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But a solution can also be worked out along the following lines: Peters first denial-occasion consisted of three verbal utterances to a servant-girl -- I dont know or understand what you are saying, as Mark 14:66-68 and Matthew 26:69-70, and Woman, I do not know Him, as Luke 22:54-57 says, and, in response to a direct question, I am not [one of His disciples], as John 18:16-17 relates. The combination of the Gospels accounts shows that Peters first denial-episode had three component-parts, each consisting itself of a denial.
Doesn't this strike you as rather peculiar? Why would each Gospel writer use only one of his sentences? Why didn't a single one of them quote him in his entirety?
Back when I was a Christian I used these kinds of tortured explanations to resolve contradictions. Eventually I realized that they might be possible for a few cases, but not for hundreds of cases. It's just not plausible.
