{
  "article": "<section class=\"plain-english-door\" aria-label=\"Introduction\">\n  <p class=\"plain-english-door__kicker\">Direct identity evidence</p>\n  <h3>Synoptic Wisdom Christology presses beyond mere teacher language.</h3>\n  <p class=\"plain-english-door__lead\">Matthew 11 and Luke 10 present Jesus with unique Father-Son knowledge and an invitation to come to him for rest. This is not the Johannine Logos prologue in another dress. It is a Synoptic wisdom-and-sonship pressure point that asks why Jesus is placed so close to the disclosure of God.</p>\n</section>\n\n<div class=\"detail-section-heading\">Observation</div>\n<div class=\"detail-article-block\">\n<p><strong>The Synoptic tradition can present Jesus as more than a messenger of wisdom.</strong> In Matthew 11:25-30 and Luke 10:21-22, Jesus speaks of unique mutual knowledge between Father and Son, disclosure by the Son, and rest given by Jesus himself. The language echoes wisdom, revelation, and divine disclosure without simply duplicating John 1.</p>\n<p>This row belongs inside the capped Synoptic divine-prerogatives family. It adds a distinct wisdom/sonship angle, but it must not be counted as a new independent Logos anchor.</p>\n</div>\n\n<div class=\"detail-section-heading\">What It Shows</div>\n<div class=\"detail-article-block\">\n<ul>\n<li>The Synoptics include material where Jesus is not only teaching wisdom but mediating knowledge of the Father.</li>\n<li>The invitation to come to Jesus for rest creates Wisdom-like pressure when read beside Jewish wisdom traditions.</li>\n<li>The row modestly supports Christ identity and a Logos-relevant canonical pattern without bypassing source and genre caveats.</li>\n</ul>\n</div>\n\n<div class=\"detail-section-heading\">What It Does Not Show</div>\n<div class=\"detail-article-block\">\n<ul>\n<li>It does not prove the Resurrection.</li>\n<li>It does not duplicate John 1, John 20, Revelation 5, Colossians 1, Hebrews 1, or 1 Corinthians 8:6.</li>\n<li>It does not settle every debate about Q, Synoptic tradition history, or wisdom Christology.</li>\n<li>It should not be inflated into a full Nicene doctrine by itself.</li>\n</ul>\n</div>\n\n<div class=\"detail-section-heading\">Bayesian Meaning</div>\n<div class=\"detail-article-block\">\n<p>The active weight is modest and dependency-capped: <strong>H-CHRIST-IDENTITY: +0.035 log10BF; H-CHRIST-AS-LOGOS: +0.020 log10BF</strong>. It is direct identity evidence with a limited Logos bridge through wisdom/revelation language, not a new independent Logos anchor.</p>\n</div>\n\n<div class=\"detail-section-heading\">Caveats</div>\n<div class=\"detail-article-block\">\n<ul>\n<li>Wisdom echoes must be argued, not assumed.</li>\n<li>Agency, prophetic revelation, and messianic sonship readings deserve a fair hearing.</li>\n<li>Synoptic source questions remain relevant.</li>\n<li>The row is capped with other Synoptic authority and early high-Christology rows.</li>\n</ul>\n</div>",
  "axioms": [
    "A6",
    "A7"
  ],
  "bayes_factors": {
    "H-CHRIST-IDENTITY": {
      "log10BF": 0.035,
      "bf_min": 0.01,
      "bf_max": 0.05,
      "rationale": "Synoptic unique Father-Son knowledge and Jesus' invitation to rest modestly support direct Christ-identity pressure while remaining compatible with agency, prophetic, and wisdom-teacher readings."
    },
    "H-CHRIST-AS-LOGOS": {
      "log10BF": 0.02,
      "bf_min": 0,
      "bf_max": 0.035,
      "rationale": "The wisdom/revelation pattern is Logos-relevant, but strongly overlaps with other canonical Logos and high-Christology rows."
    }
  },
  "bf_status": "ready",
  "category": "Early Christology",
  "citations": [
    "Matthew 11:25-30.",
    "Luke 10:21-22.",
    "Sirach 24.",
    "Wisdom of Solomon 7-9.",
    "N. T. Wright, Jesus and the Victory of God (Fortress, 1996).",
    "Richard Bauckham, Jesus and the God of Israel (Eerdmans, 2008).",
    "Ben Witherington III, Jesus the Sage (Fortress, 1994).",
    "James D. G. Dunn, Christology in the Making, 2nd ed. (Eerdmans, 1989), as developmental caution."
  ],
  "counts_in_cache": true,
  "evidence_id": "E-SCR-SYNOPTIC-WISDOM-CHRISTOLOGY",
  "visual_asset": {
    "src": "assets/evidence-viewer/evidence-images/synoptic_wisdom_in_christian_theology.png",
    "title": "Synoptic Wisdom Christology and unique Father-Son knowledge visual overview",
    "alt": "AI-generated conceptual visualization for Synoptic Wisdom Christology and unique Father-Son knowledge. Illustrative only, not experimental data.",
    "caption": "AI-generated conceptual / comparative visualization ? illustrative only, not experimental data. Presented inside a Christian evidence map.",
    "width": 1448,
    "height": 1086
  },
  "hypothesis_ref": [
    "H-CHRIST-IDENTITY",
    "H-CHRIST-AS-LOGOS"
  ],
  "last_updated": "2026-05-28T00:00:00Z",
  "major_category": "Scripture / Text",
  "metadata": {
    "canonical_anchor": "E-SCR-SYNOPTIC-WISDOM-CHRISTOLOGY",
    "cap_eligible": true,
    "cap_exempt_reason": null,
    "cap_family": "christ_identity_early_high_christology",
    "cap_notes": "Capped sibling support inside Synoptic divine-prerogatives and early high-Christology. Do not stack freely with Son of Man, forgiveness, Sabbath/Torah, Temple, trial/blasphemy, John 1, John 20, Revelation 5, Colossians 1, Hebrews 1, or 1 Corinthians 8:6.",
    "cap_profile": "moderate_semi_independent",
    "category": "Early Christology",
    "counts_as_direct_christ_identity": true,
    "counts_as_direct_logos_synthesis": true,
    "counts_as_direct_resurrection": false,
    "dependency_cluster": "synoptic_wisdom_christology",
    "dependency_cluster_id": "synoptic_wisdom_christology",
    "dependency_cluster_label": "Synoptic Wisdom Christology",
    "dependency_cluster_role": "primary_anchor",
    "dependency_role": "anchor",
    "dependency_weight_class": "semi_independent",
    "directness": "direct",
    "evidence_function": "direct_identity",
    "governance_reviewed": "2026-05-28",
    "last_updated": "2026-05-28",
    "major_category": "Scripture / Text",
    "rev": 1,
    "scoring_note": "Small direct-identity support with limited Logos relevance. No direct Resurrection BF.",
    "source_note": "Primary texts are Matthew 11:25-30 and Luke 10:21-22. Handle Q/Synoptic source questions, Jewish Wisdom background, agency readings, and sonship language carefully.",
    "source_status": "source_review_pending",
    "sub_category": "Synoptic Wisdom Christology"
  },
  "positive_apologetic": {
    "label": "Apologetic leverage",
    "title": "Jesus is not merely passing along wisdom.",
    "key_point": "The Synoptic material presents Jesus as the Son who reveals the Father and gives rest, which is stronger than generic wisdom-teacher language.",
    "conversation_move": "Grant prophetic and wisdom-teacher readings first. Then ask whether those readings can carry the whole pattern when this row is read beside forgiveness, Sabbath, Temple, Son of Man, John 1, 1 Corinthians 8, and early worship.",
    "caveat": "This is capped sibling support, not a new independent Logos anchor."
  },
  "scripture_passage": "Matthew 11:25-30; Luke 10:21-22",
  "source_note": "Use Matthew 11:25-30 and Luke 10:21-22 with wisdom-background and Synoptic source controls.",
  "status": "active",
  "sub_category": "Synoptic Wisdom Christology",
  "summary": "Datum: Matthew 11 and Luke 10 present Jesus with unique Father-Son knowledge, revelatory authority, and Wisdom-like invitation language.",
  "tags": [
    "Christology",
    "Wisdom",
    "Synoptics",
    "Scored"
  ],
  "tilt": "positive",
  "title": "Synoptic Wisdom Christology and unique Father-Son knowledge",
  "type": "atomic"
}
