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Title: THINKING ABOUT THE STUDY OF THE NEW TESAMENT


1
THINKING ABOUT THE STUDY OF THE NEW TESAMENT
2
NT Greek MSS Textual Criticism
  • A. Definition of Textual Criticism
  • Textual criticism is the study of copies of any
    written work which the autograph (the original)
    is unknown, with the purpose of ascertaining the
    original text (Greenlee, 1, see class notes for
    all references in this ppt).
  • B. Goal of New Testament Textual Criticism
  • When applied to the New Testament, it has the
    task of attempting to restore the original text
    of the New Testament Greek documents (Briggs, 31).

3
Bible Times Book/Scroll Preparation
  • D. Biblical times book/scroll preparation and
    writing
  • 1. Ancients used clay (Ezek. 41), Stone
  • (Ex. 3118), and wood tablets, leather scrolls
    (Jer. 3923).
  • 2. In later times they used papyrus (paper made
    from papyrus reed, its inner bark extracted and
    dried).

4
Bible Preparation
  • 3. Also, used parchment/vellum (small animal
    skins), scrolls (see II Tim. 413).
  • 4. Scrolls were papyrus, leather, or parchment
    sheets joined together in long rolls, about 10-12
    inches wide and up to 35 feet long with 3-4 inch
    columns. Sometimes writing was on both sides
    (Rev. 51 Ezek. 210).
  • 5. The Codex (a book of papyrus sheets) was also
    used by the mid First Century AD.

5
Bible Preparation
  • 6. Writing of NT Greek MSS had very little
    punctuation, no paragraph divisions, no sentence
    divisions, and no spaces between words.
  • ENARCHHNOLOGOSKAIOLOGOSHNPROSTONYEONKAIHEOSHNOLO
    GOS
  • thismadecopyingwithouterrorsverydifficultcopyingmi
    stakesweremadefrequentlybutnoerrorshavebeenfoundth
    ataretheologicallysignificant
  • --This made copying without errors very
    difficult. Copying mistakes were made frequently.
    But no errors have been found that are
    theologically significant.

6
Examples of Types of Errors Found
  • --The following were facilitated by the lack of
    spaces between letters and words in writing and
    copying the Greek texts and could be called
    sight errors.
  • Omissions (haplography)
  • Duplications (dittography)
  • Jumping from the same letter or group of letters
    to another at the beginning of a word
    (homoioarcton), or at the middle of a word
    (homoiomeson), or at the end of a word
    (homoioteleuton) (McKnight, 61).
  • Change of the order of words (metathesis)

7
Three Major MSS Families Discovered
  • 1. Alexandrian text witnesses These have the
    earliest and best quality of MSS and considered
    by scholars to be the best MSS.
  • 2. Western text witnesses have an early but
    generally unreliable form of the text (Green.
    135)

8
MSS Families
  • 3. Byzantine text witnesses which include the
    vast majority of later manuscripts, are the most
    universally judged by scholars to preserve an
    inferior form of the text (Green. 135).
  • King James Verson (Textus Receptus) is of this
    family. The King James Debate supporters opt for
    this majority text reading to be the inspired
    one. But does majority accuracy?

9
NT Text Criticism Greek MSS
  • John Rylands Manuscript (125-130AD).
  • --Found in Egypt.
  • --Measures only 3.5 by 2.5 inches (8.9 by 6 cm)
    at its widest and conserved with the Rylands
    Papyri at the John Rylands University Library The
    front contains lines from the Gospel of John
    183133, in Greek, and the back contains lines
    from verses 3738 (From Wikipedia)
  • --It is important in that the Gospel of John can
    no longer be dated by liberal scholars at 200AD.
  • They once dated it this late to account for
    Johns so called developed theology.

10
Ancient Greek NT MSS
  • Codex Sinaiticus (350AD) Aleph (a)
  • --Contains all the New Testament except Mk.
    169-20 and Jn. 753-811.
  • --It was found in 1844 in a Mt. Sinai
    (Traditional site) monastery.
  • --It was found in a waste basket where monks
    there had been using old manuscripts as firewood
    to keep warm!
  • --It was discovered by Tischendorf and is now in
    London.

11
Ancient Greek NT MSS
  • Codex Vaticanus (325-350AD) B
  • --Housed in the Vatican library
  • --contains nearly all the Bible (OT and NT) but
    omits the book of Revelation.
  • Codex Alexandrinus (400AD)A
  • --It is in the British Museum.
  • --Contains most of the NT and OT. It does
    contain Revelation.

12
Passing on the Text
  • Christians have always been a people of the
    book
  • Original documents were hand-written
  • The writing was in Greek capital letters
    (Uncials)
  • At a very early stage, these documents were hand
    copied by laypeople
  • This was inexpensive, but this lead to a number
    of transmission errors

13
Passing on the Text
  • Three early developments soon complicated this
    situation
  • Scrolls were replaced by codexes, which made
    documents much more usable
  • There was an increasing replacement of Uncial
    manuscripts with cursive scripts (miniscules),
    which allowed manuscripts to be copied faster

14
Passing on the Text
  • Three early developments soon complicated this
    situation
  • The Bible was translated into other languages
  • People could read the Bible in their own
    language, but
  • These translations were not all of very high
    quality

15
Passing on the Text
  • The variety of readings in the manuscripts that
    we now possess is due to
  • Accidental mistakes of the copyists
  • The correcting of perceived mistakes by later
    copyists

16
Passing on the Text
  • The variety of readings in the manuscripts that
    we now possess is due to
  • The division of the Roman Empire into East and
    West resulted in the division of the church
  • Eastern churches retained Greek as the dominant
    language and Western churches became nearly
    solely dependent upon Latin

17
Passing on the Text
  • The variety of readings in the manuscripts that
    we now possess is due to
  • Decomposition of most materials upon which the
    documents were written
  • Parchment
  • Vellum (expensive parchment)
  • Papyrus (some survived due to the hot, dry
    climate of Egypt where they were stored)

18
Passing on the Text
  • How many NT manuscripts do we now have?
  • 5000 full or partial manuscripts
  • 8000 full or partial manuscripts in versions
    other than Greek
  • This evidence dates back as far as the early
    second century

19
Passing on the Text
  • The NT comes to us in the form of
  • Uncials
  • Miniscules
  • Lectionaries
  • Ostraca
  • Quotations in the writings of the Church Fathers

20
Passing on the Text
  • After the printing press...
  • First printed edition of the Greek NT was vol. 5
    of the Complutensian Polyglot Bible in Spain
  • Also included the first lexicon

21
Passing on the Text
  • After the printing press...
  • The first published edition was by the Dutch
    scholar Erasmus in 1516
  • Contained many typographical errors
  • Principally used two 12th Century manuscripts
  • Erasmus published five editions

22
Passing on the Text
  • In the wake of Erasmus...
  • Robert Estienne (Stephanus) published 4 editions
    heavily dependent upon Erasmus
  • The 3rd edition introduced the first critical
    apparatus
  • Beza's editions (Geneva) were heavily dependent
    upon Stephanus' 3rd and 4th editions

23
Passing on the Text
  • In the wake of Erasmus
  • King James Version was mostly dependent upon
    Beza's editions
  • These very similar Greek editions eventually
    became known as the textus receptus, or received
    text
  • Nearly all English editions of the New Testament
    before 1881 are dependent upon the textus receptus

24
Passing on the Text
  • Textual criticism Searching for the original
    text...
  • When a manuscript was written is crucial
  • Which reading is most likely to have generated
    all others?
  • Generally, the more difficult reading is
    preferred over the easier

25
Passing on the Text
  • Textual criticism Searching for the original
    text...
  • External evidence what is the quality of the
    manuscript?
  • Internal evidence what in the text itself
    indicates one reading over another
  • Intrinsic probability
  • Transcriptional probability

26
Passing on the Text
  • Because of all of this evidence
  • We can be confident in the accuracy of the New
    Testament
  • No doctrinal matter is in doubt because of text
    critical problems

27
Longstanding Interpretive Traditions
  • Important developments, people, and events from
    Church history
  • Early church refused to accept pseudonymous works
  • The collection of documents into the New
    Testament canon

28
Longstanding Interpretive Traditions
  • Important developments, people, and events from
    Church history
  • The earliest Christians were Jews
  • There was a recognition by early Christians that
    asserting Jesus as the sufficient grounds of
    salvation meant that some features of Judaism
    were no longer binding

29
Longstanding Interpretive Traditions
  • Important developments, people, and events from
    Church history
  • Christians very quickly began winning Gentile
    coverts
  • Theology had to be worked out in the context of a
    highly pluralistic society.

30
Longstanding Interpretive Traditions
  • Important developments, people, and events from
    Church history
  • Within Christianity, various heretical groups
    formed at a very early period
  • Gal 169 1 John 219
  • Gnosticism became a substantial threat to the
    church in the 2nd century

31
Longstanding Interpretive Traditions
  • Important developments, people, and events from
    Church history
  • Critical examination of the New Testament was
    carried out by early Christians
  • Tatian's Diatesseron

32
Longstanding Interpretive Traditions
  • Important developments, people, and events from
    Church history
  • The Church Fathers' writings demonstrate a
    profound devotion to scripture
  • Most wrote commentaries
  • They preached on the scriptures often

33
Longstanding Interpretive Traditions
  • Important developments, people, and events from
    Church history
  • Constantine's edict declaring full legal
    toleration of Christians
  • Prior to this, Christians were often persecuted
    and without legal standing
  • Papal power arose
  • The influence of the relationship between of
    Church and state
  • Monarchical bishops arose as the church
    attempted to settle disputes

34
Longstanding Interpretive Traditions
  • Important developments, people, and events from
    Church history
  • The ecumenical councils gave definitive
    statements on doctrinal truths
  • These truths were not new inventions, but
    settlements of existing debates

35
Longstanding Interpretive Traditions
  • Important developments, people, and events from
    Church history
  • The Fall of Rome
  • Literacy fell
  • Latin nearly entirely supplanted Greek and Hebrew
    in the West
  • Monasteriesthe centers of learning
  • Eastern and Western churches officially split in
    A.D. 1054

36
Longstanding Interpretive Traditions
  • Important developments, people, and events from
    Church history
  • The Middle Ages
  • Four-fold senses of scripture (Literal,
    Allegorical tropological, Moral, Analogical
    eschatological
  • Led to the sense that the Bible could only be
    interpreted by experts and church authorities

37
Longstanding Interpretive Traditions
  • Important developments, people, and events from
    Church history
  • The Renaissance
  • Invention of the printing press
  • Fall of Constantinople in 1453 led to a flood of
    scholars migrating to the West
  • Rise of European universities
  • Rise of the humanists

38
Longstanding Interpretive Traditions
  • Important developments, people, and events from
    Church history
  • The Reformation
  • sola scriptura
  • The Bible is the final authority for faith and
    practice
  • The Bible should be studied in the original
    languages
  • Bible should be widely disseminated

39
The Rise of Biblical Theology
  • J. P. Gabler (inaugural lecture in 1787) the
    Father of Biblical Theology
  • The Bible should be studied inductively, free of
    all dogmatic constraints
  • Dogmatic theology should be built upon this
    foundation
  • Most of the major scholars of the following
    centuries ignored this second point

40
The Rise of Biblical Theology
  • Rudolph Bultmann
  • Bible is theologically useful, but historically
    suspect
  • Modern man requires that the scriptures be
    demythologized of its supernatural character

41
The Rise of Biblical Theology
  • Biblical Theology Movement (1930's to 1950's)
  • Oscar Cullman Salvation history
  • Theological Dictionary of the New Testament

42
Historical Criticism
  • Types of Historical Criticism
  • Source criticism
  • Form criticism
  • Tradition criticism
  • Redaction criticism

43
Literary Criticism
  • Pros and Cons
  • Interprets texts as whole texts
  • Can run the risk of neglecting issues of history
    and truth

44
New Literary Criticism
  • Types
  • Structuralism
  • Deconstructionism
  • Reader-response

45
The Turn to Postmodern Readings
  • Claims of Postmodernism
  • Claims to certainty are rejected
  • Truth and falsehood are products of social
    constructs
  • There is no definitive right or wrong way to read
    scripture

46
The Turn to Postmodern Readings
  • The false antithesis of postmodernism
  • Either we can claim to know objective truth
    exhaustively
  • Or we accept that our finitude means that we
    cannot ever really know reality

47
The Turn to Postmodern Readings
  • The Bible speaks of knowledge of God in a
    straightforward manner
  • 1 John 513
  • Luke 134
  • Phil 310
  • John 832
  • John 2031

48
The Turn to Postmodern Readings
  • The Bible does not only tell a story, but a true
    story

49
Approaches to Background Material
  • Historical Backgrounds
  • The Church was born in both a Jewish and
    Greco-Roman world
  • Because of the breadth of background material in
    both, most scholars become experts in one or the
    other

50
Social Scientific Approaches
  • Types of Social Scientific Approaches
  • Sociological theory
  • Psychological theory
  • Cultural anthropology

51
Language and Linguistic Approaches
  • Types of Linguistic Approaches
  • Lexicography
  • Advances in understanding of verbal aspect in
    Greek
  • Speech-Act theory

52
Concluding Reflections
  • How does the confessionally oriented scholar
    engage the New Testament?
  • We must engage with the text of scripture, the
    manner it is discussed in the present generation,
    and with reference to the inheritance of biblical
    interpretation in church history

53
Synoptic Gospels
54
Oral Traditions Form Criticism
  • Form Criticism
  • First applied to OT by Hermann Gunkel
  • Made popular in NT studies by Karl Ludwig
    Schmidt, Martin Dibelius, and Rudolf Bultmann

55
Oral Traditions Form Criticism
  • Assumptions of Form Criticism
  • Stories and sayings about Jesus circulated orally
    in small independent units
  • Transmission of gospel material takes shape and
    is handed down within particular communities, not
    by individuals
  • Stories and sayings about Jesus took on certain
    standard forms

56
Oral Traditions Form Criticism
  • Assumptions of Form Criticism
  • Form makes it possible to determine a story's or
    saying's setting in life or Sitz im Leben in
    the early Church
  • Early Christian communities not only handed down
    oral material, but shaped and modified this
    material according to its own needs
  • Certain criteria can be used to determine age and
    historical trustworthiness

57
Oral Traditions Form Criticism
  • Criteria of Form Critics
  • People tended to
  • Lengthen stories
  • Add details
  • Conform them to their own language
  • Preserve and create only what fits their own
    needs and beliefs-criterion of dissimilarity

58
Oral Traditions Form Criticism
  • Evaluation of Form Criticism
  • It is probable that more gospel material was
    written early in transmission history than form
    critics admit
  • Classification of forms is provisional and
    general at best
  • The claim that one can determine a saying's
    setting in life must be met with healthy
    skepticism

59
Oral Traditions Form Criticism
  • Evaluation of Form Criticism
  • Assumptions of form critics regarding the nature
    of transmission are suspect
  • There is some misunderstanding of oral
    transmission
  • There is far too little attention paid to
    eyewitnesses and other individuals in the
    transmission process

60
Oral Traditions Form Criticism
  • Radical Form Criticism
  • The claim that the early church did not
    distinguish between the earthly Jesus and risen
    Lord has little foundation
  • The transmission of the gospel material over the
    course of 20 years does not compare well to other
    bodies of literature formed over hundreds of years

61
Oral Traditions Form Criticism
  • Radical Form Criticism
  • Oral transmission does not have the tendency
    toward lengthening the material
  • Criterion of dissimilarity skews the
    understanding of historical persons-only accepts
    as historical what is peculiar about Jesus
    against his fellow Jews and his followers

62
Oral Traditions Form Criticism
  • Radical Form Criticism
  • Failure to account for living eyewitnesses
  • Underestimation of the ability of first-century
    Jews to remember and transmit information
    accurately

63
Source Criticism The Synoptic Problem
  • Major questions
  • What sources, if any, did the evangelists use?
  • How do the gospels relate to one another?

64
Source Criticism The Synoptic Problem
  • Main Solutions to the Synoptic Problem
  • Common dependence on one original gospel
  • Common dependence on oral sources
  • Common dependence on gradually developing written
    fragments
  • Interdependence

65
Source Criticism The Synoptic Problem
  • Three Main Theories of Interdependence
  • Two-Gospel Hypothesis
  • Matthew was written first
  • Luke borrowed from Matthew
  • Mark borrowed from Matthew and Luke
  • Popularized by J. J. Griesbach in the late 18th
    century

66
Source Criticism The Synoptic Problem
  • Three Main Theories of Interdependence
  • Two-Source Hypothesis
  • Mark was written first
  • Matthew and Luke independently made use of Mark
    and Q, a non-extant sayings source
  • Made popular in the late 19th century by H. J.
    Holtzmann in Germany and in the 20th century by
    B. H. Streeter in Britain

67
Source Criticism The Synoptic Problem
  • Markan Priority
  • Matthew was assumed to be the first written
    gospel until the late 19th century
  • Mark became recognized as the first written
    gospel in Germany in the mid to late 19th century
  • Mark or even (Ur-Markus) became the basis for
    much of the German historical Jesus research

68
Source Criticism The Synoptic Problem
  • Arguments Against the Existence of Q
  • Minor agreements between Matthew and Luke against
    Mark

69
Source Criticism The Synoptic Problem
  • Proto-Gospel Theories
  • Ur-Markus
  • Aramaic or Hebrew version of Matthew
  • Proto-Luke

70
Source Criticism The Synoptic Problem
  • The Two-Source Hypothesis is the best explanation
    for the available data, but must be used as a
    working hypothesis rather than a conclusive
    answer to the Synoptic Problem

71
Final Composition Redaction Criticism
  • Seeks to describe the theological purposes of the
    evangelists by examining their use of sources

72
Final Composition Redaction Criticism
  • Basic Elements of Redaction Criticism
  • Redaction is the process of modifying tradition
    as the gospel was written down

73
Final Composition Redaction Criticism
  • Basic Elements of Redaction Criticism
  • Redactional activity can be seen in
  • The material included or excluded
  • The arrangement of material
  • The seams used to stitch tradition
    together-transitions
  • Additions and omissions to the material
  • Change of wording

74
Final Composition Redaction Criticism
  • Basic Elements of Redaction Criticism
  • Redaction critics look for patterns in these
    sorts of changes
  • Where a pattern emerges, one can pinpoint a
    theological concern of the author
  • On the basis of the theological picture, one can
    establish the setting for the original gospel

75
Final Composition Redaction Criticism
  • History of Redaction Criticism
  • William Wrede The Messianic Secret
  • Günther Bornkamm (Matthew)
  • Hans Conzelmann (Luke)
  • Willi Marxsen (Mark)

76
Final Composition Redaction Criticism
  • Criticisms of Redaction Criticism
  • Depends on our ability to discern between
    tradition and redaction
  • Critics too often assume that all changes an
    evangelist made were theologically motivated
  • Equation of redactional emphases with an
    evangelist's theology

77
Final Composition Redaction Criticism
  • Criticisms of Redaction Criticism
  • Identification of the setting of a gospel based
    on the author's theology is tenuous
  • Redaction Criticism is most often pursued in a
    manner that questions the trustworthiness of the
    gospel accounts
  • Can the evangelists be both historically accurate
    and theologically motivated?

78
Final Composition Redaction Criticism
  • Positive Aspects of Redaction Criticism
  • Focuses on the final written work
  • Reminds us that evangelists wrote with more than
    mere historical interest
  • Increases our appreciation of the multiplicity of
    the gospels

79
Gospels as Works of Literature
  • Gospel Genre
  • Popular Literature (Schmidt)
  • Mirror of Christian preaching or kerygma (Dodd)
  • Greco-Roman Bios (Burridge)
  • The gospels share commonality with
    contemporaneous literature, but are also
    genuinely unique

80
Gospels as Works of Literature
  • Criticisms of Literary Criticism
  • Reaction against historical analyses and history
    itself
  • Loosing the text from the author often entails no
    sense of a correct meaning of the text
  • Often attempts to anachronistically shove the
    gospels into modern categories of genre

81
Gospels as Works of Literature
  • Criticisms of Literary Criticism
  • Certain approaches (structuralism) are of limited
    value to the interpretation of the gospels

82
Jesus and the Synoptic Gospels
  • First Quest for the Historical Jesus
  • Begun with the posthumous publication of Samuel
    Reimarus' Fragments in which he strongly
    contested the gospel accounts
  • Early questers were rationalists, so they sought
    reasonable explanations for miraculous events

83
Jesus and the Synoptic Gospels
  • First Quest for the Historical Jesus
  • D. F. Strauss published the first account of
    Jesus that was radically skeptical of the gospel
    accounts in general

84
Jesus and the Synoptic Gospels
  • End of the First Quest
  • Three works called into question the supposedly
    objective German reconstructions of the
    historical Jesus
  • Albert Schweitzer The Quest for the Historical
    Jesus (1906)

85
Jesus and the Synoptic Gospels
  • The New Quest
  • After WWI, the critical lives of Jesus waned
    considerably
  • Ernst Käsemann, a student of Bultmann, re-opened
    the quest for a critical reconstruction of Jesus
    in 1953

86
Jesus and the Synoptic Gospels
  • The New Quest
  • The New Quest was marked by the dearth of what
    was considered reliable historical information
    about Jesus
  • More current representatives of the New Quest
    can be found in the Jesus Seminar (begun in 1985)

87
Jesus and the Synoptic Gospels
  • The Third Quest
  • Distinguished by a serious attempt to place Jesus
    within first-century Judaism
  • Generally positive about the reliability of the
    biblical gospels

88
Matthew
89
Contents
  • Proposals for the Structure of Matthew
  • Geographical movement
  • The phrase from that time on... (Matt 417
    1621)
  • Matthew is structured around the five major
    discourses
  • Seven-part outline

90
Contents
  • Seven-part outline of Matthew
  • The Prologue 11223
  • The Gospel of the Kingdom 31729
  • The Kingdom Extended under Jesus' Authority
    81111
  • Teaching and Preaching the Gospel of the kIngdom
    Rising Opposition 1121353
  • The Glory and the Shadow Progressive
    Polarization 1354192
  • Opposition and Eschatology The Triumph of Grace
    193265
  • The Passion and Resurrection of Jesus
    2662820

91
Author
  • Anonymity
  • Martin Hengel's Arguments Against Anonymity
  • Tertullian's castigation of Marcion's Anonymous
    Gospel
  • Multiplicity of Written Gospels
  • Unanimity of Second Century Writers

92
Author
  • Papias
  • Fragments of Papias' work are only available
    through Eusebius
  • Irenaeus Papias knew the Apostle John
  • Eusebius Papias did not know the Apostle John

93
Author
  • Papias
  • Appears to make the claim that Matthew was
    originally written in Hebrew or Aramaic

94
Author
  • Papias
  • Three reasons to think otherwise
  • Quotations from the OT reflect multiple
    text-forms
  • If Matthew used Mark, the verbal connections make
    it extremely unlikely that Matthew was written in
    a language other than Greek
  • Greek text of Matthew does not read as if it were
    a translation

95
Author
  • Papias
  • Papias was likely wrong to assert that Matthew
    was written in Hebrew or Aramaic
  • This does not mean that he was wrong to assert
    that Matthew was the author

96
Author
  • Other Factors Related to the Authorship of
    Matthew
  • Only gospel to refer to Matthew the tax
    collector (103)
  • The other gospels use the name Levi when
    referring to the character of Matthew
  • Matthew's use of Mark
  • Systematic vs. chronological account

97
Author
  • Other Factors Related to the Authorship of
    Matthew
  • Matthew's Christology
  • Judaism and Anti-Judaism within the Gospel of
    Matthew

98
Provenance
  • Judea (Church Fathers)
  • Syria (most modern scholars)

99
Date
  • Post-A.D. 70
  • Matthew's relation to Mark
  • Anachronistic references to the destruction of
    Jerusalem and the church
  • to this very day (Matt 278 2815)
  • Tensions between Jews and Christians

100
Date
  • Pre-A.D. 70
  • Arguments for post-A.D. 70 date draw unnecessary
    conclusions from the evidence
  • If the author was the apostle, then an earlier
    date is more plausible
  • Church Fathers were unanimous in assigning an
    early date
  • Certain sayings indicate that the Temple was
    still standing (52324 1257 172427
    231622 266061)
  • No apparent Pauline influence

101
Destination
  • Written to Jews
  • Written to Gentiles
  • Written for all Christians

102
Purpose
  • To demonstrate Jesus to be Messiah, Son of
    David, Son of God, Son of Man, Immanuel, and the
    fulfillment of OT prophecy
  • To demonstrate the rejection of Jesus
  • Inauguration of the Kingdom
  • Continued Messianic Reign
  • Foretaste of the Future, Consummated Kingdom

103
Contribution of Matthew
  • Matthew preserves large blocks of Jesus' teaching
  • Matthew complements the information provided in
    the other gospels
  • Matthew's use of the OT
  • Matthew's treatment of the Law
  • Matthew's insight into the church
  • Unique elements of the Portrayal of Jesus

104
Mark
105
Contents
  • Mark has seven sections separated by six
    transitional statements
  • Transitions Mark 11415 3712 616
    82730 11111 1412

106
Contents
  • Seven Part Outline of Mark
  • Preliminaries to the Ministry (1113)
  • First part of the Galilean Ministry (11636)
  • Second part of the Galilean Ministry (313543)
  • Concluding phase of the Galilean Ministry
    (67826)

107
Contents
  • Seven Part Outline of Mark
  • The way of glory and suffering (8271052)
  • Final ministry in Jerusalem (1111337)
  • The Passion and Empty-tomb narratives (141168)

108
Author
  • According to Papias (and echoed by many Church
    Fathers), Mark wrote the gospel from the
    information obtained from Peter
  • Who is Mark?
  • John Mark (Acts 1212, 25 135, 13 1537
    Colossians 410 Philemon 24 2 Timothy 411 1
    Peter 513)
  • Cousin of Barnabas

109
Author
  • Who is Mark? (cont.)
  • Travelled with Paul and Barnabas
  • Present with Paul during his Roman imprisonment
  • Present with Peter during his Roman imprisonment

110
Author
  • Was Mark dependent upon the preaching of Peter?
  • The vividness and detail of Mark's story indicate
    the testimony of an eyewitness
  • The critique of the disciples in Mark is so stark
    that it most likely came from an apostle
  • Mark's gospel follows a similar pattern as
    Peter's preaching in Acts (C. H. Dodd)

111
Author
  • Was Mark dependent upon the preaching of Peter?
  • Mark's close relationship to Peter as evidenced
    by Peter's reference to him as my son (1 Peter
    513)

112
Provenance
  • Possibilities
  • Egypt
  • Antioch
  • Galilee
  • Rome

113
Provenance
  • Egypt
  • John Chrysostom (Hom. Matt. 1.3)
  • May have been a mistaken inference from Eusebius
    - Mark is said to have been the first man to set
    out for Egypt and preach there the gospel that he
    had himself written down (H.E. 2.16.1)

114
Provenance
  • Antioch
  • Proximity to Palestine (Mark assumes his readers'
    familiarity with Palestinian place names)
  • Large Roman colony
  • Peter's connection to Antioch
  • The presbyter that Papias names as his source
    comes from the East

115
Provenance
  • Galilee (W. Marxsen)
  • The significance of the region of Galilee for
    Mark
  • References to Jesus' going before the disciples
    into Galilee (1428 167) may have been a
    summons for Christians to gather there to await
    the parousia
  • This tends to ignore that these were referring to
    post-resurrection appearances, not the second
    coming

116
Provenance
  • Rome
  • Early attestation (Irenaeus, Eusebius, Clement of
    Alexandria)
  • Large number of Latinisms
  • Incidental mention of Alexander and Rufus, sons
    of Simon of Cyrenementioned elsewhere in the NT
    to be in Rome
  • Apparently Gentile audience

117
Provenance
  • Rome
  • Many allusions to suffering fits the historical
    context of the Neronian persecutions of the 60s
  • 1 Peter 513 locates Mark with Peter in Rome
  • Connection with an early center of Christianity
  • The connection to the Neronian persecutions of
    the church and the testimony of 1 Peter 516 are
    the most weighty arguments

118
Date
  • 40's
  • C. C. Torreythe abomination that causes
    desolation (Mark 1314) is a direct reference to
    the image set up in the Jerusalem Temple by
    Caligula in A.D. 40
  • The identification of Qumran fragments 7Q5, 7Q6,
    1, and 7Q7 with the Gospel of Mark

119
Date
  • 40's
  • However, Torrey's identification with the
    abomination of Caligula is very unlikely
  • Most scholars contest the identification of the
    Qumran fragments with the Gospel of Mark
  • Peter was not in Rome in the 40's

120
Date
  • 50's
  • Peter was in Rome beginning around the mid-50s
  • Acts ends at approximately A.D. 62. If this is
    when the book of Acts was actually written, and
    Luke depended upon Mark, then Mark must have been
    written some years before (there are reasons to
    suggest Acts was written later though)

121
Date
  • 60's
  • Earliest traditions favor a date for Mark after
    the death of Peter
  • Peter was in Rome beginning around the mid-50s
  • Mark's emphasis upon persecution seems to favor a
    date during or right after the Neronian
    persecution of Christians in A.D. 65

122
Date
  • 60's
  • Mark appears to reflect an historical situation
    prior to the Roman entrance into Jerusalem and
    destruction of the Temple
  • However, there are other early traditions that
    point to a date during Peter's lifetime

123
Date
  • 60's
  • Persecution of Christians was not limited to Rome
    during the 60s
  • Mark is largely silent on any details related to
    the Neronian persecution of Christians
  • Mark 13 is not specific enough to suggest any
    particular historical situation

124
Date
  • 70's
  • Mark 13 reflects the actual experience of the
    sacking of Jerusalem by the Romans in A.D. 70
  • However, Jesus' predictions are more parallel to
    stock OT and Jewish imagery rather than any
    specific detail of what happened in A.D. 70

125
Date
  • 70's
  • This also assumes that Jesus could not have
    accurately predicted what would happen

126
Date
  • Conclusion
  • It is most likely that Mark was written sometime
    in the late 50's or early 60's during Peter's
    imprisonment or soon after his death

127
Audience
  • Appears to be directed to a predominantly Gentile
    audiencemost likely in Rome
  • Most of Mark's audience would have had the gospel
    read to them

128
Purpose
  • Christology
  • Until Mark 826, Mark emphasizes Jesus'
    miraculous power as Son of God
  • After 827, Mark emphasizes Jesus as the
    suffering Son of God
  • Jesus, as Messiah, can only be properly
    understood in light of this suffering

129
Purpose
  • Discipleship
  • Mark's readers and hearers are to be followers of
    Jesus, the suffering Son of God
  • Believers must follow Jesus through suffering,
    humiliation, persecution, and, if need be, death

130
Purpose
  • History and Evangelism
  • To provide an accurate account of Jesus' words
    and deeds at a time when the eyewitnesses were
    becoming fewer
  • To arm his Christian readers with the good news
    of salvation so that they could evangelize

131
Text
  • Son of God in 11
  • These words are omitted in a few early
    manuscripts
  • It is slightly more likely that these words were
    omitted in a few manuscripts than later scribes
    adding the words

132
Text
  • Mark 16920
  • The earliest and best manuscripts do not contain
    these verses
  • Written with different vocabulary than the rest
    of the book, and does not flow naturally from
    168
  • Jerome and Eusebius were aware that their best
    manuscripts did not contain these verses
  • There are manuscripts with a different, shorter
    ending

133
Text
  • The ending of Mark Three Possibilities
  • Mark may have intended to write more, but was
    prevented from doing so
  • Mark may have written a longer ending, but this
    ending was lost accidentally during its
    transmission
  • Mark may have intended to end his gospel at 168,
    thereby refusing to comment on the significance
    of the history he narrates (most likely)

134
Contribution of Mark
  • Mark is the creator of the gospel in its literary
    form
  • Mark has inextricably tied Christian faith to
    historical events
  • Emphasizes the great importance of Jesus as the
    suffering Son of God for Christian theology and
    discipleship

135
Luke
136
Contents
  • Seven Part Outline of Luke
  • The Prologue (114)
  • The Births of John the Baptist and Jesus
    (15252)
  • Preparation for Ministry (31413)
  • Ministry of Jesus in Galilee (414950)
  • Jesus' journey to Jerusalem (9511944)
  • Jesus in Jerusalem (19452138)
  • Jesus' crucifixion and resurrection (221 2453)

137
Luke-Acts
  • The Relationship between Luke and Acts
  • Both addressed to Theophilus
  • Acts plainly makes reference to the Gospel of
    Luke in 11

138
Luke-Acts
  • Thematic parallels
  • God's fulfillment of his promises to Israel
  • God's creation of a world-wide body of believers,
    both Jew and Gentile
  • Movement toward Jerusalem in Luke movement away
    from Jerusalem in Acts
  • Salvation
  • Activity of the Holy Spirit
  • Power of the Word of God

139
Luke-Acts
  • Is it probable that Luke and Acts should be
    regarded as one book?
  • Though they are closely related, the two books
    are of different genres and not likely two parts
    of one book

140
Author
  • Luke and Acts were written by the same person
  • Most evidence points to Luke, the Gentile doctor,
    as the author
  • Luke is written in particularly good Greek style

141
Author
  • The latter half of Acts makes several we
    statements in reference to the entourage
    surrounding Paul during his journeys
  • The language seems to be commensurate to the
    particular outlook of a doctor

142
Author
  • Early Christians and documents that indicate that
    Luke is the author
  • Marcion
  • Muratorian Canon
  • Anti-Marcionite prologue
  • Tertullian
  • Bodmer Papyrus XIV (P75)

143
Author
  • Early traditions should be taken seriously
    because
  • It is unlikely that Luke's name would have been
    attached to this book if he had not written it
    he was neither an eyewitness nor an apostle

144
Provenance
  • Antioch (Anti-Marcionite prologue)
  • Achaia (Monarchian prologue)
  • Rome (some late manuscripts)
  • There is not enough information that allows for a
    positive identification of the provenance of the
    Gospel of Luke

145
Date
  • 60s
  • Acts makes no mention of key events between A.D.
    6570 (Nerionian persecution, fall of Jerusalem,
    etc.)
  • Acts ends with Paul imprisoned in Rome doesn't
    finish the story of Paul
  • Acts makes no attempt to show how Jesus' prophecy
    of the fall of Jerusalem took place

146
Date
  • 60s
  • No attempt to reconcile Paul's probable second
    visit to Ephesus (according to the Pastoral
    epistles) with the fact that Paul expected to
    never come back to Ephesus in Acts 2025, 38
  • The very popular Pauline epistles receive no
    attention in Actsthe later the date of Acts, the
    more difficult it is to account for this
  • A Christian writer would not likely have been so
    positive about Rome after the Neronian
    persecution

147
Date
  • A.D. 7585
  • Luke's version of the fall of Jerusalem is too
    specific to have come before it happened
  • But

148
Date
  • A.D. 7585
  • This denies the possibility that Jesus could have
    accurately predicted the fall of Jerusalem
  • The supposed specificity of the account in Luke
    demonstrates only a general knowledge of siege
    warfare, not a distinct knowledge of the events
    themselves.

149
Date
  • A.D. 7585
  • Luke used Mark as a source, so an early date does
    not allow enough time to have elapsed
  • But

150
Date
  • A.D. 7585
  • A date for Mark in the late 50's to early 60's
    allows enough time
  • If Luke and Mark both travelled with Paul, then
    it is likely that Luke would have had access to
    Mark soon after it was written

151
Date
  • A.D. 7585
  • Luke claims that many people had drawn up
    accounts of Jesus' life in Luke 11
  • But
  • There is little reason why 45 years more
    satisfactorily accounts for this statement (if it
    was written in A.D. 75) surely 30 years is
    enough time

152
Date
  • A.D. 7585
  • Luke downplays the second coming of Christ.
    Because Christ's return was delayed, the church
    moved from charismatic Christianity to
    institutional Christianity (early Catholicism)
  • But

153
Date
  • A.D. 7585
  • Luke's treatment of the delay of the parousia by
    no means needed to be a late development, nor
    does Luke betray any interest in the
    institutional church

154
Addressee(s)
  • Written to a particular individual, but likely
    had a wider reading audience in mind.

155
Addressee(s)
  • Audience was likely Gentile
  • Situated his gospel in the context of secular
    history (e.g. 21)
  • Emphasis on the universal implications of the
    gospel
  • Omission of material focused on Jewish law
  • Tendency to substitute Greek equivalents for
    Jewish titles (Lord or Teacher for Rabbi)

156
Purpose
  • Luke wants Theophilus, and other converts like
    him, to be certain in their own minds about the
    ultimate significance of what God has done in
    Christ

157
Composition
  • 40 of Luke is from Mark
  • 20 of Luke is shared with Matthew (from Q)
  • 40 of Luke is unaccounted for
  • L-Source?
  • Variety of written documents, oral traditions,
    and eyewitness testimony

158
Composition
  • Proto-Luke (possible)
  • Luke wrote an earlier edition using Q and other
    material, possibly in Palestine
  • After reading Mark, Luke later wrote the
    canonical version that added Markan material,
    possibly after Luke went to Rome

159
Composition
  • Luke and John Luke shares more in common with
    John than do Matthew or Mark
  • Characters Martha, Mary, Annas, Judas
    (not-Iscariot)
  • Both attribute the betrayal of Jesus to the
    activity of Satan
  • Both include the account of Peter cutting off the
    ear of the high priest's servant

160
Text
  • Western text-type, represented by Codex Bezae
    (D) has many variants
  • Many additions
  • Many omissions
  • This text type was used by Tatian and Justin
  • These variants must be taken seriously, but their
    poor attestation often renders them doubtful

161
Canonicity
  • Universally accepted by the early church
  • Possibly referenced by Clement of Rome, Ignatius,
    Polycarp
  • Most likely referenced by the Didache and Gospel
    of Peter
  • Definitely referenced by 2 Clement, Justin, and
    the heretic Marcion

162
Lukes Contribution
  • God's plan of salvation for the world
  • Dramatic emphasis on salvation as a theme, both
    present and future (already and not yet)
  • Emphasis on the Gentiles as the recipients of
    God's salvation
  • Concern for the poor and outcasts of society
    wealth ethics

163
John
164
Contents
  • Outline of the Gospel of John
  • The Prologue (1118)
  • The Disclosure of Jesus in word and deed
    (1191042)
  • Transition from public ministry to the Passion
    narrative (1111250)
  • Jesus' self disclosure on the cross and his
    exultation (1312031)
  • Epilogue (21125)

165
Contents
  • Outline of the Gospel of John
  • The Prologue (1118)
  • The Disclosure of Jesus in word and deed
    (1191042)
  • Prelude to Jesus' ministry (11951)
  • Jesus' early ministry (21454)
  • Signs, works, and words in the context of rising
    opposition (51753)
  • Climactic signs, works, and words in the context
    of radical confrontation (8121042)

166
Contents
  • Outline of the Gospel of John
  • Transition from public ministry to the Passion
    narrative (1111250)
  • Death and raising of Lazarus (11144)
  • Decision to kill Jesus (114554)
  • Prelude to the Passion narrative (11551250)

167
Contents
  • Outline of the Gospel of John
  • Jesus' self disclosure on the cross and his
    exultation (1312031)
  • Last Supper (13130)
  • Farewell discourse (13311633)
  • Jesus' prayer for his disciples (17126)
  • Trial and passion of Jesus (1811942)
  • Resurrection (20131)
  • Epilogue (21125)

168
Author
  • External Evidence
  • Theophilus of Antioch (c. A.D. 181)
  • First to unambiguously refer to the fourth gospel
    and explicitly ascribe the work to John
  • Quotations from John without reference to the
    author are found in Tatian, Claudius Apollinaris,
    and Athenagoras

169
Author
  • External Evidence
  • PolycarpBishop of Smyrna
  • Martyred in A.D. 156 at age of 86.
  • Personally knew the Apostle John
  • His testimony about John is relayed by Irenaeus,
    who knew Polycarp personally
  • Most likely refers to John (at least in Ireneaus'
    opinion), the beloved disciple and author of the
    fourth gospel was John, the apostle.

170
Author
  • External Evidence
  • Second century church fathers that clearly though
    John, son of Zebedee, wrote the fourth gospel
    included Irenaeus, Tertullian, and Clement of
    Alexandria

171
Author
  • External Evidence
  • Those who did not accept the authenticity or
    authority of the Gospel of John were known as
    Alogoi, or witless ones
  • Some rejected John because of affinities with
    heretical sects like the Montanists

172
Author
  • External Evidence
  • Papias (found in Eusebius H.E. 3.39)
  • And if anyone chanced to come who had actually
    been a follower of the elders, I would enquire as
    to the discourses of the elders, what Andrew or
    what Peter said, or what Philip, or what Thomas
    or James, or what John or Matthew or any other of
    the Lord's disciples and things which Aristion
    and John the elder, disciples of the Lord say...

173
Author
  • External Evidence
  • Papias (found in Eusebius H.E. 3.39)
  • Eusebius interprets Papias' words to mean there
    were two Johns, John the Apostle and John the
    elder, but
  • While Eusebius distinguishes between apostles and
    elders, Papias does not
  • Papias calls John the elder because he intends
    for John to be grouped with the aforementioned
    elders

174
Author
  • External Evidence
  • Papias (found in Eusebius H.E. 3.39)
  • Papias makes distinctions here between
    first-generation witnesses who have died and
    those who are still alive
  • Eusebius uses this to distance the book of
    Revelation from the Apostle John out of his
    distaste for its millennialism, so he may have a
    hidden agenda here
  • It is not certain that there was ever an elder
    John apart from the apostle

175
Author
  • Internal Evidence
  • The author was likely a Jew
  • The DSS evidence many of John's characteristic
    expressions in a Palestinian Jewish, first
    century setting, so there is no need to posit a
    period of Hellenizing influence
  • Some of John's quotations of the OT are closer to
    Hebrew or Aramaic versions than the LXX

176
Author
  • Internal Evidence
  • Who is the beloved disciple?
  • The beloved disciple is present at the Last
    Supper the Synoptics claim that only the twelve
    were present
  • Distinguished from Peter, but also cannot be
    confused with the other disciples mentioned in
    John 1316

177
Author
  • Internal Evidence
  • Who is the beloved disciple?
  • He is one of the seven who go fishing in John 21
  • He is not Peter, Thomas, or Nathaniel
  • He cannot be James (c. early 40's), since the
    beloved disciple was apparently still alive when
    the gospel was written
  • John or one of two unnamed disciples

178
Author
  • Internal Evidence
  • Who is the beloved disciple?
  • The fact that James and John are not mentioned
    anywhere in the fourth gospel by name is very
    strange unless the author is deliberately not
    using his own name
  • The companionship of the beloved disciple and
    Peter makes sense in light of John's and Peter's
    close friendship attested elsewhere in the NT

179
Author
  • Internal Evidence
  • John, the son of Zebedee, is the author
  • John lived for many years in Judea and abroad so
    there is little reason to suggest he would have
    focused more on Galilee

180
Author
  • Internal Evidence
  • John, the son of Zebedee, is the author
  • That Acts 413 refers to Peter and John as
    untrained laymen in no way means they were
    illiterate or ignorant (cf. Jesus)
  • Jewish boys learned to read and John's family was
    likely well-off financially

181
Author
  • Internal Evidence
  • John, the son of Zebedee, is the author
  • Evidence suggest that first-century Palestinians
    were bi-lingual or even tri-lingual, so there is
    no reason to suggest that the Apostle John
    couldn't have written in fluent Greek

182
Author
  • Internal Evidence
  • John, the son of Zebedee, is the author
  • The phrase beloved disciple is not and
    indicator that Jesus loved John more, but more
    likely that he had a profound grasp of God's
    grace in Christ

183
Stylistic Unity
  • The structure and style of John are so uniform
    that source and tradition-critical theories on
    John are hard-pressed to make anything other than
    highly speculative hypotheses.
  • The tradition is far more elegant

184
Stylistic Unity
  • Problem Why does the author have so little a
    distinction between his own work in shaping the
    story and the words of Jesus?
  • There are about 150 words placed on Jesus' lips
    that are never used elsewhere by the author
  • Verbatim quotation is not the only manner of fair
    and historically accurate reporting John writes
    as a preacher
  • The author thinks of himself as a reliable
    intermediary of the events and the audience of
    the gospel, equipped by the Spirit for this task

185
Provenance
  • Geographical Provenance
  • Alexandria
  • Antioch
  • Palestine
  • Ephesus only location with any support in the
    church fathers

186
Provenance
  • Conceptual Provenance
  • Philo
  • Hermetic writings
  • Gnosticism
  • Mandaism

187
Provenance
  • Conceptual Provenance
  • Except for Philo, all of these post-date John
  • The DSS have shown that John's conceptual world
    is at home within first-century Judaism
  • John uses language that more universally engages
    readers in a pluralistic society for the purpose
    of evangelistic mission

188
Provenance
  • Relation to Synoptics
  • Parallels
  • Spirit's anointing of Jesus
  • The Baptist's baptism with water and the
    Messiah's baptism with the Spirit
  • Various sayings
  • Jesus' propensity toward nature metaphors
  • Uniqueness of Jesus' sonship to the Father

189
Provenance
  • Relation to Synoptics
  • Interlocking traditions
  • John's report of an extensive Judean ministry and
    Mark's assumption that Jesus taught day after
    day in the Temple, the trepidation about the
    southward journey, and Jesus' ability to round up
    a colt and secure the upper room

190
Provenance
  • Relation to Synoptics
  • Interlocking traditions
  • Only explanation for the Synoptic account of the
    charge against Jesus that he threatened the
    Temple is in John 219
  • John provides the reason that the Jewish
    authorities brought Jesus before Pilate
  • Only John provides a reason that John was allowed
    into the high priest's courtyard

191
Provenance
  • Relation to Synoptics
  • Interlocking traditions
  • John's account of Jesus' call of the disciples in
    chapter 1 makes the Synoptic account easier to
    understand
  • Synoptics explain why the trial of Jesus plunges
    into the Roman court
  • Philip's hesitation to bring Gentiles to Jesus in
    John 12 can be explained by Matt 105

192
Provenance
  • Relation to Synoptics
  • It is likely that John read Luke, Mark, and maybe
    even Matthew
  • John is not dependent on any of their accounts
  • John provides valuable historical insight that
    complements the Synoptics

193
Date
  • Before A.D. 70
  • References to the Temple and the sheep gate are
    easily explainable by John's style and addressees
  • Between A.D. 8595
  • During reign of Domitian
  • After the council of Jamnia
  • No mention of Sadducees

194
Date
  • Between A.D. 8595 (cont.)
  • Prevailing understanding of the reconstruction of
    early Christianity
  • However
  • No legitimate reason to suggest the reign of
    Domitian
  • The theory of the break between Judaism and
    Christianity at Jamnia in A.D. 85 is widely
    challenged

195
Date
  • Between A.D. 8595 (cont.)
  • The prevailing understanding of early Christian
    history is subject to critique
  • E.g. the closest theological parallel to John
    118 are the Christ hymns of Philippians 2 and
    Colossians 1, which were circulating in the
    mid-50's

196
Date
  • Between A.D. 8085
  • No compelling reason to suggest an earlier date
    later date is verified by the church fathers
  • John's theological themes appear to be on a
    trajectory toward the unrestrained manner in
    which Ignatius uses them
  • It would be difficult to believe that John could
    have been written immediately after A.D. 70
  • Some time must be allowed between the writing of
    the gospel and the Johannine epistles, which were
    directed toward a somewhat gnostic misreading of
    the fourth gospel.

197
Purpose
  • Proposals
  • To supersede or correct the Synoptics
  • The gospel is called forth and for the Johannine
    community
  • Single themes (Mussner - knowledge)
  • Synthetic approaches

198
Purpose
  • For evangelism of Diaspora Jews and proselytes
    (preferred view)
  • John 2031 that you may believe that the Christ,
    the Son of God, is Jesus
  • Most likely people that would have asked Who is
    the Christ would have been Jews
  • Many OT allusions and quotations presume
    familiarity with Jewish scriptures

199
Text
  • Earliest fragment is from P52 (A.D. 130)
  • P66 Contains John 114 and parts of remaining
    chaps
  • P45 (3rd century) contains all four gospels plus
    Acts
  • The earliest and most reliable manuscripts do not
    include John 753811

200
Contribution of John
  • John adds depth to the portrait of Jesus'
    ministry, death, and resurrection
  • Jesus as Son of God, perfect in obedience and
    functionally subordinate to the Father
  • Emphasizes the cross and resurrection as the
    climax of his revelation of the Father
  • Distinctive emphasis on inaugurated eschatology
  • John's gospel is characterized by an
    extraordinary number of allusions and typological
    use of the OT

201
Contribution of John
  • Emphasis on how Jesus was misunder
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