What's a Harmony of the Gospels?
These used to be commonly found in the back pages of printed bibles, after Revelation and before the Index or Concordance. They collected into one place all the Gospel verses that described a particular event, so that the differences between them could be examined and researched. Using this tool Bible scholars could resolve the differences, and respond to critics who claimed that the Bible was self-contradictory.Let's take an example: After Jesus crossed the Sea of Galilee by boat, he encountered a man who was "demonized" by a legion of unclean spirits, as reported by Mark and Luke. But Matthew reports that there were two spirit-plagued men who encountered Jesus. Did one or two of the Gospel writers make a mistake?
The stock answer is, "Neither. There are no mistakes in the Bible. If Mark and Luke only reported one of the two men for their stories, they had a reason for doing so."
Is there evidence to support that view? In this case, yes. When Jesus is first confronted with these "demonized" men, he has a conversation with the unclean spirits, not with the men themselves. The voice that engages Jesus always refers to itself as "we," not "me," in all three Gospels.
But in Mark and Luke there is a second conversation, this one between a man (singular) and Jesus. The man wants to travel with Jesus, but Jesus tells him to go tell people how God freed him from unclean spirits. The man (singular) goes throughout the Roman territory of the Ten Towns telling what Jesus had done for him. For Mark and Luke, this is an important part of their story, so they simply ignored the second man, who had been freed from foul spirits but had not begged to go with Jesus.
And in Matthew? The second conversation is not present, perhaps not important to the lessons that Matthew is teaching in this context. Matthew therefor was free to report both demonized men without having to deal with the complication of their different histories after the spirits cast out. This is not to lay any blame on the person who didn't beg Jesus: he may simply not have been there by the time Jesus departed that area.
(This story is at Matthew 8:28-34, Mark 5:1-20, and Luke 8:26-39)
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