Mark 15

Mark 15 by verse:

General References

Donald Juel, Messianic Exegesis, p. 93-98
Boris Pasternak, “Evil Days,” The Enduring Legacy, p. 348
The Enduring Legacy, p. 364-373

The Enduring Legacy

“An’ He Never Said a Mumblin’ Word,” p. 364
Edwin Robinson, “Calvary,” p. 365
Wilfred Owen, “At Calvary Near the Ancre,” p. 366
Ewan MacColl, “The Ballad of the Carpenter,” p.367
D. H. Lawrence, “The Resurrection Is to Life Not to Death,” p. 370
The Last Temptation of Christ, p. 373

Mark 15:1-5
Mark 15:6-15

Wendell Berry, “Song in a Year of Catastrophe,” Collected Poems, p. 118

“Song in a Year of Catastrophe”

“Change or slavery?
Hardship or slavery?”
and voices answering:
“Slavery! Slavery!”
And I was afraid, loving
what I knew would be lost.

Frederick Buechner, “Barabbas,” Peculiar Treasures, p. 14
John Dominic Crossan, The Historical Jesus, p. 390 f.
Vassar Miller, “Pontius Pilate Discusses the Proceedings of the Last Judgment,” Divine Inspiration, p. 439
Fulton John Sheen, “The Cross and the Double Cross,” Lend Me Your Ears, p. 451

“The Cross and the Double Cross”

That is why the hope of the world is not in those politicians who indifferent to divinity, offer Christ and Barabbas to the mob to save their tumbling suffrage. It is not in those economists who would drive Christ from their shores, like the Gerasenes because they feared loss of profit on their swine. It is not in those educators who like other Pilates sneer, “What is truth?”—then crucify it.

Mark 15:16-20
Mark 15:21-32

Hans-Ruedi Weber, “The Hour of Truth,” Experiments with Bible Study, p. 191

Mark 15:33-41

“What the Centurion Saw,” April 10 (Good Friday), El Estero Presbyterian Church, Monterey, CA

Hans-Ruedi Weber, “The Hour of Truth,” Experiments with Bible Study, p. 191

Mark 15:42-47