ABSTRACT

In the light of the findings of the previous chapter, which placed the Gospel of Mark in the Roman colonial milieu, this chapter will investigate the sociopolitical, literary and religious origins and dimensions of the Gospel of Mark. By presenting and placing Mark in its real sociopolitical and religiocultural context, it is proposed by this author to offer a hermeneutical challenge based on the rebel and subaltern voices in Mark. Many scholars strongly advocate that Mark had access to some historical and biographical documents which were perhaps shaped immediately after the death of Jesus by the possible eyewitnesses of the ministry of Jesus (Trocme, 1975: 32). This chapter will also study the nature of the Jerusalem authorities and their influence on the Jesus movement. In the same way, on the basis of these investigations it is anticipated that there will be an exploration of the movements of resistance, including the identity and implications of the marginalized and subalterns in the Gospel of Mark.