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Yet another excellent page from Michael Marlowe's website. Based on Kurt Aland's Synopsis, The Synoptic Gospels are arranged in parallel columns, with links to Bible Gateway's ASV. The Bible Gateway results display all the synoptic material in parallel.
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Hosted by the University of Toronto's Department for the Study of Religion, John W. Marshall's synopsis allows you to compre the gospels not only with each other, but with Jesus-sayings in Paul's letters, in Thomas, and with Q.
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This is Stephen Carlson's excellent introduction to the synoptic problem. Though this link takes you to his color-coded Greek synopsis page, the homepage gives an excllent overview of the synoptic problem and its various solutions.
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Mahlon Smith's excellent introduction to the Synoptic Problem also contains helpful links for further research, as well as links to his color-coded arrangement of Synoptic material.
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The purpose of Ben Smith's site "is to delve deeply into the extant texts of the ancient Judeo-Christian tradition." This page is a list of the major and minor agreements with respect to the Synoptic Problem.
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This is a good primer on the distinctions between John and the Synoptic Gospels. "Versus" is probably too strong a term, but it is concise.