SYLLABUS: SYNOPTIC GOSPELS - MARK (online) This syllabus is subject to revision until the first day of class.



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NT5302L Synoptic Gospels: Mark (online) Fall, 2014 SYLLABUS: SYNOPTIC GOSPELS - MARK (online) This syllabus is subject to revision until the first day of class. COURSE DESCRIPTION This course is a study of the nature of the Gospels of Matthew, Mark, and Luke; and their witness to Jesus. The bulk part of the course will examine one of the three gospels in part or as a whole. This offering will cover the Gospel of Mark. COURSE OBJECTIVES Students will gain and demonstrate some understanding of the history and methods of source criticism, form criticism, redaction criticism, and narrative criticism. Students will gain and demonstrate familiarity with the individuality and individual purpose of the three Synoptic Gospels, particularly the Gospel of Mark. Students will gain and demonstrate an understanding of how to read and interpret the stories and teachings of the Synoptic Gospels, as illustrated by lectures and assignments concerning the Gospel of Mark. Students will begin to understand the centrality of the life and teachings of Jesus for Christianity, and students will themselves meet Jesus again in their study of these writings. COURSE TEXTS: REQUIRED Note: Texts are no longer available at the Providence Bookstore. Blomberg, Craig. Jesus and the Gospels. Nashville, TN: Broadman & Holman, 1997, 2009. Hooker, Morna. The Gospel According to Saint Mark. Black's New Testament Commentaries. Hendrikson, 1991. 1

COURSE REQUIREMENTS General Guidelines: Due dates are on the Course Schedule below. Late assignments lose 30%, beginning midnight of the due date. After two weeks late the assignment is not accepted. Most explanations produce sympathy but not exceptions to the rule. All submissions should follow Turabian's A Manual for Writers, 8th ed, 2013, the standard guide for. (Turabian does allow author-date citations.) Students can mail paper copy or send papers as email attachments, but it is best to submit them through the online course website. Papers should be set up so that if printed out, they would result in a perfectly formatted paper. That is, electronic papers (as hard copy) should have a proper title page, page numbers, left margin only justified, Times New Roman #12 font, and so on. If an assignment includes several entries, such as a reading journal of some kind, do not send them as separate file documents. Rather send them all as one document, having one title page covering the entire assignment. Weekly Discussion There are ten weekly audio lectures. Each unit includes a discussion question, based on the content of that unit s lecture. Weekly responses to these questions, and also to the responses of other students, will count toward the final grade. Longer is not necessarily better, but thoughtful is always better. Response to the discussion question will usually be evaluated on the Friday morning after the lecture was released. 10% Mark Reading Journal Read Mark through ten times in the translation of your choice. As much as possible read it through in one sitting, or at least all in one day. Do not read it through more than once in a single day, and not more than twice a week. After each reading, type a one to two page response to your reading. Write out the impression you gained from that reading. As a general rule, respond to the whole writing rather than one sentence that caught your attention. Look for recurring themes, transitions from one kind of story to another kind, characterization of Jesus or disciples or others, emphasis that you were not expecting, and so on. Date each response. I would like five of these in by October 24th (as a single document, not five documents), and the other five by end of the course. 10% of course grade each. Blomberg Review Carefully read Blomberg's book, chapters 1-9 and chapters 18-19. [Blomberg's first edition (1997) will do for this as well as the second edition (2009).] For each chapter, write about one page. Write a summary of that chapter's content (2/3 or ¾ of the page), and at the end of each page, note what you found most striking or noteworthy or interesting in that chapter. The total review should be ten to twelve pages. 20% 2

Hooker's "Additional (or "Introductory) Notes" Hooker's commentary has seven Additional Notes plus one Introductory Note. These can be located in the outline on 27-29. Write a 1 to 1 ½ page summary and response to each of these eight Notes. Conclude with a 2 page summary and response to Hooker's "Theology of Mark," pp 19-26 of the commentary. The paper should have eight to ten pages of text. 20% Sermon-Background Studies Do this assignment or the Research Paper, not both. Write ten one-page outlines from Mark's Gospel. Make sure you get each outline on one page! For this assignment you may single-space your text. Picture yourself preparing either to preach to a church, or to sit in a living room in the evening, leading a group that's hungry to understand Mark's Gospel. These ten background studies are not sermon outlines, but the background work from which you would create a sermon. Your ten texts should be spaced more or less evenly through Mark, and the total of the ten should give your people a helpful view of the structure and message of Mark as a whole. Each one-page study should have the chapter and verse of the passage you have chosen, and a title, at the top. Then it should have 4 paragraphs: (i) A short one-sentence paragraph stating the main idea of this sermon; (ii) A lengthier paragraph describing in some detail the passage, not interpreting, just observing its tone and how it is written: is it an event? A conversation? An argument? A story? Is it angry? Gentle? Is it confusing? Observe. (iii) A paragraph indicating what Mark was saying to his original audience, and how they would have perceived this passage (i.e. interpretation); (iv) Your application, describing the call you hear for yourself, and your call to the people who listen to you, or at least what you hope they hear. There is a Sample Study at the end of this Syllabus. Work on this throughout the semester. Make notes from classes and from your reading of Mark, and other readings, so that these take shape as you go through the semester. 30% Exegetical Research Paper Do this assignment or the Background Studies, not both. Pick a text from Mark, research enough to find out what commentators agree on in your text, and what the problems are. This is a good paper in which to explore some debated aspect of Mark, or a section you have grappled with for some reason. Explain the passage as you understand it. It is appropriate to suggest an application of your text, but not before the last paragraph or two. Write ten to twelve pages of double-spaced text, in Turabian 8th edition format (which permits both the notes-bibliographic style of citation, and author-date list style citations). Do not take more than one page to get to the core of 3

your text or issue. Imagine that you are writing to a fellow student, one who is taking the course with you, but knows little about the matter you are researching. Use three or four commentaries besides Hooker. The course bibliography below has asterisks before commentaries that I think would serve you well (which does not mean I agree with them). Plan ahead - if you are not near a library, get the commentary by interlibrary loan, which means you will need to order the book some time before you need it. You should also be able to get an online article or two through the Providence library website. Due after the 10th unit. 30% COURSE SCHEDULE Sept 13 Lecture 1 Synoptic Gospels and Historical Reliability of Mark Sept 20 Lecture 2 Mark 1:1-20 Sept 27 Lecture 3 Mark 1:21-3:6 Blomberg Review due Oct 3 Oct 4 No lecture - October Intrasession week Oct 11 Lecture 4 Mark 3:7-6:6a Oct 18 Lecture 5 Mark 6:6b - 8:21 Mark Rdg Journal Part 1 due Oct 24 Oct 25 Lecture 6 Mark 8:22-9:50 Nov 1 Lecture 7 Mark 10-11 Hooker's Notes essay due Nov 7 Nov 8 Lecture 8 Mark 12-13 Nov 15 No lecture - November Intrasession week Nov 22 Lecture 9 Mark 14 Mark Reading Journal Part 2 due Nov 28 Nov 29 Lecture 10 Mark 15:1-16:8 Sermon Background Studies OR Research Paper due Dec 10th. 4

COURSE BIBLIOGRAPHY Beasley-Murray, George R. Jesus and the Last Days. Peabody, Mass.: Hendrickson, 1993. Blomberg, Craig L. Jesus and the Gospels: An Introduction and Survey. Nashville, Tenn.: Broadman & Holman, 1997. Brown, Raymond E. The Death of the Messiah: A Commentary on the Passion Narratives in the Four Gospels, 2 vols. New York: Doubleday, 1994. Boring, M. Eugene. Mark: A Commentary. New Testament Library. Louisville: Westminster John Knox, 2006. Bultmann, Rudolf. The History of the Synoptic Tradition. German edition: 1931. Trans. J. Marsh. Oxford: Basil Blackwell, 1968. Collins, Adela Yarbro. Mark. Hermeneia. Minneapolis: Fortress, 2007. *Cranfield, C. E. B. The Gospel According to St. Mark. Cambridge Greek Testament Commentary. Cambridge: University Press, 1959, 1977. *Edwards, James. The Gospel According to Mark. Pillar New Testament Commentaries. Eerdmans, 2002. Evans, Graig A. Mark 8:27-16:20. Word Biblical Commentary. Nashville: Thomas Nelson, 2001. [See Guelich for volume one.] *France, R. T. The Gospel of Mark. New International Greek Testament Commentary. Eerdmans, 2002. Green, Joel B., Scot McKnight, I. Howard Marshall, eds. Dictionary of Jesus and the Gospels. Downers Grove, Ill.: InterVarsity, 1992. *Gould, Ezra P. A Critical and Exegetical Commentary on the Gospel According to St. Mark. International Critical Commentary. Edinburgh: T. & T. Clark. 1896. Guelich, Robert A. Mark 1-8:26. Word Biblical Commentary. Dallas: Word, 1989. [See Evans for the second volume.] *Hooker, Morna D. The Gospel According to St Mark. Black s New Testament Commentaries. Peabody, Mass.: Hendrikson, 1991. Huck, Albert. Synopsis of the First Three Gospels. [In Greek.] Ninth Edition Revised by H. Lietzmann. English Edition by F. L. Cross. 1936. Oxford: Basil Blackwell, 1976. 5

Kelber, Werner H. Mark s Story of Jesus. Philadelphia: Fortress, 1979. Kingsbury, Jack Dean. Conflict in Mark: Jesus, Authorities, Disciples. Minneapolis: Fortress, 1989. *Lane, William L. The Gospel of Mark. New International Commentary on the New Testament. Grand Rapids, Mich.: Eerdmans, 1974. Mansfield, M. Robert. Spirit & Gospel in Mark. Peabody, Mass.: Hendrickson, 1987. *Marcus, Joel. Mark 1-8: A New Translation with Introduction and Commentary. Anchor Yale Bible. New Haven: Yale University Press, 2002.. Mark 8-16. Anchor Yale Bible. New Haven: Yale University Press, 2009. Martin, Ralph. Mark: Evangelist and Theologian. Contemporary Evangelical Perspectives. Grand Rapids, Mich.: Zondervan, 1972. *Moloney, Francis. The Gospel of Mark: A Commentary. Peabody, Mass.: Hendrikson, 2002.. Mark: Storyteller, Interpreter, Evangelist. Henrickson, 2004. *Nineham, D. E. Saint Mark. Westminster Pelican Commentaries. Philadephia: Westminster, 1963. Poythress, Vern S. Presuppositions and Harmonization: Luke 23:47 as a Test Case. JETS 56 (2013) 499-509. Rhoads, D., J. Dewey, and D. Michie. Mark as Story: An Introduction to the Narrative of a Gospel. Philadelphia: Fortress, 1999. *Schweizer, Eduard. The Good News According to Mark. Trans. D. Madvig. Atlanta: Kohn Knox, 1970. *Swete, H. B. The Gospel According to Mark. London: Macmillan, 1913. *Taylor, Vincent. The Gospel According to St. Mark. London: Macmillan, 1959. Throckmorton, Burton H. Jr. Gospel Parallels: A Comparison of the Synoptic Gospels, 5th ed. New Revised Standard Version. Nashville, Tenn.: Thomas Nelson, 1992. Weeden, Theodore J., Sr. Mark: Traditions in Conflict. Philadelphia: Fortress, 1971. 6

Sample Sermon Study: Two Great Commands Mark 12:28-34 Main Idea: Jesus strips down to bare bones what God wants from people: love God with all we have and are, and love the person beside us as we love ourselves. Observations and Description: This section of Mark records a conversation between Jesus and a law teacher. Before this, Jewish leaders in the Jerusalem temple (11:27) asked Jesus questions to get him in trouble. At first it seems this conversation is the same, but it is not. The law teacher asked a short question: which is the most important command? Jesus gave a longer answer: the most important command is to love God will all ones heart, soul, mind, and strength. Jesus added another like it, to love ones neighbour as ones self. The law teacher said he agreed completely, and then he restated what Jesus had said, adding to what Jesus had said that these commands were more important than all burnt offerings and sacrifices. The law teacher seems to stay with the principle that Jesus had given. Then Jesus said that the man was not far from the kingdom. The conversation between the two seems courteous and warm. Mark concludes this way: no one dared ask Jesus questions after this. Three observations seem important. One, I think this is the only positive conversation in Mark that Jesus has with a law teacher. They usually oppose him. Two, even though Jesus knows the one greatest command, and says what it is, Jesus will not let that one command stand on its own. He adds a second. But two is enough. There do not need to be three commands. Three, Mark the writer records the law teacher s response, in which the law teacher restates what Jesus said in different words, and includes things Jesus did not say. Since Jesus approves of the teacher s answer, I think we are supposed to take the law teacher s answer as correct and important. The law teacher's response is part of Mark's teaching in this section, since Jesus approves of that response. Mark s audience / Interpretation: Jewish believers who read this section would be encouraged that there were at least some Jewish law teachers who were open to Jesus and the gospel. Also, Jews who followed Jesus would learn that loving God and loving neighbours were the most important, even more important than all burnt offerings and sacrifices, which is what the law teacher said, and Jesus liked that. The Gentile believers would learn that if they loved God with all their heart, and loved their neighbours, they were actually keeping the most important parts of the OT law. My Church / Application: Preachers call believers to do many different things. It is good to hear what is the most important. These two commands of Jesus tell all believers what is most important. We all know that loving God is important, but we hear all kinds of ways to do that. The most important way to love God is to love ones neighbour. How we treat the person next to us is the center of loving God with all we have. But don t get rid of the first command, which is to love God with all we have and are. 7