V
Vouthon
Guest
While for Christians each of the four gospel accounts are, of course, Sacred Scripture and at the very heart of our faith identity, there is no getting by the fact that we tend to feel a greater affinity for certain texts over others.
The Bible is a library, after all; a library of books spanning a range of genres, literary styles and degrees of rhetorical prowess and aesthetic merit. This is no less the case for the canonical gospels. One scholar has described the different tones of the four gospels succinctly as, “the elegant style of Luke, the elevated style of John, the forceful style of Matthew, and the plain style of Mark .” Take your pick! Which one do you connect with the most?
The synoptics share broad intertextual themes and dependence (i.e. Markan primacy, potentially a shared Q source for Matthew-Luke etc.), whereas the Gospel of John is quite distinct in its more mystical, realized eschatology.
What about you?
The Bible is a library, after all; a library of books spanning a range of genres, literary styles and degrees of rhetorical prowess and aesthetic merit. This is no less the case for the canonical gospels. One scholar has described the different tones of the four gospels succinctly as, “the elegant style of Luke, the elevated style of John, the forceful style of Matthew, and the plain style of Mark .” Take your pick! Which one do you connect with the most?
The synoptics share broad intertextual themes and dependence (i.e. Markan primacy, potentially a shared Q source for Matthew-Luke etc.), whereas the Gospel of John is quite distinct in its more mystical, realized eschatology.
What about you?
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