picks up the thread of Mark’s narrative again at Mk viii, 27, and he and Matthew follow it thru the confession of Peter (Mk viii, 27-33; Mt xvi, 13-23; Lk ix, 18-22), the prediction of sufferings for the disciples (Mk viii, 34-ix, 1; Mt xvi, 24-28; Lk ix, 23-27), and the transfiguration (Mk ix, 2-8; Mt xvii, 1-8; Lk ix, 28-36). Luke omits the question of the scribes concerning Elias, but Matthew follows Mark in it (Mk ix, 9-13; Mt xvii, 9-13). After the omission of these five Marcan verses Luke again continues Mark’s narrative, as does Matthew, and the three relate together the healing of the epileptic boy (Mk ix, 14-29; Mt xvii, 14-21; Lk ix, 37-43a), and the second prediction of sufferings (Mk ix, 30-32; Mt xvii, 22-23; Lk ix, 43b-45).
Matthew inserts from another source the passage about the temple-tax (Mt xvii, 24-27), and the three continue together in the passage concerning the strife about precedence (Mk ix, 33-37; Mt xviii, 1-5; Lk ix, 46-48). Matthew then drops out for a few verses, but Luke follows Mark in the story of the unknown exorcist (Mk ix, 38-41; Lk ix, 49-50). Luke omits Mark’s saying about offenses, but Matthew follows Mark in it (Mk ix, 42-48; Mt xviii, 6-9). Both Matthew and Luke then forsake Mark for the moment, since they have both given his saying about salt (Mk ix, 49-50) in other connections, their treatment of Mark here being evidently influenced by their use of another source.[4] Matthew then inserts a few sections peculiar to his Gospel (Mt xviii, 10-35), a few verses of which (Mt xviii, 10-14; Lk xv, 3-7; Mt xviii, 15; Lk xvii, 3; Mt xviii, 21-22; Lk xvii, 4) are somewhat loosely paralleled in Luke.
LUKE’S “GREAT INTERPOLATION”: ITS CONTENT
Beginning with the 51st verse of his 9th chapter, and extending thru the 14th verse of his 18th chapter, occurs Luke’s “Great Interpolation,” his account of the journey thru Samaria. Here occur in Luke many of Jesus’ sayings which Matthew has combined into his “Sermon on the Mount”; notably the Lord’s Prayer, the speech about backsliding, and the saying “Ask and ye shall receive.” Here also is much material peculiar to Luke; notably Jesus’ visit to the home of Mary and Martha, the blessing of the woman upon the mother of Jesus, the sending out and return of the seventy disciples, the healing of the ten lepers, and the parables of the Good Samaritan, the Friend Asking for Bread, the Foolish Rich Man, the Lost Sheep, the Lost Coin, the Prodigal Son, Dives and Lazarus, the Unjust Judge, and the Publican and Pharisee in the Temple.