uc pseudonym wrote:1) Old news, really, though not without merit. I personally don't feel this conclusion makes a great deal of difference to the central theme of Mark's Gospel.
2) Hm, this theory I have not heard. Is he the first one advancing it? I might have to look into the book out of curiosity, though again, I don't think it is critical to the overall message (I actually had to look up how Mark starts).
3) Also interesting. Is he making an ideological point with that or does he just think it happened?
1) Not entirely sure what you meant by 'conclusion'--the conclusion of 16:8 as it stands? The inference drawn by N. Clayton Croy (the book's author) about the ending being incomplete?
Part of Croy's argument on this point (which has certainly been shared by most Markan commentators, pro or con, up through the first part of the 20th century), is that the 16:8 ending as it stands totally violates thematic expectations established by Mark in the work up to that point. This agreement is even largely shared by more modern commentators working from a presupposition to accept the text as it is, since they frequently then go on to derive some kind of useful (or at least interesting) meaning from the radical inversion of expectation. Personally, I never thought that much about it--and I pride myself on being fairly astute as a literary critic. {wry g} Having thought about it, though, I have to agree, the ending as it stands (whether intentionally done that way by John Mark, whom I readily take to be the author, though for reasons which I think are unique in scholarship so far) does radically reverse virtually every expectation he has managed to produce up to this point. If he did it on purpose, then we have evidence of a modern style almost as striking as finding that he had invented breakdancing as a genre--meaning it would be foreign to any but the most esoterically minded of his readers.
(Though I do have to admit, I think the Markan author _is_ trying to prep the reader to accept something under the radar, and against their current expectations, earlier in the book--something I myself suspect he tried to complete his account by _clarifying_, and was authoritatively nicked by someone for doing so. But that's another theory. {g})
2) I also hadn't heard of GosMark's beginning being truncated or otherwise mutilated. However, it turns out to be fairly common as a theory in the field, all across the theological spectrum. I don't think the evidence for it is _quite_ as good as for (1), but it's strong enough to be interesting and provocative, and I have to admit I don't have a better theory myself.
3) Croy's book is very free from making ideological points at all. (The closest he comes is when discussing how the current ending of GosMark ideologically reverses themes set up by John Mark; but that's a stylistic argument, not something for application by the reader.) I can see his conclusion being a serious problem for some kinds of inerrancy doctrines, though, especially ones involving as a corollary the protection of the texts by equally authoritative subsequent record-keeping.
(That kind of inerrancy theory, or doctrine, can survive the established facts of drifting material, by appealing to the notion that everything in the original autographs _is_ in fact available for restoration from preserved sources, even if the individual sources themselves cannot be entirely relied upon as being essentially duplicates of the original autographic works. But that particular type of doctrine would not survive either the intentional suppressioin or the accidental loss, apparently forever, of a piece of one of the original authoritative accounts. Other types of inerrancy theory, of course, would be able to deal with this as well. But this starts to lead into the question of just how far we should call something 'inerrant' when we're qualifying its accuracy. {s} Which I would rather not get into here.)
Croy does think it just happened, by accident as it were. Myself, I think there is internal evidence to support a thrust by Mark toward a conclusion that would be disconcerting to his readers (but which he felt honorbound to gently prep them for and correct them on); and that the account breaks off _precisely_ at one point where he would have clarified his intent on this. Croy discounts more-or-less out of hand the notion of intentional suppression of the end of the work, with barely any analysis; but then, he doesn't seem to have picked up on this aspect of GosMark's work, either. (Besides, super-early authoritative suppression admittedly doesn't square well, on the face of it, with the first part of GosMark also being perhaps missing.)
I don't have the _First Things_ review handy that initially tipped me off to the book, but I recall it being ambivalent on more-or-less the same spread as my own conclusion about Croy's work: (1) is very well done; (2) is pretty good; (3) seems to be hastier and overamped in its apparent strength (though not without some merit for consideration).