Friday, January 22, 2010

Gospel of Mark Dating and Origins

  • The gospel is dated 65-75 CE due top references to the 2nd temple's destruction.
  • Because of the reference to the destruction of the Temple in Jerusalem in 70 CE (Mark 13:2), most scholars believe that Mark was written some time during the war between Rome and the Jews (66-74). Most early dates fall around 65 CE and most late dates fall around 75 CE.
  • Arhument for a later date is given in this quote: Those who argue for a later date say that Mark was able to include the prophecy about the destruction of the Temple because it had already happened. Most say that Mark was written during the war when it was obvious that Rome was going to exact a terrible vengeance on the Jews for their rebellion, even though the details were unknown. Some lean more towards later in the war, some earlier. For them, it doesn’t make a great deal of difference whether Mark wrote shortly before the destruction of the Temple in 70 CE or shortly after. Rome's xaction of vengeance being obvious is not obvious to me and needs to be clarified. Had it been that obvious would the zealots have directed their efforts so filled with vengeance and savagery even against their fellows?
  • Mark's Latinisms indicate a Roman audience: Those who argue for a later date say that Mark was able to include the prophecy about the destruction of the Temple because it had already happened. Most say that Mark was written during the war when it was obvious that Rome was going to exact a terrible vengeance on the Jews for their rebellion, even though the details were unknown. Some lean more towards later in the war, some earlier. For them, it doesn’t make a great deal of difference whether Mark wrote shortly before the destruction of the Temple in 70 CE or shortly after.
  • Written in Rome? Perhaps not due to the prevalence of Latinisms and Roman customs across the empire.Because of the dominance of Roman customs across their empire, though, the existence of such Latinisms really doesn’t require that Mark was written in Rome. It’s quite plausible that people in even the most distant provinces could have become used to using Roman terms for soldiers, money, and measurement. The inference that Mark’s community was suffering persecution is also sometimes used to argue for a Roman origin, but the connection isn’t necessary. Many Christian and Jewish communities suffered at this time, and even if they didn’t, simply knowing that somewhere Christians were being killed just for being Christian would have been sufficient to produce fear and doubt.
  • Responsibility for Jesus' death laid with the Jews , inthe desire to absolve th Romans of all responsibility. It’s likely, though, that Mark was written in an environment where Roman rule was a constant presence. There are many clear signs that Mark has gone to great lengths to absolve Romans of the responsibility for Jesus’ death — even to the point of painting Pontius Pilate as a weak, indecisive leader rather than the brutal tyrant that everyone knew him to be. We cannot use the argument of Pilate's indecisiveness as an absolving factor of Roman complicity in Jesus' death in that Pilate was kinown to be ferocious and tyrranical : even to the point of painting Pontius Pilate as a weak, indecisive leader rather than the brutal tyrant that everyone knew him to be.
  • It’s quite plausible that people in even the most distant provinces could have become used to using Roman terms for soldiers, money, and measurement. The inference that Mark’s community was suffering persecution is also sometimes used to argue for a Roman origin, but the connection isn’t necessary. Many Christian and Jewish communities suffered at this time.
  • The Jews' leaders and the people, to a degree, were saddled with blame for th death pf Jesus and this was more palatable to his Gentile audience, his Roman audience.







Dating and Origins of Mark’s Gospel
When Was the Gospel According to Mark
Written?
By , About.com Guide
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christian history
biblical criticism
gospel of mark

Lion of St Mark
zSB(3,3)
Because of the reference to the destruction
of the Temple in Jerusalem in 70 CE (Mark 13:2), most scholars believe that Mark
was written some time during the war between Rome and the Jews (66-74). Most
early dates fall around 65 CE and most late dates fall around 75 CE.
Those
who favor an earlier date argue that Mark's language indicates that the author
knew that there would be serious trouble in the future but, unlike Luke, didn't
know exactly what that trouble would entail. Of course, it wouldn’t have taken
divinely inspired prophecy to guess that the Romans and Jews were on yet another
collision course. Supporters of early dating also need to make room between Mark
and the writing of Matthew and Luke, both of which they also date early — as
early as 80 or 85 CE.
Conservative scholars who favor an early date often
rely heavily upon a fragment of papyrus from Qumran. In a cave sealed in 68 CE
was a piece of a text which it is claimed was an early version of Mark, thus
allowing Mark to be dated before the destruction of the Temple in Jerusalem.
This fragment, though, is just one inch long and one inch wide. On it are five
lines with nine good letters and one complete word — hardly a firm foundation
upon which we can rest an early date for Mark.
Those who argue for a later
date say that Mark was able to include the prophecy about the destruction of the
Temple because it had already happened. Most say that Mark was written during
the war when it was obvious that Rome was going to exact a terrible vengeance on
the Jews for their rebellion, even though the details were unknown. Some lean
more towards later in the war, some earlier. For them, it doesn’t make a great
deal of difference whether Mark wrote shortly before the destruction of the
Temple in 70 CE or shortly after.
Mark's language contains a number of
"Latinisms" — loan words from Latin to Greek — which would suggest that he
thinks in Latin terminology. Some of these Latinisms include (Greek/Latin) 4:27
modios/modius (a measure), 5:9,15: legiôn/legio (legion), 6:37:
dênariôn/denarius (a Roman coin), 15:39, 44-45: kenturiôn/centurio (centurion;
both Matthew and Luke use ekatontrachês, the equivalent term in Greek). All this
is used to argue that Mark wrote for a Roman audience, perhaps even in Rome
itself, long the traditional location of Mark’s work in Christian beliefs.

Because of the dominance of Roman customs across their empire, though, the
existence of such Latinisms really doesn’t require that Mark was written in
Rome. It’s quite plausible that people in even the most distant provinces could
have become used to using Roman terms for soldiers, money, and measurement. The inference that Mark’s community was suffering persecution is also sometimes used
to argue for a Roman origin, but the connection isn’t necessary. Many Christian
and Jewish communities suffered at this time
, and even if they didn’t, simply
knowing that somewhere Christians were being killed just for being Christian
would have been sufficient to produce fear and doubt.
It’s likely, though,
that Mark was written in an environment where Roman rule was a constant
presence. There are many clear signs that Mark has gone to great lengths to
absolve Romans of the responsibility for Jesus’ death — even to the point of
painting Pontius Pilate as a weak, indecisive leader rather than the brutal
tyrant that everyone knew him to be.
Instead of the Romans, Mark’s author lays
the blame with the Jews — primarily the leaders, but also to the rest of the
people to a certain degree.
This would have made things much easier for his
audience.
Had the Romans discovered a religious movement focused upon a
political revolutionary executed for crimes against the state, they would have
clamped down much harder than they already were doing.
As it was, a religious
movement focused upon on obscure Jewish prophet who broke a few irrelevant
Jewish laws could be largely ignored when there weren’t direct orders from Rome
to increase the pressure.

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