Aramaic Sources of Mark's Gospel

Aramaic Sources of Mark's Gospel is a book by Maurice Casey, who is a reader in early Jewish and Christian studies at the University of Nottingham. Casey takes four passages from the Book of Mark and reconstructs what an original written Aramaic source would have said if the Book of Mark was a translation of that source.[1]

Aramaic Sources of Mark's Gospel
AuthorMaurice Casey
LanguageEnglish
PublisherCambridge University Press
Publication date
1998
Media typePrint, Kindle
Pages278
ISBN978-0521633147

Content

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Chapter 1 is a review of prior investigations of the Aramaic substratum of the Gospels. [1]

Chapter 2 describes Casey's methodology for reconstructing the possible Aramaic sources behind the synoptic Gospels. In particular, he relies on the written Aramaic found in the contemporaneous Dead Sea Scrolls.[1]

Chapters 3 to 6 show his reconstruction of four Marcan passages:

  1. Jesus' scriptural understanding of John the Baptist's death in Mark 9:11-13;
  2. Two Sabbath controversies in Mark 2:23-3:6;
  3. The question of Jacob [= James] and John in Mark 10:35-45; and
  4. Jesus' final Passover with his disciples in Mark 14:12-26[1]

Chapter 7 shows his arguments for dating the putative written Aramaic source for Mark to around 40 C.E.

Academic reviews

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  • James H. Charlesworth of Princeton Theological Seminary felt that "Casey’s method is an improvement over earlier work" but that "one still is frustrated by the paucity of evidence on how Aramaic was being rendered into Greek in the first century, how one can discern between oral or written sources behind the Gospels, and how reliable either of these sources might be in representing Jesus’ putative Aramaic."[3]

References

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  1. ^ a b c d e Joseph A. Fitzmyer (2000). "Aramaic Sources of Mark's Gospel (book review)". The Catholic Biblical Quarterly. 62 (1): 139. JSTOR 43722162.
  2. ^ Bruce Chilton (June 2002). "Maurice Casey's Aramaic Sources of Mark's Gospel (book review)". Review of Rabbinic Judaism. 5 (2): 259 to 262. doi:10.1163/15700700260253985.
  3. ^ James H. Charlesworth (June 2002). "Can one recover Aramaic sources behind Mark's Gospel? (book review)". Review of Rabbinic Judaism. 5 (2): 249 to 258. doi:10.1163/15700700260253976.