<p>Heralds a new stage in the understanding of gospel interrelationships.</p>
Journal of Gospels and Acts Research
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
<i>John’s Transformation of Mark</i> 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
<i>John’s Transformation of Mark</i> is a well-researched, well-edited, timely contribution to Johannine studies that showcases an important shift in the field. It is worth the read.
The Expository Times
Produktdetaljer
Om bidragsyterne
Eve-Marie Becker is Professor of New Testament Studies at the Westfälische Wilhelms-Universität Münster, Germany.
Helen K. Bond is Professor of Christian Origins at the University of Edinburgh, UK.
Catrin H. Williams is Reader in New Testament Studies at the University of Wales Trinity St David, UK.