6. The Gospel of Mark
Introduction to New Testament (RLST 152) The Gospels of the New Testament are not biographies, and, in this class, they are read through a historical critical lens. This means that the events they narrate are not taken at face value as historical. The Gospel of Mark illustrates how the gospel writer skillfully crafts a narrative in order to deliver a message. It is a message that emphasizes a suffering messiah, and the necessity of suffering before glory. The gospel's apocalyptic passages predict troubles for the Jewish temple and incorporate this prediction with its understanding of the future coming of the Son of Man. 00:00 - Chapter 1. The Gospels Not As Biographies 13:44 - Chapter 2. A Historical Critical Reading of Mark 22:18 - Chapter 3. Mark's Messiah 30:26 - Chapter 4. The Apocalyptic in Mark Complete course materials are available at the Open Yale Courses website: http://open.yale.edu/courses This course was recorded in Spring 2009.

7. The Gospel of Matthew

9. The Gospel of Luke

8. The Gospel of Thomas

4. Judaism in the First Century

The Embarrassing Gospel of Mark

13. The Historical Jesus

10. The Acts of the Apostles

11. Johannine Christianity: The Gospel

1. Introduction: Why Study the New Testament?

14. Paul as Missionary

A Deep-Dive into the Book of Romans: Dr. N.T. Wright

The Gospel According to Mark read by David Suchet

Gospel of Mark Summary: A Complete Animated Overview

Mark, the Restored Deserter (Mark 1:1)

5. The New Testament as History

NEW SERIES: Professor Dale Martin talks about the Gospels

17. Paul's Disciples

2. From Stories to Canon

