The Two-Source Hypothesis was first articulated in 1838 by Christian Hermann Weisse, but it did not gain wide acceptance among German critics until Heinrich Julius Holtzmann endorsed it in 1863. Prior to Holtzmann, most Catholic scholars held to the Augustinian hypothesis[?] (Matthew → Mark → Luke) and Protestant biblical critics favored the Griesbach hypothesis[?] (Matthew → Luke → Mark).
The Two-Source Hypothesis crossed the channel into England in the 1880s primarily due to the efforts of William Sanday[?], but it was Burnett Hillman Streeter[?] who definitively expressed the case in 1924.
The Griesbach hypothesis continues to be the main challenger to the Two-Source Hypothesis in America, primarily due to the efforts of William R. Farmer (1965), but in England its most influential opponents favor the Farrer hypothesis[?] (Mark → Matthew → Luke).
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