Abstract
The Sayings Gospel Q is notable for lacking an account of Jesus' death.1 It is surprising that one early Christian document is apparently so indifferent to an event which plays a profound role in others (e.g., Romans, Mark). Scholars have, to be sure, observed that the issue of persecution and/or death is often referred to in Q, and many have come to believe that these references are casting an implicit glance at the death of Jesus himself. According to this line of thought, early Christians would have used the deaths of the prophets to connect Jesus' death with those of his followers. I do not intend to argue against this. Rather, I will propose that there is also another view according to which Q related Jesus' death and those of his followers. This view involved common, Cynic-Stoic ideas of the time.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Religious studies,History
Reference49 articles.
1. De Providentia in Moral Essays (LCL; 3 vols.; London: Heinemann/Cambridge, MA: Harvard, 1928–1935) vol. 1, 3.2–14
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