Mark: A Commentary

Adela Yarbro Collins

Mark: A Commentary
Mark: A Commentary

Book Details

Series: Hermeneia
Categories: Mark
Tags: Technical

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5 out of 5 based on 3 user ratings
Scot McKnight April 21, 2009 5 5
Probably the most intense, complete, and scholarly commentary on Mark is by Adela Yarbro Collins [Full Review]
John Dyer July 19, 2008 5 5
Collins commentary will probably become the standard technical work on Mark. It has all the excellence of other Hermeneia works, and it is one of the largest, most complete commentaries on Mark to date. In addition to the expected interaction with all the modern critical scholarship on Mark and addressing all the controversial issues of authorship, dating, and multiple endings, Collins really excels at addressing relevant first century Jewish and Greco-Roman literature. In the Hermeneia layout, she is given room to include lengthy quotes so that readers do not have to track them down. Thankfully, this work is not just about scholarly interest, Collins is also very helpful at getting at the meaning of the text.
The contribution of Adela Yarbro Collins to the Hermeneia commentary series joins the recent flow of English-language commentaries on the Gospel of Mark. These commentaries tend to modulate between historical-critical treatments and efforts to apply literary-critical tools. A number of these are shaped by the designs of the publishers and forced to make difficult choices among a variety of methodological possibilities and to focus primarily on the final text and its message. Collins’s treatment, however, is played out on a wider field of inquiry: The series is designed to be a critical and historical commentary to the Bible without arbitrary limits in size or scope. It will utilize the full range of philological and historical tools, including textual criticism…, the methods of the history of tradition (including genre and prosodic analysis), and the history of religion.… It is expected that the authors will struggle to lay bare the ancient meaning of a biblical work or pericope. In this way the text’s human relevance should become transparent, as is always the case in competent historical discourse. However the series eschews for itself homiletical translation of the Bible. (xv) Some nine hundred pages in length, the commentary employs a common format. An extensive introduction treats the typical issues of authorship, place of writing, date, composition and structure, and audience. These standard elements are expanded through lengthy discussions on the genre of this Gospel and upon its interpretation of Jesus. [Full Review]

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