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JBTM Book Reviews<br />

183<br />

A Theology of Mark’s Gospel: Good News about Jesus the Messiah, the Son of God. By David<br />

E. Garland. Biblical Theology of the New Testament. Edited by Andreas Köstenberger.<br />

Grand Rapids: Zondervan, 2015. 656 pages. Hardcover, $44.99.<br />

David E. Garland is William B. Hinson Professor of Christian Scriptures and dean for<br />

academic affairs at George W. Truett Seminary, Baylor University in Waco, Texas. Previously,<br />

he taught for twenty-one years at his alma mater, The Southern Baptist Theological Seminary<br />

in Louisville, Kentucky. Garland is a prolific author. He has written, co-written, or edited<br />

twenty books, including fourteen commentaries. Three previous studies of the Gospel of<br />

Mark 1 paved the way for his twenty-first book, A Theology of Mark’s Gospel: Good News about<br />

Jesus the Messiah, the Son of God.<br />

The book itself, having a hardcover, is durable yet lightweight in spite of its great length.<br />

The left and right margins are 1 5/8 inches wide, ideal for jotting down notes. The text has<br />

no color or graphics (i.e., maps, figures, pictures) except an occasional chart. The material<br />

unfolds in a highly ordered manner beyond the two parts and fourteen chapters. As proof, a<br />

“detailed” table of contents spans fourteen pages.<br />

A Theology of Mark’s Gospel is one of eight planned volumes in Zondervan’s Biblical Theology<br />

of the New Testament series; an ambitious project, in part, because biblical theology has<br />

been difficult to define. 2 General Editor Andreas J. Kostenberger asserts, “Biblical Theology<br />

engages in the study of the biblical texts while giving careful consideration to the historical<br />

setting in which a given piece of writing originated. It seeks to locate and relate the contributions<br />

of the respective biblical documents along the lines of the continuum of God’s<br />

salvation-historical program centered in the coming and salvific work of Christ” (23).<br />

In <strong>Part</strong> 1, Garland tackles the text of Mark. “Introductory Matters” consists of two<br />

chapters. Chapter 1 addresses the following historical-critical issues:<br />

1. Authorship: John Mark organizes unrelated stories from Simon Peter, his source.<br />

2. Audience: Gentile-Christians acquainted with Neronian persecution<br />

3. Place of Writing: Rome, not Galilee or Syria<br />

¹Mark. The NIV Application Commentary (Grand Rapids: Zondervan, 1996); Mark. Zondervan Illustrated<br />

Bible Backgrounds Commentary, ed. Clinton E. Arnold (Grand Rapids: Zondervan, 2002);<br />

with Karen Lee-Thorp, Mark: Gospel of the Servant King. Bringing the Bible to Life, ed. Karen H. Jobes<br />

(Grand Rapids: Zondervan, 2010).<br />

²Childs concedes, “The term ‘Biblical Theology’ is ambiguous. It can either denote a theology<br />

contained within the Bible, or a theology which accords with the Bible. . . . From one perspective the<br />

entire modern history of the discipline of Biblical Theology can be interpreted as the effort to distinguish<br />

between these two definitions and to explore the important implications of the distinction.”<br />

Brevard S. Childs, Biblical Theology of the Old and New Testaments: Theological Reflection on the Christian<br />

Bible (Minneapolis: Fortress, 1993), 3.

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