Showing posts with label elizabeth struthers malbon. Show all posts
Showing posts with label elizabeth struthers malbon. Show all posts

Sowing the Gospel: Mark's Work in Literary-Historical Perspective Review

Sowing the Gospel: Mark's Work in Literary-Historical Perspective
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In this excellent commentary on the Gospel of Mark, Professor Tolbert takes the "Parable of the Sower" and uses it as an interpretive tool to understand the story and meaning of the Gospel text. This method helps the reader (or hearer) of the Markan story interpret the many characters within the Gospel narrative. Highly recommended.

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Conflict in Mark Review

Conflict in Mark
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The book approaches the Text from a narrative point of view, and focuses mostly on how the plot is developped. He divided the chapters according to the major characters of the Gospels: Jesus, the Authorities and the Disciples. I found it easy to read and right to the point. I consider it to be a good way to start to deepen the understanding of the gospel. I would read this one BEFORE reading any commentary.

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Mark's Jesus: Characterization as Narrative Christology Review

Mark's Jesus: Characterization as Narrative Christology
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Elizabeth Struthers Malbon is a pioneer in the narrative critical approach to Mark's Gospel, who continues to write and edit influential articles and books in the field. She writes in dialogue with the finest current scholarship, but in a style that is accessible to non-specialists willing to make the effort to understand.
Here she challenges a belief long held and disseminated in Markan criticism that there is little or no difference between the implied reader and narrator (or the points of view of the narrator and Jesus) in Mark. She examines Mark's narrative christology, i.e. the way the portrait of Jesus as Messiah, Son of God, Son of David, and Son of Man is presented in and as story, by sifting and sorting what Jesus says and does in contrast and comparison to what others say or have said about him.
In the course of this examination, she shows that the viewpoint of Jesus and the narrator are quite distinct and different, and that this means that the implied author and the narrator are clearly distinguished also. She thus contradicts some of the standard introductory works to Markan narrative criticism (including her own). She also challenges the belief that the so-called Messianic Secrecy motif is a result of different historical layers, demonstrating rather that it is a result of interwoven literary strands.
This book allows us to look over the shoulder of--for my money--the most perceptive Markan narrative critic around as she does her work. She has broken new ground here in the discussion of narrative christology, and in revealing more of Mark's breathtakingly humane portrait of Jesus. A must read for all students and teachers of Mark's Gospel!

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Noted biblical scholar Elizabeth Struthers Malbon asks a literary question in this landmark volume: how does the Markan narrative characterise Jesus? Through a close narrative analysis, she carefully examines various ways the Gospel discloses its central character. The result is a multi-layered Markan narrative christology, focusing not only on what the narrator and other characters say about Jesus (pro-jected christology), but also on what Jesus says in response to what these others say to and about him (deflected christology), what Jesus says instead about himself and God (refracted christology), what Jesus does (enacted christology), and how what other characters do is related to what Jesus says and does (reflected christology). Holding significant implications for those who wish to use Mark's Gospel to make claims about the historical Jesus, as well as for those who wish to use Mark's Gospel to construct confessions about the church's belief, Malbon's research is a groundbreaking work of scholarship.

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In the Company of Jesus: Characters in Mark's Gospel Review

In the Company of Jesus: Characters in Mark's Gospel
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I was drawn to this book because it contains the author's "The Poor Widow in Mark and Her Poor Rich Readers," cited in more-recent commentaries on Mark 12. This chapter, one of the suthor's seven academic articles gathered to make up the present volume, expands the usual reading of the text and develops six different narrative contexts in which we can view it.
A creative, in-depth study of less-frequently-examined corners of the earliest Gospel, with an introductory chapter on narrative criticism, followed by chapters on "Fallible Followers," "Disciples/Crowds/Whoever," "Interpreting the Disciples in Mark, "Jewish Leaders in the Gospel of Mark," and "The Major Importance of Minor Characters in Mark."

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