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The Three Variant Accounts of Peter's Call: a Critical and Theological Examination of the Texts

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 February 2009

Extract

The variant accounts of Peter's call as recorded by the four Evangelists constitute a major problem in the New Testament. Can we dismiss as incredible the accounts of his call on the basis of the Gospels' inconsistencies? Fuller has pointed out that the best way to discredit a witness in court is for the cross-examiner to tie him up in knots and make his evidence to appear to be such a tissue of inconsistencies that the jury becomes convinced that he is entirely untrustworthy. But in spite of their differences, the four Gospels are united in reporting that Peter became a follower of Jesus in the very early days of his ministry. They differ, however, as to the time, place and circumstances of his call.

Type
Short Studies
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1985

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References

Notes

[1] Fuller, R. H., The Formation of the Resurrection Narratives (Macmillan, New York, 1971) 2.Google Scholar

[2] βηθσαιδά either means ‘house of the fisher’ or ‘house of the hunter’, but the former is preferable because of its position and what it is noted for.

[3] According to Josephus and most other sources, the Jordan formed the boundary of Galilee on the East and Bethsaida Julias was beyond it.

[4] This may be the reason for the use of πόλις in Luke 9. 10 and John 1. 44 for Bethsaida, but κώμη is used in the D version of both Luke and John and also in Mark 8. 23, 26.

[5] Jos, . Antiq. XVIII 112Google Scholar. Jos. War III HIS. The foundation must have been before 2 B.C. because Julia was banished in that year.

[6] Another confusion about Bethsaida is that some ancient MSS call the Jerusalem pool, the pool of Bethsaida (BWY). Other MSS of Jn 5. 2 variously use Βηθζαθά, Βηζαθά, Βελζεθά, Βηθσαιδά, and Βηθεσδά for the pool, but similarly D reads Bethany for Bethsaida in Mk 8. 22.

[7] Some archaeological discoveries have shown that Capernaum was the home of Peter during Jesus' ministry. A modest church was erected on the supposed site of his house in 352 A.D. at Kfa-Nachum. It later became a splendid octagonal basilica often mentioned in the writings of pilgrims. Corbo, Virgil, New Memoirs of St. Peter by the Sea of Galilee (Franciscan Printing Press Jerusalem, 1968) 21–2Google Scholar; McBirnie, W. W., The Search for the Twelve Apostles (Tyndale House Publishers, Wheaton, Illinois, 1973) 4650.Google Scholar

[8] Filson, F. V., ‘Peter’ in Interpreter's Dictionary of the Bible, Vol. 3, Ed. Buttrick, C. A. (Abingdon Press, New York, 1962) 749–57.Google Scholar

[9] Taylor, V., The Gospel According to St. Mark (Macmillan, London, 1966, 1955) 167CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Nineham, D. E., The Gospel of St. Mark (Penguin Books, 1972) 70 & 71.Google Scholar

[10] Tiberias and Sea of Tiberias are only found in John.

[11] Σίμωνα occurs in Ecclus 50. 1 and Josephus and it is a common Greek name; Deissmann, Bible Studies, 315. Allen, W. C., The Gospel According to St. Matthew (I.C.C.) T. & T. Clark, Edinburgh, 3rd edition, 1957) 35.Google Scholar

[12] The use of Σίμων by B and ψ in 2 Pet 1. 1 appears to be secondary.

[13] Dalman, G., Orte und Wege Jesu (3rd ed. 1942), English TranslationGoogle Scholar, Sacred Sitesand Ways (1935) 177.Google Scholar

[14] But see The Analytical Greek Lexicon, Samuel Bagster and Sons Ltd., London, 1971, 88.Google Scholar

[15] The Talmud, Translated from the Original by Polane, H. – (Fredrick Warn & Co. Ltd., London, 1973) 213–39Google Scholar; Branscomb, B. H., The Gospel of Mark (Hodder & Stoughton, London, 1952) 27.Google Scholar

[16] εύθύς including doubtful readings appears forty-one times in Mark.

[17] Rawlinson, A. E. J., St. Mark (Methuen & Co., Ltd., London, 1936) 14.Google Scholar

[18] Nineham, D. E., The Gospel of St. Mark (The Pelican N.T. Commentaries, Penguin Books, 1972) 71.Google Scholar

[19] Of the four Gospels, it is only Luke that gives the impression that Jesus' ministry was already in full swing and that Jesus had performed many miracles before the choosing of the first disciples. But for the other three Evangelists, Jesus began to work miracles only after he had chosen some of the men who would later on bear witness to these events. If Luke's chronology is accurate, it would mean that the chronology of the other Evangelists is constructed for apologetic reasons. Of course, Luke's chronology here is doubtful.

[20] See art. έπιστάτης, TDNT II, 622 f.Google Scholar

[21] Caird, G. B., The Gospel of St. Luke (Penguin Books, London, 1971) 19.Google Scholar

[22] A good example of the usage is found in the LXX; ‘preserve alive’ Numb 31. 15; Joshua 6.25.

[23] But Matthew 16. 17–19 is peculiar to Matthew and many scholars have denied its authenticity. Cf. Filson, F. V., The Gospel According to St. Matthew (Adam & Charles Black, London, 1975) 196.Google Scholar

[24] Creed, J. M., The Gospel According to St. Luke (Macmillan & Co., London, 1965) 74.Google Scholar

[25] Caird, G. B., The Gospel of St. Luke (Penguin Books, London, 1971) 91.Google Scholar

[26] Findlay, J. A., The Gospel According to St. Luke (S.C.M., London, 1937) 66–7.Google Scholar

[27] Creed, J. M., The Gospel According to St. Luke (Macmillan & Co. Ltd., London, 1965) 73–4Google Scholar; Westcott, B. F., The Gospel According to St. John, Vol. 2 (John Murray, London, 1908) 364 & 365.Google Scholar

[28] Hoskyns, E. C., The Fourth Gospel, edited by Davey, F. N. (Faber & Faber Ltd., London, 1947)554.Google Scholar

[29] Barrett, C. K., The Gospel According to St. John (S.P.C.K., 1965, London) 149Google Scholar; Filson, F. V., op. cit., 750.Google Scholar

[30] Barrett, C. K., op. cit., 150.Google Scholar

[31] Wink, W., John The Baptist In The Gospel Tradition (Cambridge, London, 1968) 89Google Scholar, Barrett, C. K., op. cit., 144–5Google Scholar; Brown, R. E., ‘John the Baptist in the Gospel of John’, in New Testament Essays (1965) 138–40.Google Scholar

[32] Cf. Barrett, C. K., op. cit., 150Google Scholar; Bernard, J. H., The Gospel According to St. John (T & T Clark, Edinburgh, 1958) 54.Google Scholar

[33] Tasker, R. V. G., The Gospel According to St. John (Tyndale Press, London, 1964) 51 and 52.Google Scholar

[34] Barrett, C. K., op. cit., 151.Google Scholar

[35] Barrett, C. K., op. cit., 151.Google Scholar

[36] Bernard, J. H., op. cit., 56.Google Scholar

[37] The tenth hour most probably stands for 4 p.m. and this will be in agreement with the Babylonian/Jewish system of reckoning. The number 10 also has a particular significance in the Old Testament and in Judaism. Also for Pythagoreans, for Gnostics and for Philo 10 is τέλειος αριθμός. The twelve hour day signifies the time of the world. The tenth hour refers to the beginning of Jesus' ministry or the Christian era or the hour of ‘Repent for the Kingdom of God is at hand’ in the Synoptic language; the hour of strange events pointing to the dramatic end of the present age.

[38] Bultmann, R., The Gospel of St. John, translated by Murray, G. R. Beasley, general editors, R. W. N. Hoare and J. K. Riches (The Westminster PressPhiladelphia, 1971) 97 ff.Google Scholar

[39] Other ancient texts read Ίωνā or Ίωαννā or Ίωανā.

[40] Cf. The Greek New Testament, edited by Aland, K., Black, M., Metzger, B. M. and Wikgren, A., (United Bible Societies, London, 1966) 349.Google Scholar

[41] Burrows, M., The Dead Sea Scrolls (New York, 1955) 383Google Scholar; Allegro, J., The Dead Sea Scrolls (Penguin Books, 1974) 167–72Google Scholar; Vermes, G., The Dead Sea Scrolls in English (Penguin Books, 1968) 47 ff.Google Scholar

[42] Burrows, M., op. cit., 355, 356 and 361.Google Scholar

[43] Burrows, M., More Light on the Dead Sea Scrolls (New York, 1958) 140, 303, 304 and 395.Google Scholar

[44] LaSor, W., Amazing Dead Sea Scrolls (Chicago, 1956) 163.Google Scholar

[45] Howlett, D., The Essenes and Christianity (New York, 1957) 189.Google Scholar

[46] Barrett, C. K., op. cit., 149.Google Scholar