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===Editorial fatigue=== Goodacre lists a number of occasions where it appears that Matthew or Luke begin by altering Mark, but become fatigued and lapse into copying Mark directly, even when doing so is inconsistent with the changes they have already made.<ref name="fatigue">{{cite journal |doi=10.1017/S0028688500016349 |title=Fatigue in the Synoptics |year=1998 |last1=Goodacre |first1=Mark |journal=New Testament Studies |volume=44 |issue=1 |pages=45β58 |s2cid=170283051 |url=http://www.markgoodacre.org/Q/fatigue.htm}}</ref>{{sfnp|Goodacre|2001|pp=71β76}} Alan Kirk, on the other hand, questions the idea that Matthew and Luke had a deficient concentration. Rather than redacting visually the evangelists used their memories to copy passages from Mark. Kirk argues that such skillful writers should not be accused of carelessness, and the instances of fatigue can be explained as a living reactualization of their sources.<ref>{{Cite book |last=Kirk |first=Alan |title=Jesus Tradition, Early Christian Memory, and Gospel Writing |publisher=Eerdmans |year=2023 |isbn=9780802882950 |pages=5298-5324 (location)}}</ref> For example, Matthew is more precise than Mark in the titles he gives to rulers, and initially gives [[Herod Antipas]] the correct title of "tetrarch",<ref>{{bibleverse|Mt|14:1|!}}</ref> yet he lapses into calling him "king"<ref>{{bibleverse|Mt|14:9|!}}</ref> at a later verse, apparently because he was copying Mark<ref>{{bibleverse|Mk|6:26|!}}</ref> at that point. Another example is Luke's version of the [[Parable of the Sower]], regarding the seed sown on rocky ground,<ref>{{bibleverse|Mk 4:5β6, 16β17; Lk 8:6, 13||!|multi=yes}}</ref> where Luke omits several elements of the parable, but then follows Mark in the parable's interpretation. Luke says merely that the seed withered for lack of moisture and does not mention the seed springing up quickly, nor the lack of roots, nor being scorched by the sun; yet these omissions remain in the interpretation as, respectively, receiving the word with joy, having no firm root, and the time of temptation. This phenomenon, along with the lack of counterexamples of fatigue occurring in the opposite direction, supports Marcan priority.
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