Table of Contents
Preface
Acknowledgements
Abbreviations
1. Theological Issues at Stake in Early 20th Century Research on the Synoptic Problem -- C. M. Tuckett, University of Oxford, UK
2. The Decline of the Gospel Harmony: Loss or Gain? -- Marijke de Lang, United Bible Societies
3. The Archaeology of the Q Hypothesis: The Case of H. J. Holtzmann -- Francis Watson, University of Durham, UK
4. Memory, Tradition, and Synoptic Sources: The Quest of Holtzmann and Wernle for a Pre-Dogma Jesus – Alan Kirk, James Madison University, USA
5. The Search for “Urevangelium” as a Question of the Authority of the Jesus Tradition -- Markus Tiwald, University of Duisburg-Essen, Germany
6. The Rise of the Markan Priority Hypothesis and Early Responses and Challenges to It – Paul Foster, University of Edinburgh, UK
7. "No Weapon but That of Analysis”: Issues at Stake in the Rise and Reception of the Two-Document Hypothesis – Daniel Smith, Huron University, Canada
8. The Synoptic Problem, the Apocryphal Gospels, and the Quest of the Historical Jesus: Towards a Reformulation of the Synoptic Problem -- Jens Schröter, Humboldt University Berlin, Germany
9. French Catholic Scholars on the Synoptic Problem in the Late 19th and Early 20th Centuries -- Benedict Viviano, Fribourg University, Switzerland
10. Camouflaging Q: The Catholic 2DH from Lagrange to Sickenberger and Beyond -- John Kloppenborg, University of Toronto, Canada
Bibliography
Index