Gospel of Matthew | Gospel of John | Gospel | gospel | Gospel of Luke | Gospel of Mark | Gospel music | gospel music | Oral Roberts | Oral Roberts University | oral history | Gospel of Peter | Riemann hypothesis | Gospel of Thomas | Masterpieces of the Oral and Intangible Heritage of Humanity | Alvarez hypothesis | The Gospel According to St. Matthew (film) | The Gospel According to St. Matthew | oral sex | Oral and maxillofacial surgery | International Church of the Foursquare Gospel | Witch-cult hypothesis | Oral Torah | Oral rehydration therapy | Harlem Gospel Choir | Gospel of Philip | extraterrestrial hypothesis | combined oral contraceptive pill | two-source hypothesis | Southern Gospel Music Association |
J. J. Griesbach (Commentatio, 1794) treated this as the first of three source theories as solutions to the synoptic problem, following (1) the traditional Augustinian utilization hypothesis, as (2) the original gospel hypothesis or proto-gospel hypothesis, (3) the fragment hypothesis (Koppe 1793); and (4) the oral gospel hypothesis or tradition hypothesis (Herder 1797).