To Harmonize or Not: A Brief Answer

120628-four-gospelsFrom time to time I receive random questions from people I don’t even know. One from yesterday went as follows:
“Does Trinity Bible College hold the position that the four Gospels can or cannot be perfectly harmonized into one account?”
And my brief response (that I thought could be of interest to some who follow this blog) after letting the individual know that Trinity does not have any official position on this:

The four Gospel accounts can be harmonized with one another, but must also be allowed to remain distinct voices from one another. This has been the historic response to such ideas. Irenaeus in the second century contended for the necessity of the four distinct accounts that each in their own ways reveal Jesus as God’s self-revelation and belong being heard together (though as individual voices). Tatian (another second century Church father) attempted a harmony as the text of the Syriac Church (it was called the Diatessaron), but this was rightly rejected by the wider Church as failing to allow for the distinctions of each individual Gospel account. In other words, I would say that while we believe that the Gospels do not actually contradict one another they remain as differentiated testimonies to Jesus that should be honored as distinct witnesses.

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One Response to To Harmonize or Not: A Brief Answer

  1. charles may says:

    One difficulty that comes to mind arises when trying to harmonize the Olivet Discourses in Matthew, Mark and Luke. The narrative in Matthew and Mark seem to describe a certain event and the account in Luke describes appears to be a different event. Also the account in Matthew and Mark is recounted to a different group and in a different location.

    One good effort was undertaken and published by Charles Thomson in 1815 entitled, “A Synopsis of the Four Evangelists” but uses the Luke account as the primacy. That said I feel it is a good representation of ordering the events of the gospels. He is also known as the first translator of the LXX into English in 1808.
    IMHO
    Charlie

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