David Laird Dungan Explained

David Laird Dungan (10 May 1936 – 30 November 2008) was an American scholar of Christianity. He served as Distinguished Professor of the Humanities and Emeritus Professor of New Testament and Early Christianity at the University of Tennessee, Knoxville. He also was a scholar of the synoptic problem.

Biography

The son of Presbyterian missionaries, Dungan was born in New Haven, Connecticut, and grew up in Shanghai, China until 1940. His family moved back to the United States and he was then raised in Berea, Kentucky, where he graduated high school in 1953. He earned degrees from The College of Wooster (B.A. 1957), McCormick Seminary in Chicago (B.D. 1963), and Harvard Divinity School (Th.D. 1968).[1]

From 1967 to 2002, Dungan 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.[2] His teaching was interdisciplinary, with courses linking religion to the environmental crisis, and a course in the 1980s on religious legacies of the Vietnam War, in which local veterans served as guest lecturers, sharing their experiences with students.[3] 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.[4]

Dungan was a proponent of the two-gospel hypothesis (Griesbach hypothesis), which argues that the Gospel of Mark is derived from the Gospel of Matthew and the Gospel of Luke. This meant he argued against both Markan priority and the necessity of the Q document proposed in the more accepted and common two-source hypothesis.[5] He authored numerous articles and books on the subject, including A History of the Synoptic Problem (Yale University Press, 1999). He was also a founding member of the International Institute for the Renewal of Gospel Studies[6] and a member of the Research Team of the International Institute for Gospel Studies, groups which facilitated and supported Dungan's work.

In 1976-77 and again in 2006, he taught at the invitation of the Pontifical Biblical Institute in Rome.[7] 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.[8] Dungan frequently collaborated with William R. Farmer, one of the main proponents of the two-gospel hypothesis. From 1990 to 1998, he and Farmer co-edited the International Bible Commentary: A Catholic and Ecumenical Commentary for the 21st Century, a collection of commentaries from biblical scholars from diverse Christian traditions worldwide.

At the time of his death, he was working on a multimedia book project entitled Images of Jesus in America.[9] Colleagues have assembled a volume of essays in his honor, which includes an introductory set of essays on his life of teaching and scholarship.[10] 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.[11]

Publications by David Laird Dungan

Books Authored

Books Edited

Articles and Essays Authored

Links

Notes and References

  1. Obituary for David Laird Dungan, Knoxville News-Sentinel, 5 December 2008, repr. at ChanVinson.com Blog, http://chandlervinson.blogspot.com/2008/12/in-memory-of-dr-david-l-dungan.html (5 Dec. 2008).
  2. Obituary for David Laird Dungan, Knoxville News-Sentinel, 5 December 2008, repr. at ChanVinson.com Blog, http://chandlervinson.blogspot.com/2008/12/in-memory-of-dr-david-l-dungan.html (5 Dec. 2008).
  3. David Linge, "Dungan's Interdisciplinary Teaching" section of "David Laird Dungan's Life and Work: A Cooperative Essay on a Collaborative Scholar," in Resourcing New Testament Studies, 7-9.
  4. Ralph Norman, "Dungan's Teaching of Christian Texts and Origins," in Resourcing New Testament Studies, 12-14.
  5. Research Team of the International Institute for Gospel Studies, "A Website for the Two Gospel Hypothesis," http://web.nebrwesleyan.edu/groups/synoptic/whoarewe.html .
  6. Charles Reynolds, "Introduction and Overview" section of "David Laird Dungan's Life and Work: A Cooperative Essay on a Collaborative Scholar," in Allan J. McNicol, David B. Peabody, & J. Samuel Subramanian, Resourcing New Testament Studies: Literary, Historical, and Theological Essays in Honor of David L. Dungan (New York: T&T Clark International, 2009), 5.
  7. Obituary for David Laird Dungan, Knoxville News-Sentinel, 5 December 2008, repr. at ChanVinson.com Blog, http://chandlervinson.blogspot.com/2008/12/in-memory-of-dr-david-l-dungan.html (5 Dec. 2008).
  8. David R. Cartlidge, "On Editing and Translating Documents for the Study of the Gospels," in Resourcing New Testament Studies, 17.
  9. "A Bibliography of Works by David Laird Dungan," in Resourcing New Testament Studies, 23.
  10. Resourcing New Testament Studies: Literary, Historical, and Theological Essays in Honor of David L. Dungan, edited by Allan J. McNicol, J. Samuel Subramanian, and David B. Peabody (T & T Clark International, 2009).
  11. David L. Dungan Memorial Lecture Fund, Religious Studies Department, University of Tennessee, Knoxville, https://archive.today/20130913054504/http://web.utk.edu/~religion/giving/dungan.php