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[[Category:2019| Botner]]
[[Category:2019]]


[[Category:English language--2010s|2019 Botner]]
[[Category:English language--2010s|2019 Botner]]

Latest revision as of 12:51, 30 January 2024

Max Botner, Jesus Christ as the Son of David in the Gospel of Mark (Society for New Testament Studies Monograph Series, 174; Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2019).

Abstract

"This study contributes to the debate over the function of Davidic sonship in the Gospel of Mark. In contrast to William Wrede's paradigm, Max Botner argues that Mark's position on Jesus's ancestry cannot be assessed properly though isolated study of the name David (or the patronym son of David). Rather, the totality of Markan messiah language is relevant to the question at hand. Justification for this paradigm shift is rooted in observations about the ways in which ancient authors spoke of their messiahs. Botner shows that Mark was participant to a linguistic community whose members shared multiple conventions for stylizing their messiahs, Davidic or otherwise. He then traces how the evangelist narratively constructed his portrait of Christ via creative use of the Jewish scriptures. When the Davidssohnfrage is approached from within this sociolinguistic framework, it becomes clear that Mark's Christ is indeed David's son."--Publisher description.

Contents

1. The son of David and the Christ of Mark: beyond an interpretive impasse -- 2. The makings of a Messiah: sons of David, messiahs like David, and the Markan Jesus -- 3. Christening Jesus of Nazareth -- 4. How a Galilean prophet becomes a messiah like David -- 5. The son of David and the Jerusalem Temple -- 6. Crucifixion and resurrection as a Markan hermeneutic -- 7. Conclusion.

External links

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current08:51, 27 October 2019Thumbnail for version as of 08:51, 27 October 2019304 × 499 (17 KB)Gabriele Boccaccini (talk | contribs)

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