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Products>John’s Transformation of Mark

John’s Transformation of Mark

Digital Logos Edition

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Digital list price: $31.45
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Overview

John’s Transformation of Mark brings together a cast of internationally recognised biblical scholars to investigate the relationship between the gospels of Mark and John. In a significant break with the prevailing view that the two gospels represent independent traditions, the contributors all argue that John both knew and used the earlier gospel. Drawing on recent analytical categories such as social memory, ‘secondary orality,’ or ‘relecture,’ and ancient literary genres such as ‘rewritten Bible’ and bioi, the central questions that drive this volume focus on how John used Mark, whether we should speak of ‘dependence,’ ‘familiarity with,’ or ‘reception,’ and whether John intended his work to be a supplement or a replacement of Mark. Together these chapters mount a strong case for a reassessment of one of the key tenets of modern biblical criticism, and open up significant new avenues for further research.

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  • Explores the relationship between Mark and John
  • Provides useful knowledge for research on the Gospels
  • Studies John’s use and transformation of the Gospel of Mark
  • Introduction
  • Mark and John in the History of Research – Harold Attridge
  • The Johannine ‘Relecture’ of Mark - Jean Zumstein
  • John’s Critical Inheritance of Prior Tradition: A Social Memory Approach - Chris Keith
  • John’s ‘Rewriting’ of Mark: Some Methodological Considerations – Catrin Williams
  • The Use of Sources by Classical Authors - George Parsenios
  • John’s Use of Matthean/Lukan Redaction of Mark – Mark Goodacre
  • John and the Construction of History - Eve-Marie Becker
  • Macro-Genre of Mark/John: Beginnings - Christina Hoegen-Rohls
  • o One Has Ever Seen God: The Revelatory Import of the Fourth Gospel’s Use of Mark in John 1:19-34 - Steve Hunt
  • John the Baptist in Mark and John – To be Confirmed
  • How John ‘Rewrites’ Mark as Seen in John 5:1-18 - Gilbert Van Belle
  • Eschatology in Mark and John: Aspects of a Comparison - Jörg Frey
  • The Ethical Concepts in Mark and John: a Comparative Approach - Oda Wischmeyer
  • Speeches in Mark and John - Susanne Luther
  • Metalepsis in Mark, John, and Ancient Narrative - Kasper Bro Larsen
  • The Plot to Kill Jesus in Mark and John: Reflections on the Literary Relationship Between two Early Christian Theological Lives of Jesus based on a Detail in the Narrative Plot - Michael Labahn
  • Mark, John and the Hypothetical ‘Pre-Markan Passion Narrative’ – Helen Bond
A judicious study on the relationship of Mark and John. By evaluating the literary techniques and theological motifs that guided John in his reception of Mark, this collection of essays opens new insights and sets the agenda for the future. It is no longer the old question of whether John knew the Gospel of Mark, but how he used it. This book will be welcomed by all theologians for a deeper understanding of transfer processes in early Christianity.

Udo Schnelle, University of Halle-Wittenberg, Germany

John's Transformation of Mark is a timely volume, amassing a wide variety of scholars to reflect anew on the question of John’s relationship to the First Gospel. This collection of essays boasts contributions from notable Gospel scholars who offer both large- and small-scale comparisons, all concluding John does indeed transform Mark’s Gospel in forming its own. Bringing these essays together in one place, Becker, Bond, and Williams have crafted a must have volume for Gospel scholars and students!

Alicia Myers, Campbell University, USA

A group of world-leading scholars gather to compare the Gospels of Mark and John and unexpectedly find unanimous agreement that John has used and transformed Mark! This excellent collection of their fresh analyses of specific passages, episodes and themes, complemented by methodological studies using intertextuality, social memory and analogies within ancient literature, will prove indispensable for research on the Gospels. It constitutes another major milestone in the shift of the current scholarly consensus to the view that, though not of the same type as the relation among the Synoptic Gospels, there is indeed a literary connection between John and Mark.

Andrew T. Lincoln, Emeritus Professor of New Testament, University of Gloucestershire, UK

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  1. Jeff Moss

    Jeff Moss

    4/15/2022

    I am surprised that this resource is spending so long in the Gathering Interest phase of Pre-Pub. After reading various sections of the book available in the ‘preview’ format on Google Books – including the Introduction by the editors which reviews each of the chapters and is available in full – it is clear to me that this is an important and innovative collection of academic essays examining ways in which John appears to have made substantial and creative use of Mark’s earlier work in structuring and composing his own. It presents, therefore, a strong challenge to the idea that John was a work independent of any of the Synoptic Gospels. This is a major, recent – and, from my perspective, long overdue – contribution to the study of the Gospels, yet it languishes on the lower end of the Gathering Interest spectrum. Also, the cost of the Logos Edition is far less than the prices listed for both the print edition and alternative digital editions available online (e.g., Kindle). Here’s hoping this challenging volume soon achieves the status of Almost Funded then In Production. In order to read and study the complete book, I would prefer the power of a Logos Edition instead of having to purchase a print or Kindle edition.

$12.99

Digital list price: $31.45
Save $18.46 (58%)

In production