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This volume provides enough information about each story in the Gospel of Mark and about the gospel as a whole, in order to afford an informed understanding of the gospel. The evangelist was not writing a book for submission to a committee for inclusion in the Christian Bible. Rather, he was collecting existing oral and written tradition into a coherent narrative to promote, for his own Christian community, an understanding of the "good news" of Jesus the Messiah. The church to which the evangelist was writing, probably in Antioch of Syria, was likely already familiar with many of the stories…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
This volume provides enough information about each story in the Gospel of Mark and about the gospel as a whole, in order to afford an informed understanding of the gospel. The evangelist was not writing a book for submission to a committee for inclusion in the Christian Bible. Rather, he was collecting existing oral and written tradition into a coherent narrative to promote, for his own Christian community, an understanding of the "good news" of Jesus the Messiah. The church to which the evangelist was writing, probably in Antioch of Syria, was likely already familiar with many of the stories from the church's evolving liturgy. Christians gathered in people's homes; there were no "churches" as we understand that word as a specific building for Christian worship. It was in such gatherings in homes that stories were told, perhaps as the basis for a message delivered by an elder of the church. Such stories illustrated some truth about Jesus or addressed an issue of importance to the church. In other words, these individual stories were developed to serve the needs of the Christian community. Historical accuracy was not a concern of the evangelist. Proclaiming Jesus as Messiah was his primary purpose.
Autorenporträt
Arthur J. Bellinzoni is Professor of Religion Emeritus at Wells College and the author of The Sayings of Jesus in the Writings of Justin Martyr (1967), The Future or Christianity: Can It Survive? (2006), The Old Testament: An Introduction to Biblical Scholarship (2008), and The New Testament: An Introduction to Biblical Scholarship (2016), and co-editor and partial author of Intellectual Honesty and Religious Commitment (1969), and The Two-Source Hypothesis: A Critical Appraisal (1985), and the editor of The Influence of the Gospel of Saint Matthew on Christian Literature Before Saint Irenaeus (1992).