Monday, September 10, 2012

24th SUNDAY IN ORDINARY TIME (B)


"Get behind me, Satan. You are thinking not as God does, but as human beings do."

Mk 8:27-35


(From Nineham's commentary)

v. 27. Now Jesus and his disciples set out for the villages of Caesarea Philippi. Along the way he asked his disciples, “Who do people say that I am?”

The villages of Caesarea Philippi: An obscure expression generally taken to mean the villages in the area around Caesarea Philippi. For the town itself, formerly called Paneas, and rebuilt by Herod Philip.

v. 28. They said in reply, “John the Baptist, others Elijah, still others one of the prophets.”

Cf. 6: 14-15  may well have influenced, or been influenced by, this verse.

v. 29. And he asked them, “But who do you say that I am?” Peter said to him in reply, “You are the Messiah.”

If vv. 27-29 existed before St Mark's time as an independent unit of tradition, the unit will no doubt have contained further verses making plain the significance of the event. Since St Mark has omitted these in the process of building up his longer unit, we can no longer tell how the pre-Marean Church understood the incident. They may have seen its significance as showing that the decisive confession of the Church had already been made in the lifetime of Jesus.

v. 31. He began to teach them that the Son of Man must suffer greatly and be rejected by the elders, the chief priests, and the scribes, and be killed, and rise after three days.

“The elders and the chief priests” could be simply a way of referring to the lay and clerical aristocracy in Jerusalem who, with “the scribes”, formed the Sanhedrin. But even if so, the question has naturally been raised whether so detailed a forecast is not a prophecy after the event, ascribed to Jesus by the early Christians. We have no means of deciding for certain, but if Jesus did foretell disaster for himself, it seems unlikely that it was in terms as precise as these; in particular, if he had several times referred to the resurrection as explicitly as is suggested here (and in 9:31.and 10:34), the behavior of the disciples after the crucifixion is almost impossible to explain. On the other hand, if he did foresee disaster he must presumably also have looked forward to ultimate vindication in some form or other.

Chief priests: Greek “archiereus”, elsewhere (e.g. 14:47 and 54) translated high priest. The plural is at first sight surprising, as there was only one high priest at any given time, but it occurs frequently in the New Testament and also in Josephus, and the usual explanation is that, in addition to the ruling high priest, deposed high priests and other male members of the most prominent priestly families were included.

After three days: cf. 9:31, 10:34, and Matt. 27:63. Elsewhere in the New Testament we have 'on the third day'. It is often held that, at any rate in popular usage, the two phrases were synonymous, 'after three days' meaning 'when the third day had begun". But this is difficult to reconcile with the evidence of such a passage as Matt. 12:40, and the fact seems to be that the tradition on the matter was influenced in rather different directions by two Old Testament passages, Hos, 6:2 and Jonah 1:7. In light of the Hosea passage it would seem that such a phrase could be used simply as a conventional expression meaning 'after a short while'. On the assumption that the words go back to Jesus himself; it has been suggested that it was in that conventional sense that he used them; clearly, however, that was not St Mark's understanding.

v. 33. At this he turned around and, looking at his disciples, rebuked Peter and said, “Get behind me, Satan. You are thinking not as God does, but as human beings do.”

Looking at his disciples: 'The reproof which follows is for their benefit as
well as Peter's'.

You are thinking not as God does (Or You are not on the side of God): The Greek here is one of those expressions too rich in meaning to be fully represented by any single translation. The RSV may well be right in hinting at a political metaphor, but the basic meaning of the verb (phronein} is 'to be minded' and there is certainly the idea of sharing, or failing to share, another's point of view and intentions.

v. 34. He summoned the crowd with his disciples and said to them, “Whoever wishes to come after me must deny himself, take up his cross, and follow me.”

Take up his cross: The Romans required a condemned criminal to carry part of his own cross to the place of execution; hence the metaphor. As the words stand, they seem to presuppose that 'the Cross' is already a familiar idea. No doubt Jesus' audience would have been familiar with crucifixion as a Roman method of execution, but it was normally reserved for criminals condemned by due process of law and it remains very doubtful whether, before Jesus' own crucifixion, they could have caught the allusion here. .Probably the present formulation of the saying is the work of the early Church.

v. 35. For whoever wishes to save his life will lose it, but whoever loses his life for my sake and that of the gospel will save it.

And that of the gospel: These words, omitted by Matthew and Luke, and by Jolm at 12:25, again suggest that the present formulation of the saying dates from a time when Christians were being martyred 'for the sake of the gospel'.

ON THE NECESSITY OF SUFFERING

 Neither here nor elsewhere in Mark is any theory offered as to why it should be God's will that the Messiah and his disciples should suffer, but in this connection we need to remind ourselves of the eschatological mould in which the thought of the early Christians was cast. For them God's realm in heaven entirely conformed to God's holiness, and stood in the sharpest contrast to this age or world ruled by forces of evil and governed by their evil values and designs. One day God would judge this world and bring this age to an end, transforming whatever in it was capable of being transformed, and transferring it to the conditions of his realm. But meanwhile, so long as this world lasted, anyone in it who represented God's realm and its values must look for misunderstanding and persecution from the evil powers and the human beings under their sway. 'The Old Testament itself says of the children of Israel: "They mocked the messengers of God, and despised his words, and scoffed at his prophets" (2 Chron, 36:16. Cf. Ps. 34:19). For later Jewish writers it was axiomatic that the people of God were basically opposed to whatever really emanates from God, and that therefore they had, always persecuted God's true servants and ambassadors and always would'. Such ideas would thus seem natural to Jesus and his early disciples. For evidence that they shared them, see such passages as Luke 11:49ff, Acts 7:2ff.

The true servant of God would not be disconcerted by such suffering, but would realize that in some mysterious way it was a means by which the redemptive purpose of God for this world was carried out. Isa. 53 is the classic passage for this idea but it by no means stands alone. In view of the remarkably few references to the Isaiah passage in the Gospels, It is probably better to think of a general background of ideas than of direct influence from that particular passage. 

Against this background, the true character of the disciples' reaction to Jesus' prophecy of suffering can be recognized. What the disciples had to learn was that until the kingdom came with power (9:1), the law of suffering applied at least as fully to the Messiah and his followers as it had done to earlier representatives of God see (9:13 and 6:17-29).

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