by jimwalton » Sat Apr 30, 2016 10:16 am
Thanks for a great response. that's a lot to deal with in one post. I'm gonna bet I'm going to exceed the 10,000 character or word limit, but I'll do my best to keep it concise at the possible expense of leaving out some things I'd want to say.
You're right that Mark is often dated between 65-70. some want to put it later, and some want to put it earlier. My research motivates me to put it earlier, but we can stick with 65-70 for now. It is very believed to have been written in Rome, by Mark, having been told most of it by Peter. So it is generally considered to be a second-hand eye-witness account, with Peter as the author and Mark as the secretary. Mark himself, however, was most likely raised in Jerusalem (Acts 12.12, 25), and possibly knew Jesus personally, since his mother was well integrated in the Christian community. Mark was a good friend of Paul's and very close with Peter (1 Pet. 5.13). It's very reasonable to believe he had extremely good access to accurate information.
Since Peter was most likely the author (according to Papias, AD 125, as told to us by Eusebius later), it makes sense that we have knowledgable information about Jesus' baptism, his days in the desert, personal information about the disciples, and schemes of the enemy. Peter was in the inner circle and eye-witness to most of these events.
As far as "fictional" elements, they are only possibly fictional if one doesn't believe that Jesus was deity. If Jesus was deity, there is no barrier to any of these events.
> Growing back an arm
??? This is a mystery to me. There is no such story.
> Its story patterns are copied from the OT, possibly from Josephus.
Multiplying food. If this is one of the ways God works, it's not a surprise to see it repeated. And sometimes the NT repeats OT events as a way to reference them with a different emphasis. No problem here.
Walking on water. This is not a reference to the floating OT axehead, but a manifestation of God on earth. The only person in the OT who ever walked on water was God (Job 9.8; cf. Ps. 77.20).
Resurrecting a child. A direct copy, or a repeat of an important act? I guess it's a matter of interpretation, not necessary conviction.
Copied from Josephus? Not likely since Josephus wrote in AD 78 and Mark was almost certainly written before that. A large majority of scholars put Mark before 70, and with good reason.
Legion story. "People agree"???? That's too flimsy. Your "clearly the author..." is not clear at all, nor even a majority position.
The crucifixion story based on a psalm. Yes, he makes brilliant use of some psalms. The question is, does literary artistry detract from historicity? No. Events of history have theological significance and intrinsic artistry.
The crucifixion replicates the Jewish Passover lamb sacrifice. Absolutely. It's one of the most important theological understandings of the crucifixion event. Again, this doesn't detract from its historicity.
I appreciate the work you put into your post. You have explained why you take it to be midrash. I'm not convinced, as you can tell; I don't see where the items and events you have mentioned stand outside of the possibility of history. The only real problem it seems you have is with the miracles: multiplying food, walking on water, angels and demons—all the supernatural elements. Frankly, if we take the supernatural elements away from Jesus, his story is virtually meaningless. His story only has significance in dealing with the question all of the Gospel writers address: Jesus is divine. That's the case every one of them presents, and with which every reader must wrestle.
Thanks for a great response. that's a lot to deal with in one post. I'm gonna bet I'm going to exceed the 10,000 character or word limit, but I'll do my best to keep it concise at the possible expense of leaving out some things I'd want to say.
You're right that Mark is often dated between 65-70. some want to put it later, and some want to put it earlier. My research motivates me to put it earlier, but we can stick with 65-70 for now. It is very believed to have been written in Rome, by Mark, having been told most of it by Peter. So it is generally considered to be a second-hand eye-witness account, with Peter as the author and Mark as the secretary. Mark himself, however, was most likely raised in Jerusalem (Acts 12.12, 25), and possibly knew Jesus personally, since his mother was well integrated in the Christian community. Mark was a good friend of Paul's and very close with Peter (1 Pet. 5.13). It's very reasonable to believe he had extremely good access to accurate information.
Since Peter was most likely the author (according to Papias, AD 125, as told to us by Eusebius later), it makes sense that we have knowledgable information about Jesus' baptism, his days in the desert, personal information about the disciples, and schemes of the enemy. Peter was in the inner circle and eye-witness to most of these events.
As far as "fictional" elements, they are only possibly fictional if one doesn't believe that Jesus was deity. If Jesus was deity, there is no barrier to any of these events.
> Growing back an arm
??? This is a mystery to me. There is no such story.
> Its story patterns are copied from the OT, possibly from Josephus.
Multiplying food. If this is one of the ways God works, it's not a surprise to see it repeated. And sometimes the NT repeats OT events as a way to reference them with a different emphasis. No problem here.
Walking on water. This is not a reference to the floating OT axehead, but a manifestation of God on earth. The only person in the OT who ever walked on water was God (Job 9.8; cf. Ps. 77.20).
Resurrecting a child. A direct copy, or a repeat of an important act? I guess it's a matter of interpretation, not necessary conviction.
Copied from Josephus? Not likely since Josephus wrote in AD 78 and Mark was almost certainly written before that. A large majority of scholars put Mark before 70, and with good reason.
Legion story. "People agree"???? That's too flimsy. Your "clearly the author..." is not clear at all, nor even a majority position.
The crucifixion story based on a psalm. Yes, he makes brilliant use of some psalms. The question is, does literary artistry detract from historicity? No. Events of history have theological significance and intrinsic artistry.
The crucifixion replicates the Jewish Passover lamb sacrifice. Absolutely. It's one of the most important theological understandings of the crucifixion event. Again, this doesn't detract from its historicity.
I appreciate the work you put into your post. You have explained why you take it to be midrash. I'm not convinced, as you can tell; I don't see where the items and events you have mentioned stand outside of the possibility of history. The only real problem it seems you have is with the miracles: multiplying food, walking on water, angels and demons—all the supernatural elements. Frankly, if we take the supernatural elements away from Jesus, his story is virtually meaningless. His story only has significance in dealing with the question all of the Gospel writers address: Jesus is divine. That's the case every one of them presents, and with which every reader must wrestle.