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238 pages, Paperback
First published January 1, 2006
We do not in this book intend to attempt a historical reconstruction of Jesus's last week on earth. Our purpose is not to distinguish what actually happened from the way it is recorded in the four gospels.... We intend a much simpler task: to tell and explain, against the background of Jewish high-priestly collaboration with Roman imperial control, the last week of Jesus's life on earth as given in the Gospel According to Mark. Both of us have spent our professional lives on the historical Jesus, but we work together here on this humbler task: to retell a story everyone thinks they know too well and most do not seem to know at all. (pp. viii-ix)
Mark's gospel thus has an apocalyptic eschatology, a technical phrase that refers to the expectation of dramatic and decisive divine intervention in the near future, one so public that even nonbelievers will have to agree that it has happened. Whether this kind of eschatology goes back to Jesus himself is a separate question. We do not think that it does (my italics). We see it as most likely a post-Easter creation of the early Christian movement. In our judgment, Mark's gospel expresses an intensification of apocalyptic expectation triggered by the great war. But once again, our focus in this book is how Mark tells the story of Jesus and not the historical reconstruction of Jesus. (pp. 82-83)