Additional Resources

Additional Resources;
A comparison of the Gospels of Marco and Luke reveals the idea of the author of Luke. He is based on Marco's gospel and writes with extra material. The materials collected in this way are properly distributed as events during the journey of the Lord Jesus. But He doesn’t think much about when and where they happened. So, in fact, things that have happened in Jerusalem and Judea tell a lie as if it happened in Galilee, and this time things that can not be in Samaria are delivered as if they actually happened there. Then the Luke author seems to write with only one thing in mind. It means keeping the order and structure of Marco gospels that he referred to as much as possible in his gospels.

This is where Luke's author struggles. He distributes various things appropriately as events on the way of the Lord. He does not think much about the relationship between place and time. It was more important to write something appropriate for issues that he did not want to
throw away some of the materials that were at hand. As a result, this travel book has become as long as ten chapters. This is no longer a journey record. In this travel book, there is a trace that the material which seems to have put down the word of Jesus Christ, seems to have been written suddenly without relation to before and after.

Not only the written part itself has nothing to do with the parts before and after it, but it is not as stagnant as itself. As such, there are the following places. Luke 11; 33-36 12; 1-12 12; 35-46 13; 22-30 26; 16-18.
In addition, one part itself is concentrated and takes an independent form, but there is a misunderstanding between the front and back parts and the continuation. I do not know at all why the story has to be there.
Like9; 57-62 11; 1-13 12; 22-34.

Generally speaking, I feel strongly that it has arranged the materials gradually.
He also continued his journey, and it is not consistent with recording it. In this sense, it has a different character from Haiku; Basho MATSUO's 'Narrow Road to the Deep North.' in 1702,Japan.