This book is for those who are interested in ancient messianism and Christology. It interrogates how early Jewish authors used traditions about David and his descendants to characterize their messiahs, and then applies this set of criteria to the Gospel of Mark.
This book is for those who are interested in ancient messianism and Christology. It interrogates how early Jewish authors used traditions about David and his descendants to characterize their messiahs, and then applies this set of criteria to the Gospel of Mark.
Max Botner is Assistant Professor of New Testament at Grand Rapids Theological Seminary. His work has been published in the Journal for Biblical Literature, the Journal for Theological Studies, the Journal for the Study of the Pseudepigrapha, and the Catholic Biblical Quarterly. He is also a co-editor of the forthcoming volume, Atonement: Sin, Sacrifice, and Salvation in Jewish and Christian Antiquity.
Inhaltsangabe
1. The son of David and the Christ of Mark: beyond an interpretive impasse 2. The makings of a messiah: sons of David, messiahs like David, and the Markan Jesus 3. Christening Jesus of Nazareth 4. How a Galilean prophet becomes a Messiah like David 5. The son of David and the Jerusalem temple 6. Crucifixion and resurrection as a Markan hermeneutic 7. Conclusion.
1. The son of David and the Christ of Mark: beyond an interpretive impasse 2. The makings of a messiah: sons of David, messiahs like David, and the Markan Jesus 3. Christening Jesus of Nazareth 4. How a Galilean prophet becomes a Messiah like David 5. The son of David and the Jerusalem temple 6. Crucifixion and resurrection as a Markan hermeneutic 7. Conclusion.
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