| A: The
word "synoptic"
means to give an account from the same point of view. The
Synoptic Gospels (Matthew, Mark, and Luke) are similar in the
miracles, parables, and teaching of Christ included in the books.
This does not mean that they are identical. Often that which
is found in one is not found in the other. Also, even the same
events are told with slightly different viewpoints that help
us see the entire story. However, the similarity is more than
is usually found in three independently written biographies of
the same person.
Some scholars spend great amounts
of energy and ink to explain how Matthew and Luke copied
from Mark or how all three took much of their information
from a source that no longer exists. All of this fails to
get to the spiritual meaning of the gospels and wastes a
lot of time. God sometimes allowed the Bible writers to refer
to extra biblical sources. However, if we believe that the
Holy Ghost controlled the writing of the text, it does not
matter what tools He used to get it written.
The particulars of how the three
gospels differ is too involved to get into here except in
the most general terms. Many reference Bibles will have comparisons
of the parables and miracles as found in the different gospels.
If you want a heavy-duty reference that goes into all the
issues, I would recommend "A Guide to the Gospels" by
W. Graham Scroggie.
But let me give a very general rundown of the four gospels.
Matthew - This book was especially
written to the Jews and it presents Christ as the King of
the Jews. It gives the royal genealogy of Christ to prove
Him to be in the Messianic line of David. He gives the Sermon
on the Mount (Matthew 5-7)
as a rule of life for the kingdom.
Mark - In Mark, Christ is the
servant of man. Mark if the shortest of the gospels and has
the least teaching of the four gospels. It is a book of action
using words like "straightway." The birth of Christ
is not mentioned. It is the ministry of Jesus that this book
portrays.
Luke - Luke shows Jesus Christ
to be the Son of man. It is His humanity and His understanding
of man that is emphasized. The genealogy of Christ in Luke
goes back to Adam. Luke is filled with teaching for the disciples.
Subjects like prayer are mentioned more in Luke than in the
other gospels.
John - In John, Jesus is presented
as the Son of God. The book begins with His identity as God
and His work in creation. John clearly states the purpose
of his book: "But these are written, that ye might believe
that Jesus is the Christ, the Son of God; and that believing
ye might have life through his name" (John
20:31). John was written to identify Jesus Christ as
the Son of God and to lead others to believe in Him in order
to have eternal life.
Here are some other comparisons
between the four gospels:
As to number of chapters:
(1) Matthew –
28 chapters; 4 (earthly view) times 7 (heavenly work)
(2) Mark – 16 chapters; 4 (earthly
view) times 4 (earthly work)
(3) Luke – 24 chapters; 4 (earthly
view) times 6 (humanity)
(4) John – 21 chapters; 3 (divine
view) times 7 (heavenly work)
As to where the gospel begins
with the life of Christ:
(1) Matthew begins with Abraham
and David (Matthew 1:1)
(2) Mark begins from His baptism
(Mark 1:9)
(3) Luke begins from Adam (Luke
3:38)
(4) John begins from the beginning
(John 1:1)
As to main audience (this is a
general statement only):
(1) Matthew –
the Jews
(2) Mark –
the Gentiles
(3) Luke –
the Saved
(4) John –
the Lost
As to miracles:
(1) Matthew records 20 of which
4 are exclusive to Matthew
(2) Mark records 18 of which 2
are exclusive
(3) Luke records 19 of which 6
are exclusive
(4) John records 8 of which 6
are exclusive
Notes: Only the miracle of the
feeding of the 5,000 is found in all four gospels. John has
the fewest number of miracles but the greatest percentage
of exclusive miracles (6 out of 8).
As to parables:
(1) Matthew records 27 of which
15 are exclusive
(2) Mark records 10 of which 2
are exclusive
(3) Luke records 28 of which 19
are exclusive
(4) John records 2; both are exclusive.
Note: John does not commonly use parables as a teaching tool.
Till He comes,
Pastor David
Reagan
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