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Self-Help or Deus ex Machina in Mark 12.9?

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  11 October 2004

JOHN S. KLOPPENBORG
Affiliation:
Department for the Study of Religion, University of Toronto, Toronto M5S 2E8, Canada

Abstract

The conclusion to the parable of the tenants in Mark (12.1b–9) involves the vineyard owner killing the refractory tenants and re-letting his vineyard to others. In legal terms the man employs ‘self-help’ – the satisfaction of a real or pretended claim without the permission of the defendant or the intervention of a court. Most advocates of a metaphorical approach to the parable (Pesch, Snodgrass, Evans, Hultgren), and some who argue that Jesus spoke in realistic fiction, have argued or assumed that Mark 12.9 is an original part of the parable, believing it to be a ‘realistic’ element of Mark's story. But an examination of Greek, Roman, Graeco-Egyptian, and biblical legal rulings indicates that resorts to self-help were discouraged and even criminalized in this period. Mark 12.9 is not a realistic component of the parable, but is part of its secondary allegorization.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
© 2004 Cambridge University Press

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