Baruch Background: This deutero-canonical
book that comes Lamentation and Ezekiel is not in the Hebrew Bible. In the Greek Bible, it appears between
Jeremiah and Lamentations; in the Vulgate it comes after Lamentations. It says it was written in Babylon by
Baruch, Jeremiah’s scribe, and sent to Jerusalem to be read at liturgical
gatherings. It gives us valuable
information on how the religious life of those in exile was maintained. Lawrence
Boadt, author of Reading the Old
Testament: An Introduction (1984), places it between third and first
centuries BC, “a work of
encouragement to those Jews being forced to adopt Greek ways” (503). The sixth
chapter (going by Vulgate) appears in the NRSV as a separate book called The Letter of Jeremiah. In the
Septuagint, the Letter is separated
from Baruch by Lamentations. The first and last chapters are in prose (probably from
the Hebrew). The middle chapters are in verse (probably from Greek only).
Baruch 1 – The book or letter
was read on the fifth anniversary of the fall of Jerusalem (582 BC). When it
was read to all who lived in Babylon, they “wept, fasted, and prayed before the
Lord.” They collected money to send back to Jerusalem and they returned some of
the Temple treasures along with these.
They beg the people back in Jerusalem to pray for King Nebuchadnezzar and his son and to read the scroll
they are sending them.
In this book as in so
many, the prophetic voice is dominant. Israel has come to this pass in their
history because of the unfaithfulness of the people, the priests, the rulers,
and many of the prophets. “We did not
listen to the voice of the Lord our God in all the words of the prophets whom he sent to us, but all of us
followed the intent of our own wicked hearts by serving other gods and doing
what is evil in the sight of the Lord our God” (NRSV 1:21).
Mark: Background
Information
– The Gospel of Mark is most likely the first of the gospels to have been written
down. Ascribed to John Mark, a
disciple whose house was open to Christians and a cousin of Barnabas, who
accompanied Paul on one of his missionary journeys, the book is traditionally
thought to have been written around 70 AD in Rome. The audience probably was mostly Gentile. It stresses Jesus’ message of the coming of the kingdom, the call
to repentance and faith. The content of Jesus’ teaching is rarely gone into. He
exorcises, heals, preaches and feeds crowds. The disciples here are dense—one will betray him, one will deny
him, the rest will desert him. He
goes only rarely into Gentile territory, but the centurion at the cross presages
Jesus’ appeal to them.
The
Christology of the gospel is apparent: He is the Messiah, anointed Davidic
king, Christos, Son of Man. Mark
emphasizes the “mystery” of Jesus’ identity. Mark also shares with Paul a focus on “election,”
The
Jerusalem Bible introduction
emphasizes the “scandal” of man’s (even the disciples’) failure to recognize or
receive the Messiah. This is something Peter dwells on
in his speech to the people of Jerusalem. “Men of Israel . . . Jesus the
Nazarene was a man commended to you by God by the miracles and portents and
signs that God worked through him when he was among you. . .This man, who was
put into your power by the deliberate intention and foreknowledge of God, you
took and had crucified by men outside the Law. You killed him, but God raised him to life, freeing him from
the pangs of Hades. . .” (Acts 2: 14-24).
Mark 1:1-28 – The “good news” of Jesus
Christ, Son of God, starts with a quote from Isaiah (but actually Malachi 3:1
and Isaiah 40:4), alluding to John the Baptist. People everywhere—from the
Judean countryside and from Jerusalem flocked to John to be baptized. Here even before
Jesus, Mark lets us feel the hunger in people for his coming. Jesus
comes too.
At his baptism, a dove comes down and a voice
proclaims him God’s Son, [His] Beloved (1:11). Then the Spirit “drives” him
into the wilderness where he is “tempted by Satan” for 40 days. After John’s arrest, Jesus comes to
Galilee with his good news. He seems here to take the place of John. His message is virtually the same.
He
selects his first four disciples: Simon and Andrew (fishermen), James and John
(sons of Zebedee, also fishermen). He impresses them with the authority in his demeanor (1:22). A
possessed man approaches him, saying, “’I know who you are, the Holy One of
God"”(1:24). But Jesus silences him
and exorcises the “unclean spirit” (that possesses him (1:26). His fame
spreads.
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