Defilement Penetrating the Body: A New Understanding of Contamination in Mark 7.15

Full title
Defilement Penetrating the Body: A New Understanding of Contamination in Mark 7.15
Updated By
Research notes

reader checked|02/06/2014 SE

Reference type
Author(s)
Furstenberg, Yair
Year
2008
Journal / Book Title || Series Title
New Testament Studies
Volume
54
Issue / Series Volume
2
Pages
176-200
Work type
Alternative title
NTS
Label
21/07/2008
Abstract

Mark 7.15, which contrasts two modes of defilement, appears in the gospel as a response to the Pharisaic custom of washing hands before eating. In this article, it is argued that this custom embodies an innovative approach to ritual impurity. Hand washing, which originated, so it is argued, in the Greco-Roman practice, was promoted by the Pharisees along with other purity laws, but stands in contrast to the biblical priestly purity system. In this logion, Jesus rejects the Pharisees' new conception of ritual purity, which was designed to guard the self from impurity. This interpretation offers both a coherent narrative and a plausible understanding of the custom within its historical-social context.