James the Brother of Jesus and the Dead Sea Scrolls II (60 page)

BOOK: James the Brother of Jesus and the Dead Sea Scrolls II
8.21Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

Later Luke 24:10 groups Mary Magdalene and Joanna with another ‘Mary’ – this time, ‘
Mary (the mother) of James
’, all pointedly denoted in 24:1 once again as ‘
some
’. For Mark 16:1, the parallel trio is ‘
Mary Magdalene and Mary the mother of James and Salome
’ –
Salome
here clearly taking the place of
Joanna
– and it is now these ‘
who bring perfumes
’ or ‘
aromatics that they might come and anoint him
’. Once again we have the ‘
coming
’ allusion coupled with the ‘
anointing
’ one, but now we have two more ‘
Mary
’s
coming to Jesus to

anoint him
’ (living or dead, as in this case – it hardly matters).

While in Luke 24:10 it is this trio who report ‘
these things
’ – meaning,
the empty tomb
,
the two Angels

in shiny white clothes
’, and
what they said –

to the Apostles
’; in Mark 16:5, as in Matthew 28:2, only one Angel ‘
clothed in a white robe
’ is seen in the empty tomb. Of course Mark’s version of such post-resurrection appearances is considered defective by most scholars. Still for Mark 16:9, Mary Magdalene alone, as we just saw, is – as in John 20:14–17, for whom there are (as in Luke 24:4) ‘
two Angels sitting in the tomb in white clothing
’ (20:12, the complexity of these inter-relationships becoming legion) – the recipient of Jesus’ first post-resurrection appearance. This she duly reports, as in John 20:18,
to the Disciples
, whereas in Matthew it is the two
Mary
s who report the ‘
Angel of the Lord
’, ‘
with a gaze like lightning and his clothing white as snow
’, and the fact of
the empty tomb
to
the Disciples
(28:2–3). In Luke 24:4 and 10, it is ‘
two men
’ – later identified as
Angels
– and now it is
the three women
, including ‘
Joanna and Mary (the mother) of James
’, making the report, this time
to the Apostles
.

Of course for John, too, it is ‘
the Disciple whom Jesus loved
’ who ‘
outruns Peter
’ for the honor and is
the

first

to enter the empty tomb
, where he sees the linen cloths and the napkin for his head rolled up to one side – Mary still ‘
standing
’ outside weeping –
but no Angels
(20:2–11). It was only after this and after
the Disciples had gone home
that Mary ‘
stooped down into the tomb
’ and gets her vision of the ‘
two Angels in white
’ and following this, as usual,
Jesus

standing

behind her
(
n.b
.
, ‘
the Standing One
’ ideology again). So in the end in John we have ‘
three

people
entering the tomb, but not the ‘
three
’ reported in the Synoptics. For Matthew 28:7–8, it is only ‘
Mary Magdalene and the other Mary
’ (whoever she may be) who experience this and they are instructed to report this at one point ‘
to the Disciples
’ – and, at another (28:10), ‘
to my brothers
’ – as Mary Ma
g
dalene is in John 20:17 – not, as in Luke 24:10, ‘
to the Apostles
’.

It is perhaps because of the nature of such a post-mortem encounter with Jesus that Mark 16:9 includes at this point Luke 8:2’s earlier characterization of
Mary Magdalene
as having
been possessed by

seven demons
’. Instead, however, of ‘
going out of
’ her – as Luke and Mark 7:19’s own picture of Jesus’ words concerning what ‘
went out into the toilet bowl
’ – now the ‘
se
v
en demons
’ are characterized as being

cast out of her
’ (
ekbeblekai
) by Jesus. The usage is yet another variation of his own ‘
ekballe
’ earlier in his version of the Greek Syrophoenician woman’s request to Jesus ‘
to
cast
the demon
out
of her daughter
’ (Mark 7:26) and the ‘
ekballetai
’ in Matthew 15:17’s version of the food ‘
cast out
down the toilet drain
’ excursus preceding this.

Mary Magdalene, Jairus’ Daughter, the Woman with ‘
the Fountain of Blood
’ and Jesus’ ‘
Feet
’ Again

Interestingly enough, the parallel at this point in Matthew 28:9 which, while ignoring the allusion in Mark to ‘
casting out

vis-a-vis
Jesus’ treatment of Mary Magdalene’s ‘
seven demons
’, once more picks up another important notation from this circle of related usages – that of
Jesus
’ ‘
feet’.
We shall continue our consideration of these sometimes repetitious allusions, because the mutual reverberations resound back and forth in so many different combinations and permutations that something edif
y
ing usually emerges from their analysis, even if only because of the slightly differing contexts with or perspectives from which they start.

As Matthew 28:9 puts this – now with only two women: ‘
Mary Magdalene and the other Mary
’ and like Mark 16:5, which probably derived from it, only one Angel ‘
whose face was as lightning and his clothing white as snow
’: ‘
Lo and behold Jesus met them … and they
came
to him
,
took hold of his
feet
and worshipped him’
!

So now we have two ‘
Mary
’s ‘
coming to

Jesus
and
falling at

his feet
’ – not one as in John and Luke’s
Mary
,
Martha
, and
Lazarus
scenarios – one called ‘
Mary Magdalene
’ and the other ‘
Mary the mother of James and Salome
’ (Mark 16:1). Elsewhere – as in Mark 15:47 – this ‘
Mary
’ is called ‘
Mary the mother of Joses
’ and, in Mark 15:40 earlier, ‘
Mary the mother of James the less and Joses
’. We have already treated to some extent in
James the Brother of Jesus
these multiple confusions and overlaps b
e
tween ‘
mothers
’, ‘
brothers
’, and ‘
cousins
’ of Jesus (including even the one presumably between ‘
Joses
’ and Jesus himself) as the doctrine of the supernatural Christ gained momentum in the early Second Century and beyond.
3

This allusion to ‘
falling at his feet
’ is also reprised in Mark 7:25’s picture of the
Greek Syrophoenician
woman (whom we have already connected to some extent to the picture of Mary Magdalene – to say nothing of Queen Helen of Adiabene) ‘
fal
l
ing at his feet
’ above. It is also reprised in John 11:32’s picture of Lazarus’ sister ‘
Mary
’ – after Jesus ‘
came
’ to Bethany the s
e
cond time – and how after ‘
coming
’ to him,
she

fell at his feet
’ (‘
come
’ repeated about seven times in eight lines – not to me
n
tion a number of other times throughout the episode).

But this same ‘
Mary
’ had earlier in John 11:2 (repeated more dramatically in 12:3) had already
taken

the  litra of precious spikenard ointment and anointed Jesus

feet

with it
, ‘
the house being filled with the odor of the perfume
’. The same allusion to ‘
feet
’ was replicated in Luke 10:38–42, but this time it was ‘
Mary sitting at Jesus

feet

while Martha complained about ha
v
ing to do

so much serving
’. Again in this last, there is the possible play in
Jesus

response (
‘(
she
)
has
chosen the good part
’)
to Martha’s complaint over Mary’s having

left her alone to serve
’ in Luke 10:42 on the critique of ‘
the Lying Spouter
’ and ‘
the Seekers after Smooth Things
’ – ‘
the Pharisees
’ and ‘
the Pauline Christians
’, as we have defined them – at the end of the First Column of the Cairo Damascus Document.
4

These last were described in CD 1.19 in terms of ‘
choosing the fair neck
’ (evidently meaning ‘
the good part
’ or ‘
the easiest way
’) and connected to ‘
seeking Smooth Things
’ and ‘
watching for breaks
’ in the passage from Isaiah 30:10–13 being drawn on there. The reason the Damascus Document gives for applying this allusion (‘
choosing the fair neck
’) to such persons is b
e
cause ‘
they chose illusions
’, ‘
condemning the Righteous and justifying the Wicked
’ – the opposite, it should be appreciated, of the proper ‘
Justification
’ activity by
the Sons of Zadok
later in the same Document of ‘
justifying the Righteous and condem
n
ing the Wicked
’, ‘
transgressing the Covenant and breaking the Law
’.
5

Nor is this to mention that the issue of these ‘
feet
’ is so much a part of these Talmudic traditions, not only regarding the various daughters of these proverbial ‘
Rich Men
’, but also ‘
the Poor
’, who ‘
gather up the woollen garments that were laid down
’ so the ‘
Rich
’ Nakdimon’s ‘
feet

would not have to touch the ground
. Again there is the motif of ‘
touching
’ here, already variously underscored above in episodes involving
the

touching

of both Jesus
’ and
James

person
,
fringes
, or
clothes
. More
o
ver this same ‘
touching
’ theme, along with a number of other motifs, will again
intrude into the incidents surrounding another character – this time, in the Synoptics – named ‘
Jairus
’ and designated as ‘
a Ruler
’ (compare with how John 3:1 designates ‘
Nicodemus
’) or ‘
Ruler of the Synagogue
’, and
yet another individual whose daughter will need to be cured
(Matthew 9:18–26/Mark 5:21–43/Luke 8:40–56).

Here, too, in both Mark 5:22 and Luke 8:41, ‘
Jairus
’ is described as ‘
falling at his (Jesus

) feet
’.
6
This is interrupted by the ‘
coming
’ of another in this endless series of unnamed women – this one now described as ‘
with a flow of blood for twelve years
’ (Mark 5:25/Luke 8:43/Matthew 9:20). Here, again, there is another use of the miraculous number ‘
twelve
’, which will then be the age of Jairus’ daughter in Mark 5:42 and Luke 8:42 and, of course, Jesus’ age in Luke 2:42 when ‘
sitting among the teachers in the Temple
’, and the number of ‘
talents
’ and ‘
water cisterns
’ in the Nakdimon story, to say nothing of the ‘
twelve handbaskets full of broken pieces
’, ‘
gathered up
’ (like ‘
the Poor

do Nakdimon

s

woollen clothes
’) in the aftermath of Jesus’ miraculous
famine relief
/
signs
demonstrations in all Gospels.

BOOK: James the Brother of Jesus and the Dead Sea Scrolls II
8.21Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

Other books

Hideaway Hill by Elle A. Rose
Trouble in the Pipeline by Franklin W. Dixon
Dismember by Pyle, Daniel
Destined for an Early Grave by Jeaniene Frost
Ellie's Wolf by Maddy Barone
A Wife by Christmas by Callie Hutton