A good teacher not only conveys knowledge, but gives his students the tools by which they may continue learning. With the publication of the third and final volume of A Comparative Greek Concordance of the Synoptic Gospels, Dr. Robert Lindsey has given to the scholars who have been following his work, as well as to future scholarship, a necessary tool for the study of the synoptic Gospels.
The concordance is laid out in such a way that the vitally important data which Lindsey long ago saw embedded in the literary strata will be more easily seen by others. The verse-by-verse comparison offers building blocks for grasping the literary relationship of the synoptic Gospels, and more clearly understanding the life and teachings of Jesus.
Parallel References
Anyone who has studied the synoptic Gospels will quickly realize the valuable contribution this new concordance makes to comparative Gospel research. Most New Testament concordances list entries in order of their appearance, which makes it quite difficult to determine whether a word in the synoptic Gospels is used in parallel pericopae, omitted or substituted by another word. With Lindsey's concordance, the student can immediately see the answer to these questions.
Let us take as an example the nou
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