THE ENDING OF THE PRE-MARKAN PASSION NARRATIVE

  • Kirk Robert MacGregor McPherson College
Keywords: Pre-Markan Passion Narrative, Empty Tomb, Tradition Criticism, Redaction Criticism

Abstract

 This article argues that the pre-Markan passion narrative ended with a starkly unadorned account of the empty tomb, an account which raises as many questions about Jesus’s fate as it does answers. Employing tradition and redaction criticism, I reveal that the pre-Markan empty tomb account contained no mention of an angel, Jesus’s resurrection, or Galilean appearances. Rather, it straightforwardly de-scribed the women’s coming to the tomb, finding the tomb empty, and fleeing from the tomb in terror and silence. The logic of the pre-Markan ending discloses that the women fled because they naturally assumed grave robbery and feared being implicated in this capital crime. Throughout this article, I interact with the views of Sakkie Spangenberg, Hansie Wolmarans, Andries van Aarde and Julian Müller, four prominent South African scholars who have commented on the empty tomb narrative.

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Author Biography

Kirk Robert MacGregor, McPherson College
Kirk R. MacGregor is Assistant Professor and Chair of the Department of Philosophy and Religion at McPherson College.
Published
2019-01-21
Section
Articles