Book's Detail
Proclaiming the Gospel

Scholars have long understood that the texts we now know as the Gospels were read aloud in the Greco-Roman world, but few have actually envisioned what a performance of the Gospel of Mark would have been like in the first century and how it would have shaped the experience of its audience. Proclaiming the Gospel shows us. Oral performances in the New Testament world were lively affairs. In the performance of Greco-Roman theater, readers lose their voices from the stress of emotional passages. Audiences cheer for philosophers as if at a rock concert, and in law courts, they are paid for their responses. Storytellers compete for attention with jugglers, and some speakers must fend off hostile crowds. Congregations at churches and synagogues cheer as if at the theater. Shiner reveals the ways that Mark wrote his Gospel to compete in this arena and how his audiences would have responded: applause for the miracles of Jesus, then an altogether different response at the cross. Whitney Shiner is Assistant Professor of Christian Origins at George Mason University, Fairfax, Virginia, and the author of Follow Me: Disciples in markan Rhetoric.

Statement of Responsibility
Author(s) Whitney Shiner - Personal Name
Edition 1563383969
Call Number 226.306 6 Shi p
ISBN/ISSN
Subject(s)
Classification 226.306
Series Title
GMD Print
Language English
Publisher Harrisburg: Trinity Press International
Publishing Year 2003
Publishing Place London
Collation
Specific Detail Info
File Attachment
LOADING LIST...
Availability
LOADING LIST...