A good friend has reviewed my Commentary in
detail and very usefully. Here is his review:
Review of Michael Turton's Historical Commentary on the Gospel of Mark
Close
to a century ago, German scholar Hermann Gunkel (1862-1932), arguably
the father of form criticism, set about exploring oral traditions,
genres and settings in life of the old testament texts and developed
comparisons between the Bible and literature scattered all over the
world [1]. With respect to Genesis, he showed Egyptian influence in the
Joseph romance, Moabite influence in the
Since
Gunkel's efforts, several studies have been carried out on the Bible
involving application of literary methods and the field of literary
study of the Bible has expanded tremendously. It is from that
background that Turton's work unfolds like a tapestry, weaving modern
approaches in New Testament scholarship with a literary analysis of the
Gospel of Mark and meshing these with a historico-critical approach,
exposing the literary structure of the Gospel of Mark and the resulting
historical implications. Turton's work identifies the dominant and
recurring themes in Mark and explicates the content (inventio),
structure (dispositio) and style (elocutio)
and shows how the narrative units in Mark work together, exposing the
gospel as an artistic and aesthetically beautiful text, fulfilling
James Muilenberg's words: Scripture as artistic composition engages the
ultimate questions of life [3]. The other pillar that hoists Turton's
work, other than the literary analysis of the gospel of Mark, is his
detailed exposition of the literary borrowing by Mark from Old
Testament scriptures and illustration of how Mark employed Hellenistic literary and dramatic conventions.
Turton's central thesis is that a literary analysis of the Gospel of Mark demonstrates that it is a fictional product from the writer of the gospel. For example, the character of Peter, whose name means "the rock", is ironically not strong enough to even acknowledge Jesus and is the only disciple that breaks down and weeps (Mark 14:72). Turton argues that in the parable of the sower in Mark 4, in the typology of the gospel, Peter represents rocky ground which fails to support the germinated seeds in the same way Peter fails to recognize and respond to Jesus. The conclusions Turton draws regarding the historicity of the characters and events in Mark present a remarkable contribution to the quest for the historical Jesus and Turton's work is therefore of interest to anyone interested in historical Jesus studies.
Turton
first dispenses with positive criteria that conservative scholars use
in historical Jesus studies then he uses the lessons learnt from the
positive criteria to forge a robust set of negative criteria, which are
undergirded by thoroughgoing skepticism and close attentiveness to the
historical method. Using these negative criteria as a sounding board,
Turton brings to bear analytic techniques employed in narrative
criticism, rhetorical criticism, historical criticism and redaction
criticism upon the gospel of Mark. The results of this endeavour are
profound, epiphanic and powerful because Turton brings to life Markan
ideas that have been struggling for _expression, articulation and
execution.
Turton presents his methodology upfront and justifies his approach for using "negative criteria", which overcome the assumptive and subjective nature of the "positive criteria" employed by conservatives in New Testament scholarship. Backed by the works of scholar like Tomas L. Brodie, Turton advances the argument that the author of Mark modeled the events surrounding Jesus on the Elija-Elisha cycle and other Old Testament characters and prophecies. Though he performs a literary analysis on the gospel, Turton's main objective is using the analysis to help in arriving at a judgement on the historicity of the events and characters in the Markan narrative.
A remarkable and novel idea from this work is the argument that the entire Gospel of Mark is organized in chiasms [4] and Turton proceeds to break down the gospel to chiasms, verse by verse, revealing a distinct Markan writing style which becomes instrumental in detecting the authentic from inauthentic passages from the first gospel. In antiquity, Phillys Trible notes, chiastic structures were used to aid memory, enhance argumentation and shape totality of thought [5].
Turton's
approach is multifaceted and a reading of the commentary is rewarding
because it is rich with insights and rushes untrammeled, like light
into the dark, into erstwhile unexplored grounds, exposing the pearls
around every corner of the Markan narrative. The work draws from a wide
range of scholarship and by its inclusion of all views on certain
verses, the reader enjoys a broad vantage point from which they can
interpret the gospel of Mark.
To
some extent, the work makes heavy demands on the reader. The reader
encounters terms like typology [6], doublet, chreia [7], tryptich,
enthymemes, pericope, Markan redaction and so on without accompanying
definitions.The reader is thus sometimes left to figure out what these
words mean from the contexts in which they are employed, a situation
that some can find very challenging. Let us examine a key example of
this.
After employing the
term "chiasm" five times, Turton writes:
Scholars have long recognized that Markan structure is chiastic, that is, composed of structures that are parallel and inverted. Such structures were commonly used in antiquity.
Turton uses the terms "redaction", "Markan redaction", "Markan creation" and "Markan style" in a synonymous sense. For example, when defining the 8th Criterion, he writes:
One would think that "Markan style" refers to the hand of Mark, that is, her style of writing, like arranging the pericopes in chiastic structures, using diminutives and words of Latin origin (Grant), using double negatives etc. And expect that "Markan redaction" refers to changes carried out by the author of Mark, to events in oral or written sources. And "redaction" [unqualified] to mean changes made to GMark by an unknown redactor – an interpolator.
Whilst listing Ludemann's negative criteria, Turton writes:
That Turton also means interpolation when he writes "redaction", let us look at his criticism on Ludemann's 4th criterion. Turton writes:
(1.) Embarrassment (or Offensiveness) criterion - which holds that sayings and events that would have embarrassed the early church must be authentic or historical. (2.) Difference criterion – if a saying by Jesus was inconsistent with the practices or beliefs of post-Easter Christian communities, it must be authentic. (3.) Growth – if a unit has grown through later traditions, it must have an authentic core. (4.) Rarity (Discontinuity) criterion – sayings that differ with those of both Judaism and the early church must be authentic. (5.) Multiple (wide) Attestation criterion – if independent sources have the same saying, it must be authentic. (6.) Coherence criterion – a saying that is consistent with the rest in the database is likely to be authentic. (7.) Plausibility criterion – if it is believable, it must be authentic.
Turton explains why these criteria cannot be relied upon to help us separate myth from fiction and dispenses with three of Gerd Ludemann's five "negative criteria". After wiping the slate clean, he presents twelve criteria that are freed from the weaknesses of the above criteria:
2: No anachronisms are historical.
3: No events in which the logic of order precludes historicity are historical.
4: Where an event is disconfirmed in outside history, or where outside sources are silent on events that they apparently should discuss, historicity is severely impaired.
5. Where themes and motifs occur that are common in stories from antiquity, historicity is severely impaired.
6: Signals of creation from the Old Testament, such as parallels, citations, and allusions, severely impair historicity
7: Themes and motifs that appear to be creations of Mark severely impair historicity.
8: Markan style/redaction impairs historicity.
9: Anything with a source in earlier non-Christian literature impairs historicity.
10: Anything that indicates erroneous understandings or ignorance of Jewish and Roman law and custom impairs historicity.
11: Where events are implausible, historicity is impaired.
12: Where a place name or character name appears to have theological significance, history is impaired.
One can argue,
against criteria 12, that
Turton
argues that portraying the disciples as dumb is a Markan theme. But how
can we maintain this in the face of knowing that Homer also
employed the ineptitudes of Odysseus' crew in Odyssey
to highlight the virtues of Odysseus and thereby make Odysseus appear
more heroic and via the contrast, magnified his "wisdom, courage, and
self-control" as Dennis McDonald argues in The Homeric
Epics and the Gospel of Mark (p. 23)? Would we then treat it as a Homeric theme?
And
what if we find the other evangelists doing the same thing? In John,
for example, Jesus tells the disciples that Lazarus has fallen asleep
and they instead think that Lazarus is having a restful nap (
In
Matthew, Jesus shows that suffering and servant-hood are central to
discipleship, the disciples "fail to grasp this essential component of
his teaching (see for example
And about Mark
Boris Upensky defines irony as a "nonconcurrence" of point of view as revealed through actions, speech, beliefs or motives. [18] Irony is "always the result of disparity of understanding" [19]
Powell writes:Our
gospels are filled with ironic moments. In Luke, a Pharisee thanks God
he is not like a certain tax collector without realizing it is the
latter that God considers justified (18:9-14). In Mark, James and John
ask to be placed at Jesus' right and left (
What the above means is that irony itself, as a rhetorical device meant to help the reader understand the narrative, is not distinctly Markan as the phrase "Markan irony" implies. One may feel uncomfortable with the _expression Markan irony without an explanation of how it is distinctly "Markan".
Turton notes that Markan styles include:
I suggest that an exposition of Markan styles in the introductory pages of the commentary would improve the presentation better and place the reader in a receptive frame of mind to better appreciate Markan styles as they read the commentary, chapter by chapter.
He criticizes it on the same page:
I suggest that chiasms be defined upfront alongside the methodologies because as it is, the reader is forced to walk into Mark not knowing what a Markan "style" is and what a chiasm is and they are "served" chiasms before they have been adequately weaned to chiasms: in essence, the first two chiasms are wasted on the reader because the reader cannot appreciate them. When the reader finally reaches the Excursus: Chiastic Structures in Mark, that is the time that they are introduced to chiasms as follows:
What is to stop one
from splitting an
....E And he said to them, "Take heed what you hear; the measure you give will be the measure you get, and still more will be given you. For to him who has will more be given; and from him who has not, even what he has will be taken away."
....F Watch and pray that you may not enter into temptation; the spirit indeed is willing, but the flesh is weak."
The following chiasm of Mark 15:16-20 that Turton beautifully presents exemplifies what I mean by opposites. Note how A' opposes A and so on:
….B And they clothed him in a purple cloak, and plaiting a crown of thorns they put it ….on him.
........C And they began to salute him, "Hail, King of the Jews!"
........C' And they struck his head with a reed, and spat upon him, and they knelt down in …….homage to him.
….B' And when they had mocked him, they stripped him of the purple cloak, and put ….his own clothes on him.
A' And they led him out to crucify him. And they compelled a passer-by, Simon of Cyre'ne, who was coming in from the country, the father of Alexander and Rufus, to carry his cross. And they brought him to the place called Gol'gotha (which means the place of a skull).
From Mark11:1-11, Turton constructs the following chiasm:
B And they went away,
…C and found a colt tied at the door out in the open street;
……D and they untied it.
……D' And those who stood there said to them, "What are you doing, untying the colt?"
…C' And they told them what Jesus had said;
B' and they let them go.
The B bracket has geographic movement, which should be contained in the A bracket. It is also unclear how the C brackets are related; one refers to speech and the other has action. This chiasm appears to violate the rules for chiasms presented by Turton.
The idea of the entire Mark being made up of chiastic structures is evocative of Paul Duke's caveat about what Scholars and critics in the quest of ironies are prone of. Duke wrote:
Turton joins other
scholars in arguing that the
Turton deals with the
The
arguments he makes are good and convincing though somewhat lengthy. I
would suggest he presents the reader with the arguments that show that
the section has been tampered with, in point form.
Here,
we examine Turton's analysis of what Elizabeth Struthers Malbon treats
as the geopolitical, topographical and architectural settings in Mark
[23]
Turton writes regarding C11:1-11:
v1: OT
construction is evident here in the writer's decision to begin Jesus'
entry into
4 On that day his feet will stand on the
v1: Just as the Mount of Olives and the Temple Mount face off throughout the rest of the Gospel of Mark, so in the OT mountains frequently face each other in paired opposition, for example, Horeb and Carmel in 1 Kings 18 and 1 Kings 19, and Ebal and Gerizim in the Pentateuch.
Turton writes in C13:
The
It is not clear whether Turton is using the word "opposition" in the above passage in a structuralist sense. If he is, as I think he is, there is more that needs to be said lest the meaning is lost on the reader. What is the myth complex of cosmic mountains?
Wheelwright has suggested that the symbolic function of these settings is to inject "ancestral vitality" in the narrative by linking the events in the narrative with Israel's past [24] as we can see in the example Turton has provided above (Mount of Olives being derived from Isaiah). This is similar to the symbolic portrayal of the desert in Mark as a place for testing where Jesus is tested for 40 days just like the Israelites wandered in the desert for 40 days in the OT. Powell writes:
"The
mountain is a place of refuge, safety and revelation, a role that it
also plays in stories of Moses and Elijah – both of whom appear with
Jesus in 9:4…The schematic theme underlying these topographical
oppositions is the contrast of promise and threat. Heaven represents
promise in Mark's story. God's spirit and voice come from heaven (1:10,
11; 9:7) and it is to heaven that characters look for an experience of
God's power (6:41; 7:34). Characters fall to the earth, on the other
hand, when they are beset by sickness or sorrow (
In a comment that
is evaluative of the usage of architectural settings in Mark, Turton
notes that C10:10-12:
"...gives
us Jesus instructing the disciples in a house, a common redactional
feature, as well as an explanation for the disciples, another
redactional feature."
Malbon (ibid)
argues that the architectural settings in Mark entail a thematic
contrast between locations that are logically sacred and profane.
Buildings for example, can be considered more profane than tombs.
Malbon groups the buildings into religious and residential ones. A
temple should logically be more sacred than a house, but in Mark, we
observe the opposite [26]. Powell notes:
"The
temple is condemned as 'a den of robbers' (
In C9, Turton writes: "v33: 'the way.' The Way is a common motif in Mark." Since Turton is classifying this _expression by referring to it as "a motif", it would be good to define what a motif is.
Rhoads and Michie (Mark as Story) and Malbon have written on this pattern of movement in Mark described as "the way" and they argue that it is an artifact of the usage of journey as a feature as is evident in Hellenistic literature like Odyssey. We also have journeys in Dante's Divine Comedy and J.L Tolkien's The Lord of The Rings. Powell regards journeys as a setting in Mark:
"Mark
uses the term way a total 16 times. At the beginning of the story, John
"prepares the way" for Jesus (1:2, 3). Jesus not only travels
throughout
This analysis can be placed alongside Turton's note in C12 of "the way" as a set of teachings (Winberry 1998).
I suggest that Turton spends at least two chapters laying out the groundwork of his thesis. These chapters should cover the methodology (the negative criteria, rhetorical and narrative criticism), the literary analysis and a classification of the literary features identifiable in Mark. These chapters can serve as a preview into the rest of the work whilst equipping readers with the necessary foundation to enable them appreciate what is to come. The readers should not be allowed to step into the text before they have been properly instructed on what method of analysis Turton employs.
I would also urge Turton to comment on the views from other scholars in his commentary, where he disagrees with such views. This ensures that the reader is guided and not liable to perceive contradictions incorrectly.
Questions touching on
the gospel of Thomas, Markan familiarity with paul and the existence of
Q require detailed handling in separate chapters in my view so that
they get a full treatment and so that they are not eclipsed by other
views.
This section is like a sort of appendix and comprises miscellaneous suggestions and comments from the reviewer on various issues in no specific order.
"There are even similarities in the Greek" (C5) – examples would strengthen the argument.
It would help if an explanation accompanied the Antiquities passage where Josephus narrates Eleazar's demonstration of exorcism (C5).
Consider moving the Excursus: Literary Structures in Mark (C5) somewhere in the introductory pages.
The logic in the
statement "
The claim "There are many ways this scene can be interpreted as fiction." needs to be demonstrated.
I
am surprised at the minimal use of MacDonald (whom Turton mentions
twice) especially with respect to Hydropatesis (water-walk) and his OT
parallel of the death of John the Baptist and I thought I would see a
consideration of MacDonald's argument that Jesus as a character in Mark
is an inversion of Hector and Achilles in the Iliad. Carrier notes in his review of Homeric Epic and the
Gospel of Mark:
…while the death of
Hector doomed
I suggest that the statement: "where Jesus has compassion on the beggar, and which Bart Ehrman has argued persuasively is an insertion." would do well with a footnote so that the reader can have a taste of the alleged persuasiveness.
Turton writes (C12):
Chapter 11 is the prologue for the final three chapters, in which the Parable of the Tenants serves as the synopsis of coming events, a common feature of Hellenistic popular literature.
Again, in this instance, giving a few examples to the readers to show that this was "a common feature of would of Hellenistic popular literature" would be good IMHO.
Readers may be interested in knowing
why Mark
Regarding Mark 7:31, Turton comments as follows:
While
some exegetes have argued that the verse is unhistorical because it
shows that "the Evangelist was not directly acquainted with Palestine"
(Nineham 1963, p40), my own experience of pre-industrial cultures
indicates that even people who have lived in a region for many years
may not be aware of which direction things are, since they orient
themselves by landmarks rather than by compass points. No judgment
about either Mark's experience of
Is a sea not a "landmark"? In rural areas, permanent water masses are used as landmarks. For example, one can be directed: "once you have crossed the lake, you will see a huge baobab tree…" or, "follow this path until you come to a swamp, then take the path that is at the right side of the swamp…"
Regarding C8:13-21, Turton writes: "A
chiasm can be constructed, but it makes no sense at all, merely an
artistic arrangement of the sentences. The less said about it, the
better. The writer of Mark never had a hand in this one."
The phrase, "The
less said about it, the better" may be problematic for it does not
clarify the matter.
Turton writes: "Tacitus recounts a famous story in which a blind man begs Vespasian to place the Emperor's spittle on his eyes." This allusion, may do better with a the reference to the passage.
The phrase "v44, v46: considered interpolations by the majority of scholars." requires some supporting footnotes.
I think an example of a fivefold attic drama (mentioned when explaining the fivefold structure of Markan features) would help the reader appreciate the implication that they were common.
Turton writes:
Further, none of Jesus' miracles represent actions that would have been physically difficult or materially complicated and expensive to portray on stage. Jesus doesn't fly, move mountains, cast lightning, or transform one object into another. Instead, the blind see, the lame walk, demons leave their hosts, and a fig tree wilts. Clearly, the Gospel of Mark could easily be staged by a non-professional cast and crew on short notice, with a minimum of sets and equipment.
Just about anything "could easily be staged by a non-professional cast and crew on short notice". It depends on desired quality or effect of whatever is being portrayed: heavens opening with a dove flying down accompanied by a voice, the temple curtain getting ripped into two, hydropatesis, drowning 20000 pigs.
These can all be achieved on a stage and I do not find the argument compelling. Even the collapse of World Trade center can be acted on a stage. One can argue that drowning pigs in a sea, or simulating an earthquake may not be easily be staged by a non-professional cast and crew. Without a standard for determining what could easily be staged by a non-professional cast and crew; it is difficult to judge. The argument can also be challenged: does the fact that Joseph and his technicolour coat can be acted on a stage mean that the story was meant to be performed? I think they are two separate issues and one has got nothing to do with the other.
Turton may consider including Doherty's
analysis of the triumphant entry into
On the entry of Jesus in
v2: As many exegetes have noted, an unridden colt signifies a colt for the King, since no one but the King was allowed to ride the colt without his express authorization.
It would be useful to support the "many exegetes" claim with a reference and enlighten the reader on what sources indicate that "no one but the King was allowed to ride the colt".
Against Price, Turton argues that:
"…that the speaking
is done not by a crowd but most probably by disciples who have come
into
I think it is unlikely that Mark would vaguely refer to the disciples, who are among the central characters in the Markan narrative, as "many." And by numerically referring to "two of his disciples" as being sent by Jesus, Mark is keen to alert the reader regarding the number of disciples involved in each activity. Also, having the disciples declare "Hossana" etc, would be inconsistent with the Markan theme of portraying the disciples as thick-headed because it would mean that the disciples had decided (since we wouldn't consider them capable of mocking Jesus) that Jesus was the Davidic messiah.
This
reviewer, contrary to Doherty and Turton (and closer to Price), regards
the "many" (in "9: And those who went before and those who followed
cried out, "Hosanna! Blessed is he who comes in the name of the
Lord!"), as other pilgrims who were also trooping into
"In summary, although judgments of outright fiction are generally implied rather than stated in this commentary…"
This conservative statement is not consistent with the following statements made by Turton:
"all
of the evidence of Jesus' relationships with John are contained in what
are generally acknowledged to be fictions from the hand of the writer
of Mark."(C1) "Since the healings are most probably fictions created by
the author of Mark working off of the Old Testament, that implies that
the "
Turton may need to clarify this.
It is unclear under which criteria the "the banality of the injunction to forgive" (C11) is used to discount historicity.
Regarding C12:6 He had still one other, a beloved son; finally he sent him to them, saying, `They will respect my son.' Turton writes:
v6:
A supernatural prophecy of Jesus' death.
The word 'supernatural' appears superfluous since the ability to see the future (prophecy) is not considered 'natural' in humans. But more importantly, the equation of a parable to a prophecy may be confusing to some.
Mark 12:7 But those tenants said to one another, `This is the heir; come, let us kill him, and the inheritance will be ours.'
About this, Turton writes:
v7:
The parable is on its face is absurd, for how could the tenants inherit
the farm if they were the killers of its heir? J. D. H. Amador (1992)
has attempted to explain this absurdity using a sociological reading of
the parable against the economic desperation of the
The answer to Turton's question is: the passage does not say the tenants would inherit the farm if they killed the heir: it has them plotting to own the inheritance upon killing the inheritor. The key point being that they wanted to possess the farm, not inherit it.
Why is C13: 9-11 excluded from the analysis?
The statement "its dependence on the OT, its dependence on the Septaugint[sic]" may appear to mean the OT is different from the Septuagint, which may not be the meaning Turton intends to convey above.
Mark
David
himself, inspired by the Holy Spirit, declared, `The Lord said to my
Lord, Sit at my right hand, till I put thy enemies under thy feet.' 37:
David himself calls him Lord; so how is he his son? And the great
throng heard him gladly.
This is inconsistent with Pauline attribution of Jesus as being "of the stock of David" Romans 1:3. It would be interesting to see how Turton, who argues that Mark was acquainted with Pauline epistles, resolves this apparent conflict. Is Mark engaging in anti-Pauline polemic here?
About the rebuttals to arguments that favor Thomasine dependence on Mark, it would be good to have footnotes on which Egyptian text Proverbs 17-24 is based upon. One may also question the suitability of the analogy considering the disparity of the sizes of the texts being compared. I think Turton does a fine job of critiquing the idea that GThom preceeded GMark but there are arguments that are repeated especially the ones dealing with temple cleansing (which is tackled in Chapter 11). Consider using see and see also references, or treating both under one platform.
The temple ruckus is one that Turton has shown persuasively and thoroughly to be ahistorical. I would just like to nitpick a little.
Turton writes:
v48: Although some exegetes have seized upon the word "robber" here (which might also mean "insurrectionist") to say that Jesus was arrested as a political revolutionary, Paula Fredriksen (1988, p116) pointed that if Jesus had been arrested for political reasons, he would have been taken straight to Pilate. There would have been no trial before the Sanhedrin, and no need of one. However, the cogency of Fredriksen's argument hinges on whether the reader accepts that the Sanhedrin Trial is historical. If the writer invented it, then her argument is null.
I think Fredricksen's argument stands either way. Her referential argument gauges historicity of the trial by using the Roman practices of handling insurrectionists as a sounding board. She assumes historicity for the sake of argument then compares the resulting conclusion with other data and she reaches conclusions similar to Turton's. This is perfectly acceptable and logically sound IMO.
Regarding Mark 14:51 where we have the scene of the young man who fled naked, Turton compares parallels between Mark 14 and 2 Samuel 15-16 and has the following "parallel":
Mark 14: A young man betrays Jesus by running away
2 Samuel 15-16: A young man betrays David by informing on his followers.
Turton writes elsewhere: "Yet exegetes have found it extremely difficult to pin down exactly what Judas "betrayed."; in the Judas example, Turton is exacting with regard to what constitutes 'betrayal'. Yet in the parallel above, he presents the mere act of running away as "betrayal". At best, running away can be desertion, not betrayal. What did the young man betray, a code of concealment? One may argue that in Samuel, David as king may have expected loyalty from his subjects, plus, the young man actually revealed information that jeopardized the safety of David and his followers. But in Mark, Jesus is a man walking around with a gang of twelve illiterate, thumb-fingered boneheads. Why would a faceless, unidentified teenager who is not one of Jesus' disciples, betray Jesus by running away from people out to grab him? The lad was running for his dear life.
On the basis of the above, one may argue that the above parallel does not fit because betrayal entails violation of some bestowed or expected trust. The fact that this young man is presented fleeing naked without even being introduced or named means his role is purely transitory and not central to the plot (compare this to Joseph of Arimathea who we are told was a member of the Sanhedrin, a group of spiritually obtuse people [per Mark] – Joseph's character is used to show that even among hopeless groups, if one believes, they get saved and to move the plot further – recall the faith motif). The reader is not made to empathize, sympathize or to be antipathetic to the naked young man. At best, he is meant to provide some humor by being a spectacle. And unlike Carrier, I will get invited to all parties at Turton's house.
Turton would also help readers understand the formula below by including supporting examples for the statement: "'I am' is a formulaic term of self-revelation commonly used by gods and goddesses in the Greek-speaking world, according to Fowler"
The above applies to the claim: "Galileans were lampooned for being dull-witted and provincial."
I expected Turton to mention Philo when commenting on Mark 15:15: "So Pilate, wishing to satisfy the crowd, released for them Barab'bas; and having scourged Jesus, he delivered him to be crucified. "
According to Philo, Leg. Ad Caium 38, Agrippa I described Pilate in a letter to Caligula as "inflexible, merciless, and obstinate" and as having been guilty of "corruption, violence, robbery, ill-usage, oppression, illegal executions and never-ending most grievous cruelty"
Of course, Agrippa's characterization of Pilate may be hyperbolic, but the fact remains that that characterization is not consistent with the portrayal of Pilate in Mark as an indecisive, spineless, moralistic, off-handed puppet that bends to the wills of a rowdy crowd. This, in my view, argues against historicity of the trial before Pilate as narrated in Mark.
I suggest considering inclusion of the following in the commentary on the mocking scene, which has been argued to be derived from Philo's Flaccus, Book IV:
· The purple robes represented a soldier's paludamentum – a scarlet military cloak.
·
Hail King of the Jews, i.e. Ave rex Judarorum, is a parody of Ave Caesar
Imperator
· Alongside the above, the crown of thorns represents the emperor's laurel wreath.
Turton writes regarding Mark 15:26:
The RSV once again
smoothes out the writer's awkward doublets, for in Mark's Greek the
"inscription" is "inscribed."
An "inscribed inscription", just like the _expression "hot fire" sounds like a pleonasm (a feature of Matthean style) rather than a doublet. A definition of what a doublet is would help clarify this.
Regarding Mark
Markan irony, of course, since Jesus will rescue himself by living again.
This statement, one would argue, is inconsistent with adoptionist Christology since according to adoptionist Christology, Jesus does not rescue himself: God is the one who "rescues" him.
Chiasms that are incorrect, like Tolbert's Chiastic structure of Markan Crucifixion I and Chiastic Structure of Markan Crucifixion II, should be left out altogether. The chiasms presented on the crucifixion scene are particularly problematic for example:
A And they compelled a passer-by,
Simon of Cyre'ne.... the father of Alexander and Rufus,
...B who was coming in from the
country,
......C to carry his cross.
.........D And they brought him
to the place called Gol'gotha (which means the place of a ……skull).
The above, Turton writes, "nicely parallels" the following:
.........D and also many other
women who came up with him to
......C followed him, and ministered to him;
...B when he was in
A There were also women looking on from afar, among whom were Mary Mag'dalene, and Mary the mother of James the younger and of Joses, and Salo'me,
Turton explains:
This offers us three men as opposed to three women, 2 sons of one mother as opposed to 2 sons of one father, "Galilee" opposed to "coming in from the country", "taking up the cross" opposed to "following and ministering", "they" who bring opposed to "many other women", and finally, "Golgotha" opposed to "Jerusalem."
One
may argue, against Turton, that the three women are actually present,
while only one man is present. Alexander and Rufus are only mentioned
in identifying Simon of Cyre'ne, who was their father. It is like
arguing that the statement "Idi Amin Dada, who drowned two hundred
cripples, was present" is referring to two hundred and one people.
"when he was in
The following statement may need clarification because by its framing, it isolates the transient and intermittent dissenting voice from what is favorably identified as "mainstream scholarship". The "voice outside the mainstream" comes out as marginal and inconsistent:
Mainstream scholarship is almost entirely unanimous in accepting that Jesus died by Crucifixion, though now and then a voice outside the mainstream disputes this.
The following statement may be confusing to some because of the phrase "bare fact of Jesus' crucifixion". Does the phrase mean that Turton believes that Jesus' crucifixion is a bare fact? The statement conflicts with the notion that Jesus' death was a literary creation, which is embodied in the same passage.
Certainly Paul speaks of the Crucifixion, but he knows nothing about it -- date, timing, location, and details all appear to be an invention of the writer of Mark working off the OT. The Death of Jesus is a supreme literary creation, and there is no support for historicity in this pericope, save for the bare fact of Jesus' crucifixion.
It is intriguing to find a form of plausible deniability in Mark. Turton brushes past it and smells irony in it instead. We see this below:
The visit of the women looks like literary invention designed to create witnesses to the Empty Tomb. It is important to note that under Jewish law women could not be "fully qualified as witnesses" (Theissen and Merz 1998, p497). Markan irony at work again?
Plausible deniability here is used in a similar fashion that UFO believers, like Jim Deardoff use it. They argue that UFO aliens present evidence of their presence whilst at the same time presenting evidence or taking actions that raise suspicions that the witnesses are hoaxers or were mistaken. This strategy, the UFO believers maintain, ensures that people are not forced to believe what they don't want to believe.
Mark's
author presents something that is inconsistent with Jewish law (women
as "fully qualified witnesses") as noted above, but presents it anyway.
It could be Markan irony as Turton notes (assuming that Mark was
familiar with Jewish law), or a beautiful example of plausible
deniability. Plausible deniability though, as far as I know, is not
employed in literary study. Just an idea.
Turton's commentary has great potential of revolutionizing historical Jesus stories and is likely to be used as a touchstone in future when examining the synoptic problem. It is likely to generate a lot of controversy because it proposes theories that go against generally accepted ideas like Markan independence or unfamiliarity with Paul, Thomasine precedence over Mark and the existence of Q. It is also likely to add to a collection of the works done by liberal scholars like Robert Price, Earl Doherty, G. A. Wells, Richard Carrier and Tim Thompson, which favour the Christ-myth hypothesis.
The commentary occupies a fertile ground that can be a turning point for many in the New Testament scholarship because it employs several historico-critical and literary methods whilst touching on important questions in the field of NT scholarship, exposing the reader to several new insights to perennial questions in the field. It is important to find a way of presenting this fleshy cleavage, bedecked with jewels, in a fashion that is systematic and more structured, even as we appreciate that this is a commentary and therefore follows the pre-existing order available in the gospel of Mark.
[1.] Gunkel H., Legends of Genesis, 88-122
[2.]
Trible P., Rhetorical Criticism, Context, Method and the
Book of Jonah, 1994, p.23
[3.]
Muilenberg J., Form Criticism and Beyond, p.18
[4.]
The term "chiasm" derives from the shape of the Greek letter chi(X).
Trible, op. cit., p.53 notes that "Chiasm designates
inverted correspondences between words, phrases, sentences or larger
units."
[5.]
Trible, op. cit., p. 35
[6.]
Simply put, typology is the systematic classification of types that
have characteristics or traits in common. Powell defines a typological
reference (unlike a chronological reference) as "indicative of the time
during which an action transpires. When the narrator of John's gospel
says that Nicodemus came to Jesus "by night" (3:2), he does not mean to
indicate when the meeting occurred (which night?) but rather to inform
us that it was night at the time." Powell, M.A., What is
Narrative Criticism?, 1990, p.73
[7.]
Turton writes in C2: "the Cynics deployed chreiai ("useful"),
anecdotes which show the teacher fielding questions that test his
abilities and show him "emerging unscathed from a difficult,
challenging situation" (Mack 1995, p54)."
[8.]
Powell, op. cit., p.33
[9.]
Powell, op. cit., p.7
[10.]
German scholar Hermann Gunkel (1862-1932) played a major role in
shaping form criticism (Form-geschichte).
Its principal topics comprise oral tradition, genre, setting in life
and extra-biblical parallels. As such, it is a literary-sociological
sort of inquiry.
[11.]
Powell, op. cit., p.14, referencing Norman Perrin, The Evangelist as Author: Reflections on Method in the Study
and Interpretation of the Synoptic Gospels and Acts, BiblRes
17 (1972);5-18, esp. 9-11
[12.]
Trible notes: "The word 'climax' derives from Greek meaning 'ladder'.
It designates a series of parallel items in ascending order of
intensity. The word inclusio derives from the Latin.
It designates a parallelism of words, phrases or sentences between the
beginning and the end of a unit. Chiasm may be viewed as a series of inclusios.",op. cit.,p.27
[13.]
Powell op. cit., p.15
[14.]
Powell notes that "The ironic link between these two women may be even
greater if the "flow of blood" is understood as a reference to
menstruation and "12 years of age" as a reference to the approximate
onset of puberty" op. cit. p.73
[15.]
Powell, op. cit., p47
[16.]
A
....B The Israelite leader Joachim orders preparations for
war (4:1-15)
….....C Achior is expelled from the Assyrian camp (5:1-6:11)
….....C'Achior is received into the Israelite city (
....B'The Assyrian general Holofernes orders preparations for
war (7:1-5)
A'Assyria campaigns against its
enemies (7:6-32)
[17.]
Powell, op. cit., p.75 notes: "the
[18.]
Upensky B., A Poetics of Composition: The Structure of the
Artistic Text and Typology of a Compositional Form, 1973.
[19.]
Scholes and Kellog, Nature of Narrative, p.240
[20.]
Op. cit., p.31 referring to Culpepper, Anatomy of Fourth
Gospel, 169-75 and Rhoads and Michie, Mark as Story,
p.60
[21.]
Turton writes: "A good example of the typical style is Peter's denial,
in the A-B-A' format. While Jesus affirms who he is, Peter is out in
the courtyard, denying who Jesus is. Then even as the soldiers mock
Jesus and tell him to "Prophesy!" as if he can't, his prophecy of
Peter's denial is coming true out in the courtyard."(C6). And "the
story of the woman with bloody hemorrhage sandwiched between the
account of Mark's raising of the daughter of Jairus." As I noted above,
the idea that Jairus' daughter, who was 12, and therefore probably
starting her menstrual flows, juxtaposed with a woman whose 12 year
bleeding was stopped by Jesus, must be a literary construction.
[22.]
Paul Duke, Irony in the Fourth Gospel, 1985, p.2
[23.]
Elizabeth Struthers Malbon, (Narrative Space and Mythic
Meaning in Mark, 1986) classifies spatial settings in Mark into
these three categories
[24.]
Powell, op. cit., p.75 notes: "The desert or
wilderness is a place of testing for Jesus (40 days) just as it was for
[25.]
Powell, op. cit., p.76-77
[26.]
Malbon employ's Levi Strauss' scheme of structural analysis (which is
based in finding opposites) in her classifications. Pyromanic
post-structuralists reading this review would perhaps set her work in a
deconstructionist fire just to experience the delight of seeing the
binary oppositions implicit in her work melt and fuse together and
ultimately collapse in swirling jelly of multiple meanings.
[27.]
Powell, op. cit., p.77
[28.]
Powell references Rhoads and Michie, Mark as Story,
p.64-65
[29.]
Powell, op. cit., p.78
[30.]
Richard Carrier, Review
of The Homeric Epics and the Gospel of Mark