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| Matthew, Mark, Luke, John |
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| Matthew, Mark, Luke (ministry of Jesus from similar perspective) |
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| theme of Jesus' preaching (sovereign rule/authority, consummation of reign in end-times kingdom) |
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| Matt's title for Kingdom of God |
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| messianic figure in Isaiah (offers self as sacrifice for sins) |
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| Jesus as messianic figure in Isaiah |
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| end-times savior sent to deliver his people "Anointed One" |
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| presence and wisdom of God (Immanuel) |
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| translation in the NT of Greek kyrios(servant, master, "God") |
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| Jesus' self-designation (true humanity and glorious redeemer) |
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| traditional title referring to Messiah's descent from line of David |
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| historical criticism which studies the oral or spoken traditions behind the written Gospel sources |
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| historical criticism which seeks to identify the written sources behind each Gospel and their relationship to one another. |
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| type of historical criticism which studies how the Gospel writers edited their sources to achieve their distinct theological goals. |
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| Matthew first, Mark used Matt, Luke used both |
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| view that Mark was first, Matthew and Luke used Mark |
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| both Matthew and Luke used Mark and "Q" as sources |
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| adds "M" and "L" (unique material by Matthew and Luke) |
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| (aka Two Gospel Theory)Matt first, Luke used Matthew, Mark used Matt and Luke |
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| Q (Synoptic Sayings Source) |
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| used by Matt and Luke (supposedly) |
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| short, self-contained Gospel episode in such as a miracle story, a parable, or a pronouncement story which may have originally circulated as an independent unit of oral tradition |
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| pericope recounting a miracle of Jesus (physical problem --> healing --> amazed reaction) |
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| pericope which builds to a climactic statement or pronouncement by Jesus. |
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| short fictional story illustrating a moral or spiritual lesson |
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| short, memorable statement of wisdom or truth |
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| completion of second temple to destruction (516 BC-AD 70) |
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| Macedonian King whose military conquests of the Eastern Mediterranean greatly advanced the process of hellenization |
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| spread of Greek culture and language, whether by coercion, force, or natural appeal. |
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| Greek translation of Hebrew OT |
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| Idumean (Edomite) ruler who gained the throne of Israel after the Roman conquest of Palestine |
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