Working on an article about monotheism in early Christianity, I was struck as I hadnโt been before by the contrast between two statements in the Gospel of Mark, one on the lips of others who are complaining about Jesus, the other on the lips of Jesus complaining about how someone else has characterized him.
Mark 2:7: โWhy does this fellow speak in this way? It is blasphemy! Who can forgive sins but God alone?โ
Mark 10:18: Jesus said to him, โWhy do you call me good? No one is good but God alone.โ
Both use the same Greek phrase ฮตแผฐ ฮผแฝด ฮตแผทฯ แฝ ฮธฮตฯฯ. Richard Bauckham writes (in โMarkan Christology According to Richard Hays: Some Addenda,โย Journal of Theological Interpretationย 11:1 (2017) 21โ36, here p.28):
The phrase โbut God aloneโ (ฮตฮฏ ฮผฮฎ ฮตฮนฯย ุฉ ฮธฮตฯฯ) is identical in 2:7 and 10:18. It alludes to the Shema in the form inย which it was often summarized in Second Temple period Jewish literature:ย โGod is oneโ (ฮตฮฏฯ ฮธฮตฯฯ ฮญฯฯฮนฮฝ)ู
This is really striking given that both of these texts are quite crucial to how we understand the Christology of the Gospel of Mark as a whole.
The first one sees Jesus respond with a healing that is intended to demonstrate that God has given the son of man authority to forgive sins.
Perhaps the point made through the similar language is that inherent goodness is a different matter. God has delegated some authority to human beings in general (or perhaps, if one thinks Son of Man is a messianic title here, to his anointed one). Goodness, on the other hand, is not something that can be bestowed the way authority can. Human beings fall short, and one of Jesusโ main aims was to call his people to repentance, a people persuaded of their own inherent goodness as the people of God. Jesus thus takes aim at the fact that โgoodโ had become a form of respectful address, not always reflected in reality.
One of the only places Iโve seen this connection made a focus of attention is in John J. R. Leeโs article โThe divinity of Jesus and the uniqueness of God: are they compatible? A reflection on high Christology and monotheism in Markโs Gospelโ inย Midwestern Journal of Theologyย 15:1 (2016) 84-100. He uses Bauckhamโs concept of โdivine identityโ which I have evaluated critically in the past and find unhelpful. Iโll include some links to those posts below.
What do readers of this blog think? Iโm among those who are not persuaded by attempts to read ideas like pre-existence and ontological divinity into the Gospel of Mark. Does the similar phrases in these two passages fit, confirm, or challenge that conclusion I had drawn previously? What do you think and why?
Of related interest:
https://ehrmanblog.org/nope-jesus-is-not-yahweh/?utm_source=feedly&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=nope-jesus-is-not-yahweh
https://ehrmanblog.org/a-heresy-that-may-not-sound-heretical-to-you-arius-of-alexandria/?utm_source=feedly&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=a-heresy-that-may-not-sound-heretical-to-you-arius-of-alexandria
https://ehrmanblog.org/the-actual-heretical-views-of-arius-in-his-own-words/
โHow the Spirit Became Godโ on The Intersectionย Podcast
Mike Bird provides a teaser for other subscription-only posts with โIs Jesus Merely an Angel?โ But his review of George Hunsingerโs commentary on Philippians is free for all readers.
Open access book on the Apostle Peter and his reception
Jim Davila drew attention to a new book on pre-existence in ancient Judaism and Christianity, another on how angels are represented, and yet another on the Gospel of Matthew in its theological and historical context.
Boldly proclaiming โno other nameโ (Acts 4; Easter 4ย B)
How can Jesus promise eternal life?
Ken Schenck on the mission of Jesus
3D imaging of the Church of the Holy Sepulcher
Bob Cornwall, โFirst Things Firstโ
Here are those prior blog posts about divine identity, as promised:
See also:
A Man Attested By God: Daniel Kirk on the Human Jesus of the Synoptic Gospels










