The Gospel of Mark: A CommentaryThe Gospel of Mark, addressed to an early Christian community perplexed by failure and suffering, presents Jesus as suffering Messiah and Son of God. Recognizing that failure and suffering continue to perplex Christians, Francis Moloney marries the rich contributions of traditional historical scholarship with the contemporary approach to the gospels as narrative to bring the Gospel's story to life for readers today. |
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Page 66
... reference to Jesus as " the bridegroom " ( v . 20 ) has links with the Old Testament's reference to God as the bridegroom ( see Isa 54 : 4–8 ; 62 : 5 ; Ezek 16 : 7-34 ) . Some suggest that Judaism had developed these links into the idea ...
... reference to Jesus as " the bridegroom " ( v . 20 ) has links with the Old Testament's reference to God as the bridegroom ( see Isa 54 : 4–8 ; 62 : 5 ; Ezek 16 : 7-34 ) . Some suggest that Judaism had developed these links into the idea ...
Page 153
... reference to the presence of the postresurrection Jesus to Jew and Gentile ( see LaVerdiere , The Begin- ning , 1 : 208-9 ; Marcus , Mark , 492 ) . 185 See Guelich , Mark , 402–3 ; against Hooker , St. Mark , 188 : “ Mark makes no reference ...
... reference to the presence of the postresurrection Jesus to Jew and Gentile ( see LaVerdiere , The Begin- ning , 1 : 208-9 ; Marcus , Mark , 492 ) . 185 See Guelich , Mark , 402–3 ; against Hooker , St. Mark , 188 : “ Mark makes no reference ...
Page 268
... reference for " these things . " Coming hard on the heels of the use of Isaianic symbols that will indicate the imminent end of time , " these things " must link 13 : 28-31 with 13 : 24-27 . Furthermore , the sight of " these things ...
... reference for " these things . " Coming hard on the heels of the use of Isaianic symbols that will indicate the imminent end of time , " these things " must link 13 : 28-31 with 13 : 24-27 . Furthermore , the sight of " these things ...
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Common terms and phrases
accept action already appear asks association attempt authority Beginning Brown called Christ Christian claim close coming command context continues criticism cross crowd death described developed disciples discussion earlier early especially example expression failure faith Father final follow further Gentile given Gnilka God's Gospel of Mark Guelich hand Hooker human important indicates instruction interpretation introduction Israel Jerusalem Jesus Jewish Jews John king kingdom Lane leads light literary Lohmeyer looks Lord Luke Marcus Mark's Markan Markus Markusevangelium Matthew means Messiah miracle mission narrative original parable passage passion Pesch Peter Pharisees possible pre-Markan present Press question reader reference reflects rejection reported response resurrection Roman saying scribes setting story suffering suggests summary Taylor teaching tells temple Testament theme theological tion tomb tradition Twelve understanding women