Eve-Marie Becker
and
Anders Runesson
: Introduction: Studying Mark and Matthew in Comparative Perspective
1. History of Research
Cilliers Breytenbach
: Current Research on the Gospel according to Mark: A Report on Monographs Published from 2000-2009 -
David C. Sim
: Matthew: The Current State of Research
2. Reconstructing the Artifacts: Text-Critical and Linguistic Aspects of the Study of Mark and Matthew
Barbara Aland
: Was heißt Abschreiben? Neue Entwicklungen in der Textkritik und ihre Konsequenzen für die Überlieferungsgeschichte der frühesten christlichen Verkündigung -
Tommy Wasserman
: The Implications of Textual Criticism for Understanding the 'Original Text' -
Stanley E. Porter
: Matthew and Mark: The Contribution of Recent Linguistic Thought
3. Date and Genre
Eve-Marie Becker
: Dating Mark and Matthew as Ancient Literature -
David E. Aune
: Genre Theory and the Genre-Function of Mark and Matthew
4. Socio-Religious Location
Sean Freyne
: Matthew and Mark: The Jewish Contexts -
Morten Hørning Jensen
: Conflicting Calls? Family and Discipleship in Mark & Matthew in the Light of First-Century Galilean Village Life -
Linden Youngquist
: Matthew, Mark and Q -
Wayne Baxter
: Matthew, Mark, and the Shepherd Metaphor: Similarities, Differences, and Implications
5. Conflict and Violence
Warren Carter
: Matthew: Empire, Synagogues, and Horizontal Violence -
Lorenzo Scornaienchi
: The Controversy Dialogues and the Polemic in Mark and Matthew -
John S. Kloppenborg
: The Representation of Violence in Synoptic Parables
6. Building Community Using Text
Oda Wischmeyer
: Forming Identity Through Literature: The Impact of Mark for the Building of Christ-Believing Communities in the Second Half of the First Century C. E. -
Anders Runesson
: Building Matthean Communities: The Politics of Textualization
7. Notes from the Conference: Further Discussion
Adela Yarbro Collins
: Reflections on the Conference at the University of Aarhus, July 25-27, 2008