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Scenes and Details in the Gospels: Concrete Reading and Three Alternatives

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  12 May 2004

TIMOTHY WIARDA
Affiliation:
Singapore Bible College, 9–15 Adam Road, Singapore 289886

Abstract

An approach to Gospel narratives that treats them as realistically depicted stories and emphasises the way their details function within the time-of-Jesus scenes they portray yields substantial exegetical results. Alternative approaches such as allegorical reading, focus on theological words, and the pursuit of intra-Gospel allusions sometimes stand in tension with this kind of concrete reading, and can distract interpreters from attending to surface-level scenes and details. The value of concrete reading and the effects of alternative approaches may be seen through examining several texts: the Nicodemus narratives of John; Mark 8.22–6; John 1.35–9; Mark 14.38; and John 21.15–17.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
© 2004 Cambridge University Press

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Footnotes

Some of the ideas in this paper were presented in a colloquium at Trinity Evangelical Divinity School in February 2001, and at a seminar sponsored by the Ichthus Research Centre (Singapore) in November 2001. I am grateful for helpful feedback received on those occasions.