David Laird Dungan
David Laird Dungan was Distinguished Professor of the Humanities and Emeritus Professor of New Testament and Early Christianity at the University of Tennessee, Knoxville, and a major scholar of the synoptic problem. As a founding member of the International Institute for the Renewal of Gospel Studies and a member of the Research Team of the International Institute for Gospel Studies, he was a proponent of the Two-Gospel Hypothesis, also known as the Griesbach hypothesis, which argues that the Gospel of Mark is derived from the Gospel of Matthew and the Gospel of Luke, thereby arguing against both Markan priority and the necessity of the conjectural Q document proposed in the two-source hypothesis. He authored numerous articles and books on the subject, including A History of the Synoptic Problem.
The son of Presbyterian missionaries, Dungan was born in New Haven, Connecticut, and grew up in Shanghai, China, and in Berea, Kentucky, where he graduated high school in 1953. He earned degrees from The College of Wooster, McCormick Seminary in Chicago, and Harvard Divinity School.
From 1967 to 2002, he was a faculty member in the Department of Religious Studies at the University of Tennessee, Knoxville, teaching courses in Biblical literature, Church history, and images of Jesus. His teaching was interdisciplinary, with courses linking religion to the environmental crisis, and an innovative course in the 1980s on religious legacies of the Vietnam War, in which local veterans served as guest lecturers, sharing their experiences with students. His teaching was inquiry based; according to one colleague, it was designed "to put students in the presence of what is primitive and, far more, pristine about biblical texts," to put students "in the grip of serious uneasiness" with their prior assumptions, and to challenge them to work through dilemmas of faith and scholarship for themselves.
His scholarship and teaching were recognized internationally. In 1976-77 and again in 2006, he taught at the invitation of the Pontifical Biblical Institute in Rome. Documents for the Study of the Gospels, which he began co-editing in the 1970s with David R. Cartlidge, is used by scholars and students worldwide. And from 1990 to 1998, he co-edited the International Bible Commentary: a Catholic and Ecumenical Commentary for the 21st Century, comprising biblical scholars from diverse Christian traditions from North and South America, Europe, Asia, Africa, and Australia.
At the time of his death, he was working on a multimedia book project entitled Images of Jesus in America. Colleagues have assembled a volume of essays in his honor, which includes an introductory set of essays on his life of teaching and scholarship. The University of Tennessee, Knoxville, has established the David L. Dungan Memorial Lecture Fund to support an annual lecture by a noted scholar on an issue that motivated Dungan's work.
Publications by David Laird Dungan
Books Authored- Constantine's Bible: Politics and the Making of the New Testament.
- A History of the Synoptic Problem: The Canon, the Text, the Composition, and the Interpretation of the Gospels.
- Beyond the Q Impasse: Luke's Use of Matthew: A Demonstration by the Research Team of the International Institute for Gospel Studies, co-authored with Allan J. McNicol, David B. Peabody, Lamar Cope, William R. Farmer, and Philip L. Shuler.
- The Sayings of Jesus in the Churches of Paul: The Use of the Synoptic Tradition in the Regulation of Early Church Life.
- International Bible Commentary: a Catholic and Ecumenical Commentary for the 21st Century, co-edited with William R. Farmer, Dominique Barrios-Delgado, Armando Levoratti, and Sean McEvenue, English language edition.
- Documents for the Study of the Gospels, co-edited with David R. Cartlidge, revised and expanded edition. Originally published as Sourcebook of Texts for the Comparative Study of the Gospels: Literature of the Hellenistic and Roman Period Illustrating the Milieu and Character of the Gospels, co-edited with David R. Cartlidge, Society of Biblical Literature.
- The Interrelations of the Gospels: a Symposium Led by M É Boismard, W R Farmer, F Neirynck, Jerusalem 1984, Bibliotheca Ephemeridum Theologicarum Lovaniensium 95.
- "The Bible and Ecology," co-authored with Dan Deffenbaugh, in International Bible Commentary: a Catholic and Ecumenical Commentary for the 21st Century, edited by William R. Farmer, et al., English language edition.
- "What is the Synoptic Problem?" co-authored with John Kloppenborg, in International Bible Commentary: a Catholic and Ecumenical Commentary for the 21st Century, edited by William R. Farmer, et al., English language edition.
- "'Eppur Si Muove': Circumnavigating the Mythical Recensions of Q," Soundings 78:3-4 : 541-570.
- "The Year of Living Dangerously: An East–West Dialectic," co-authored with Linda Ehrlich, The New Orleans Film Review 19.3-4 : 118-124.
- "The Two Gospel Hypothesis," Anchor Bible Dictionary, vol. 5, 671-679.
- "Response to the two-source hypothesis," in The Interrelations of the Gospels: a Symposium Led by M É Boismard, W R Farmer, F Neirynck, Jerusalem 1984, Bibliotheca Ephemeridum Theologicarum Lovaniensium 95, 201-216.
- "Synopses of the Future," in The Interrelations of the Gospels: a Symposium Led by M É Boismard, W R Farmer, F Neirynck, Jerusalem 1984, Bibliotheca Ephemeridum Theologicarum Lovaniensium 95, 317-347.
- "Jesus and Violence," in Jesus, the Gospels, and the Church. Essays in Honor of William R. Farmer, edited by E. P. Sanders, 135 –162.
- "Critique of the Main Arguments for Mark's Priority as Formulated by B. H. Streeter," in The Two-Source Hypothesis: a Critical Appraisal, edited by Arthur J. Bellinzoni, Jr., Joseph B. Tyson, and William O. Walker, 143-161.
- "Critique of the Q Hypothesis," in The Two-Source Hypothesis: a Critical Appraisal, edited by Arthur J. Bellinzoni, Jr., Joseph B. Tyson, and William O. Walker, 427-433.
- "Synopses of the Future," Biblica 66 457–492.
- "A Griesbachian Perspective on the Argument from Order," in Synoptic Studies: The Ampleforth Conferences of 1982 and 1983, edited by Christopher M. Tuckett, Journal for the Study of the New Testament Supplement Series #7, 67-74.
- "The Purpose and Provenance of the Gospel of Mark According to the 'Two Gospel' Hypothesis," in Colloquy on New Testament Studies: a Time for Reappraisal and Fresh Approaches, edited by Bruce C. Corley, 133-179. Repr. in New Synoptic Studies: the Cambridge Gospel Conference and Beyond, edited by William R. Farmer, 411-440.
- "Theory of Synopsis Construction," Biblica 61 : 305–329.
- "Survey of Nineteenth Century ‘Lives of Jesus’," Religious Studies Review : 113–127.
- "Lives of Jesus Series," review article co-written with James O. Duke, Religious Studies Review 4.4 : 259-265.
- "Albert Schweitzer’s Disillusionment with the Historical Reconstruction of the Life of Jesus," in Perkins Journal 29 : 27–48.
- "Reconsidering Albert Schweitzer," Christian Century 92.32 : 874-880.
- "New Testament Canon in Recent Study," Interpretation 29.4 : 339-351.
- "Reactionary Trends in the Gospel Producing Activity of the Early Church: Marcion, Tatian, Mark," in L’évangile du Marc, Bibliotheca Ephemeridum Theologicarum Lovaniensium #34, edited by M. Sabbe, 179–202.
- "Mark the Abridgment of Matthew and Luke," in Jesus and Man’s Hope, vol. I, edited by D. Miller, 51–79. Repr. in The Two Source Hypothesis: A Critical Appraisal, edited by A. Bellinzoni.
Links
- , Knoxville News-Sentinel, 5 December 2008, repr. at ChanVinson.com Blog,.
- , Religious Studies Department, University of Tennessee, Knoxville.
- ,, A Web Site for the Two Gospel Hypothesis, Research Team of the International Institute for Gospel Studies.
- Thomas R. W. Longstaff,
- , Amazon.com page.
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