Difference between revisions of "Mark ~ Westminster Bible Companion (1996 Hare), book"

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==Abstract ==
==Abstract ==


"A Bible commentary for teaching and preaching."
"A Bible commentary for teaching and preaching ... Mark, often eclipsed by the other Synoptic Gospels, is now considered by many biblical scholars to be the earliest written gospel. This conclusion would place Mark closest to the historical Jesus. In his book, Douglas Hare examines Mark for modern Christians who are in search of the Jesus portrayed in these earliest known writings. What emerges is a Jesus whose moral and religious teachings are of secondary importance to the very fact of his life, death, and resurrection. For it is the Jesus depicted in Mark that serves as the window through which we may see God. God's love for humankind, Hare contends, is made visible through Mark's Jesus."--Publisher decription.


==Editions and translations==
==Editions and translations==

Revision as of 10:32, 1 February 2014

<bibexternal title="Mark" author="Hare"/>

Mark (1996) is a book by Douglas R.A. Hare.

Abstract

"A Bible commentary for teaching and preaching ... Mark, often eclipsed by the other Synoptic Gospels, is now considered by many biblical scholars to be the earliest written gospel. This conclusion would place Mark closest to the historical Jesus. In his book, Douglas Hare examines Mark for modern Christians who are in search of the Jesus portrayed in these earliest known writings. What emerges is a Jesus whose moral and religious teachings are of secondary importance to the very fact of his life, death, and resurrection. For it is the Jesus depicted in Mark that serves as the window through which we may see God. God's love for humankind, Hare contends, is made visible through Mark's Jesus."--Publisher decription.

Editions and translations

Published in Louisville, KY: John Knox Press, 1996 (Westminster Bible Companion)

Table of contents

  • 1. The Beginning of the Good News: Mark 1:1-20
  • 2. Jesus' Healing Ministry Begins: Mark 1:21-39
  • 3. Jesus' Ministry Provokes Controversy: Mark 1:40-3:12
  • 4. Jesus Prepares Twelve Apprentices for Mission: Mark 3:13-6:13
  • 5. Jesus' Immense Popularity Prompts Antagonism: Mark 6:14-8:26
  • 6. The First Passion Announcement and the Transfiguration: Mark 8:27-9:29
  • 7. The Second Passion Announcement: Mark 9:30-10:31
  • 8. The Third Passion Announcement: Mark 10:32-52
  • 9. The Messiah's Royal Arrival in Jerusalem: Mark 11:1-25
  • 10. Jesus Refutes His Opponents: Mark 11:27-12:44
  • 11. Jesus Teaches About the Future: Mark 13:1-37
  • 12. Jesus' Last Days: Mark 14:1-15:47
  • 13. The Empty Tomb: Mark 16:1-8

External links

  • [ Google Books]