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Decoding Mark

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When John desires Mary or Mary desires John, what does either of them want? What is meant by innocence, passion, love and arousal, desire, perversion and shame? These are just a few of the questions Roger Scruton addresses in this thought-provoking intellectual adventure. Beginning from purely philosophical premises, and ranging over human life, art and institutions, he surveys the entire field of sexuality; equally dissatisfied with puritanism and permissiveness, he argues for a radical break with recent theories. Upholding traditional morality -- though in terms that may shock many of its practitioners -- his argument gravitates to that which is candid, serene and consoling in the experience of sexual love.

224 pages, Kindle Edition

First published October 1, 2003

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John Dart

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28 reviews1 follower
February 9, 2024
John Dart presents Kiasms he has found in the Book of Mark - introduction to ending, and five sections making up the entire book and Kiastic to each other. He claims these Kiasms proves the fragments that Morton Smith found were part of orignal Mark but we have a version of Mark where those were take out, and a long series of miracles were inserted (Mark 7 and 8 IIRC).
Morton Smith to my eye looks untrustworthy, but I have no problems with the fragments. They say the rich young man that Jesus loved is basically Lazarus. If so that adds a lot of depth to the story. The other thing is the fragments make mention of a week long sacred rite which involves dressing up and re-enacting important events in scripture that correspond to the framework of our lives, creation:birth, fall:loss-of-innocence, death, resurection, etc. This understanding and the fragments clearly make sense of Mark 14:51 - that young man is the initiate, going through this sacred rite, and is at the stage where you wear the linen burial sheet.
That said his exact Kiasms didn't completely convince, and his understanding of the 7 day long sacred rite seems to be what he wants it to be, because there is no surviving description or explanation of it.
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