The gospel of the beloved disciple : a work in two editions

Author(s)

    • Waetjen, Herman C.

Bibliographic Information

The gospel of the beloved disciple : a work in two editions

Herman C. Waetjen

Bloomsbury, 2014

  • : pb

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Note

"First published 2005. Paperback edition first published 2014"--T.p. verso

Includes bibliographical references (p. [428]-450) and indexes

Description and Table of Contents

Description

There is a general consensus that the Fourth Gospel underwent two editions. But in contrast to all previous efforts to reconstruct these two editions on the basis of source and redaction criticism, Waetjen maintains that these two editions essentially overlap without far-reaching changes. Chapter 1-20 originated within the Jewish community of Alexandria and were addressed to Jews in order to persuade them to "believe into" Jesus as the Messiah, the Son of God. The second edition originated when chapter 21 as added and certain revisions were made in chapters 1-20 by an editor in the Christian community of Ephesus in order to present the Gospel to Gentile Christians and perhaps attendantly to legitimate it for canonization. Waetjen examines John's gospel by engaging in a close reading of various units of the Gospel from the perspective of a two-level drama that presents two narrative worlds within the literary structure of the Gospel. Out of his readings of the texts, one of the major and provocative conclusions Waetjen draws is that Lazarus is the Beloved Disciple of Jesus in chapters 1-20. John, the son of Zebedee, is intimated to play the role of the Beloved Disciple not only in chapter 21, but throughout the Gospel. In other words, the editor of chapter 21 has concluded that John (based on the title that the gospel already bears), is the Beloved Disciple and project that backwards from chapter 21 throughout the previous 20 chapters. Waetjen's thorough scholarship and his attention to detail in his original readings challenge traditional readings of John's Gospel, providing fresh insights into the Gospel.

Table of Contents

1.Introduction 2.The Prologue 3.The Role of John as Witness 4.The Beginning of Jesus' Ministry 5.Seeing and Therefore Believing and Believing in Order to See 6.Jesus and Nicodemus 7.Romancing the Samaritan Woman 8.Failure in Jerusalem 9.The Second Passover 10.Jesus at the Festival of Booths in Jerusalem 11.Success in Jerusalem 12.The Seventh Sign 13.Jesus Closes His Ministry 14.Incarnation and the New Human Being 15.Jesus' Farewell Discourse 16.Arrest, Trial, Death, and Burial 17.Resurrection and the New Creation

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