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12th March 2020, 09:34
#676
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15th March 2020, 08:14
#677
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20th March 2020, 05:42
#678
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22nd March 2020, 21:02
#679
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The Following User Says Thank You to Aianawa For This Useful Post:
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22nd March 2020, 21:23
#680
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The Following User Says Thank You to Aianawa For This Useful Post:
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22nd March 2020, 22:55
#681
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23rd March 2020, 01:00
#682
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24th March 2020, 10:03
#683
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24th March 2020, 23:35
#684
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Nice reminder > remastered version >
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25th March 2020, 10:22
#685
Senior Member
Matthew 5:5
Blessed are the gentle, for they shall inherit the earth.
This well known verse is perhaps the most famous of the Beatitudes. Unlike the previous two, however, this one has no parallel in Luke's Sermon on the Plain. Luke's Sermon contains four Beatitudes and four Woes. There is considerable debate over whether this Beatitude was in Q, and Luke left it out, or if it is an original addition by the author of Matthew.
Q Source
The Q source (also called Q document, Q Gospel, or Q from German: Quelle, meaning "source") is a hypothetical written collection of primarily Jesus' sayings (logia).
In the two-source hypothesis, the three-source hypothesis and the Q+/Papias hypothesis, Matthew and Luke both used Mark and Q as sources. Some scholars have postulated that Q is actually a plurality of sources, some written and some oral.[5] Others have attempted to determine the stages in which Q was composed.
The Synoptic Problem
The gospels of Matthew, Mark, and Luke are referred to as the synoptic Gospels because they include many of the same stories, often in a similar sequence and in similar or sometimes identical wording. They stand in contrast to John, whose content is largely distinct. The term synoptic comes via Latin from the Greek σύνοψις, synopsis, i.e. "(a) seeing all together, synopsis";[n 1] the sense of the word in English, the one specifically applied to these three gospels, of "giving an account of the events from the same point of view or under the same general aspect" is a modern one.[1]
The longstanding majority view favors Marcan priority, in which both Matthew and Luke have made direct use of the Gospel of Mark as a source, and further holds that Matthew and Luke also drew from an additional hypothetical document, called Q.[4]
This post is "Biblical".
moreonethananyoneta
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26th March 2020, 00:05
#686
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27th March 2020, 02:15
#687
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29th March 2020, 22:50
#688
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30th March 2020, 08:03
#689
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31st March 2020, 02:28
#690
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