Available Formats
Jesus and the Empire of God: Royal Language and Imperial Ideology in the Gospel of Mark
By (Author) Dr. Margaret Froelich
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
T.& T.Clark Ltd
18th November 2021
United Kingdom
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
Christianity: sacred texts and revered writings
226.306
Hardback
192
Width 156mm, Height 234mm
440g
Margaret Froelich examines the Gospel of Mark using political and empire-critical methodologies, following postcolonial thinkers in perceiving a far more ambivalent message than previous pacifistic interpretations of the text. She argues that Mark does not represent an entirely new way of thinking about empire or cosmic structures, but rather exhibits concepts and structures with which the author and his audience are already familiar in order to promote the Kingdom of God as a better version of the encroaching Roman Empire. Froelich consequently understands Mark as a response to the physical, ideological, and cultural displacement of the first Roman/Judean War. By looking to Greek, Roman, and Jewish texts to determine how first-century authors thought of conquest and expansion, Froelich situates the Gospel directly in a historical and socio-political context, rather than treating that context as a mere backdrop; concluding that the Gospel portrays the Kingdom of God as a conquering empire with Jesus as its victorious general and client king.
Margaret Froelich is Theology Librarian at Willamette University, USA.