lords house and davids lord
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BiblicalInterpretation
BiblicalInterpretation 15 (2007) 307-322 www.brill.nl/bi
The Lord's House and David's Lord:
The Psalms and Mark's Perspective onJesus and
the Temple
RikkE. Watts
Regent College
Abstract
Four Davidic Psalms (2, 118, 110, and 22), each cited or alluded to at least twice, in
this order, and at critical junctures in Marks narrative, play a key role in his Gospel.
In contemporary understanding Psalm 2 was associated with the future messianic
purging of Jerusalem and especially the temple (e.g. 4QFlor, Pss Sol 17). Psalm 118,
concluding the Egyptian Hallel, spoke of Israels future deliverance under a Davidic
king with the restored temple as the goal of Israels return from exile. Psalm 110 s
surprisingly elevated royal designation, uniquely expressed in Melchizedekian priest-
king terms, contributed to several portraits of exalted heavenly deliverers, some mes
sianic, who would preside over Israels restoration (e.g. HQMelch, 1 Enoch) while
Psalm 22 s Davidic suffering and vindication described the deliverance of righteous
Zion (e.g. 4QPs). Drawing from the dual perspective of their original contexts and
contemporary interpretations, this paper proposes that Marks careful arrangement of
his psalm citations presents Jesus as both Israels Davidic Messiah (Pss. 2, 118) and
the temples Lord (Ps. 110) who, coming to purge Jerusalem but rejected by the tem
ple authorities, announces the present structures destruction and, through his death
and vindication (Ps. 22), its replacement with a new people-temple centered on him
self.
Keywords
Jesus, Psalms, David, temple, Mark
Introduction
m'ti*
B R I L L
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actions in the temple.1 This is already implicit in Mark's opening com
bined citation, two of which textsIsa. 40:3 and Mai. 3:1are
primarily concerned with Yahweh's return to Jerusalem and in the lat
ter to a rebuilt but currently defiled temple.2 The other concerns
Mark's use of the Psalms. Second only to his interest in Isaiah, Mark
particularly focuses on four psalms (2, 22, 110, 118).3 Ps. 2:7 appears
at the baptism (1:11) and the transfiguration (9:7), Ps. 118 during the
"triumphal" entry (w. 25-26 in 11:9-10) and at the culmination of
the parable of the tenants (w. 22-23 in 12:10-11), Ps. 110:1 in Jesus'
question concerning the Christ and David's son (12:36) and his pro
vocative response to Caiaphas (14:62), and finally elements of Psalm
22 are invoked at the division of Jesus' garments (v. 19 in 15:24), the
cry of dereliction (v. 2 in 15:34), and the mockery of the passing
crowds (v. 8 in 15:29).
Several important features emerge. The references to a given psalm
are grouped togetherthe first three in "pairs"and follow a trajec
tory beginning with Psalm 2 through 118, 110, and finally 22. Each
appears at a key point in Mark's narrative. Psalm 2 is central to the two
divine attestations, both of which set the tone for the sections they
introduce, respectively, Jesus' proclamation of the kingdom's powerful
presence and his "cruciform" journey to Jerusalem. The two citations
of Psalm 118 form an explanatory inclusio around his temple demon
stration. In concluding Jesus' two final confrontations with his
enemies, including perhaps the christological highpoint during his
pre-trial examination (Mark 14:62), Psalm 110 provides core material
for his self-understanding. Psalm 22 then constitutes the major inter
pretative grid for Jesus' death.
This paper proposes that Mark's careful arrangement of all his
psalms, when read from the dual perspective of their original larger
1)E.g. D. Juel, Messiah and Temple (SBLDS, 31; Missoula, MT: Scholars Press,
1973).2)
R. Watts, Isaiahs New Exodus in Mark (WUNT, 2; Tbingen: Mohr Siebeck,
1997).3)
R. Watts, "The Psalms in Mark's Gospel," in Steve Moyise and Maarten J.J. Men
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RE. Watts I BiblicalInterpretation 15 (2007) 307-322 309
contexts and of their contemporary interpretations, not only speak to
Jesus' identity as Israel's Davidic messiah but are particularly con
cerned with his relationship to the temple, and especially his unique
role in its eschatological purification and restoration.
Psalm 2
1. The Baptism
At the pinnacle of the prologue the heavenly voice alludes in part toPs. 2:7 and attests to Jesus' identity as David's messianic son (1:11),
preparing the reader for his announcement of the coming kingdom
(1:14-15) and his mission and message overall. Psalm 2 recalls God's
promise to his Davidic agent through whom he exercises his cosmic
rule. Confronted with the conspiratorial nations (w. 1-3), the royal
psalmist is confident of God's overwhelming support (v. 5). Recalling
Yahweh's word that the nations are his inheritance and his shattering
"rod of iron" rule will extend to the ends of the earth (w. 7-9), heurges the rebels to be wise and submit lest they perish (w. 10-1 lb).
Happy, he concludes, are those who take refiige in Yahweh (v. lie).
Foundational to all this is Zion theology: Yahweh himself declares that
it is he who has installed his "son" on "my holy hill," his cosmic moun
tain upon which he dwells and from which he reigns (w. 6-7). In the
later Targ. Ps. 2:6-7 God's "beloved" son (v. 7; cf. Mark 1:11) is explic
itly "set over my sanctuary" (v. 6).
This well-recognized link between Zion and the Davidic king is alsoreflected in several contemporary Jewish interpretative traditions which
invoke the language of this psalm. The larger problem for them, how
ever, is not that Jerusalem is under threat from external enemies but
that the city and its temple are already defiled from within. The rem
edy is the return of the Davidic king.4
4)The Messiahs task of rebuilding/restoring the temple is not a common theme. See
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310 RE. WattsIBiblicalInterpretation 15(2007) 307-322
Based on an eschatological reading of 2 Samuel 7 (particularly w.
10-14 in lines 1, 7-11) the fragmentary and notoriously difficult
4Q174 is primarily concerned with a renewed temple and the deliver
ance ofGod's people which it links with the appearance ofthe Davidic
Messiah.5
Thus 2 Sam. 7:10's promise to plant Israel in peace (line 1)
leads direcdy to Exod. 15:17-18 (line 3), which celebrates the Exodus'
raison d'etre-, God's planting of his people on his holy mountain, th
establishment of his sanctuary among them, and his eternal kingship
(cf. Jesus' vineyard parable in Mark 12:1-12 with its concluding Ps.
110 citation). This eschatological temple will no longer be defiled by
the presence, among others, of foreigners and proselytes (whereas for
Jesus Isa. 56:7 is central to the temple's role, Mark 11:17). The righ
teous will enjoy the rest Yahweh promised David (line 7 citing 2 Sam.
7:11) as he destroys the conspiratorial sons of Belial (lines 8-9) and
restores David's "branch" (lines 10-11 citing 2 Sam. 7:12-14) and his
fallen hut (lines 12-13 citing Amos 9:11).
Keyhere, in the most extended scriptural citation in the document,
2 Sam. 7:12-14, are the phrases "establishing the throne of his king
dom for ever" and "I will be a father to him and he will be a son to
me" (lines 10-11)verymuch the language of Psalm 2 and not sur
prisingly since the former surely informed the latter.6
That this
connection is in the author's mind is evident in his subsequent appli
cation of Ps. 2:1-2 s promise to the community (lines 18-19). For
4Q174 the ultimate fulfillment of the Exodus promisethe purging
of Jerusalem resulting in a reconstituted holy dwelling of a holy God
among his holy peopleis inseparable from Davidic messianism.
Likewise Psalms ofSolomon 17 is also heavily influenced by Psalm
2/ It begins with a confident declaration again of Yahweh's eternal
5)G.J. Brooke, "Miqdash Adam, Eden and the Qumran Community," in E. Beate,
. Lange, and P. Pilhofer (eds.), Gemeinde ohne Tempel( WUNT, 118; Tbingen:Mohr-Siebeck, 1999), p. 287, argues that in keeping with I Q P 29:9-10 4Q174somission of 2 Sam. 7:13a signifies a repudiation of human involvement. But Exod.15:17s "your hands [i.e., Gods] have established" hardly means this.6) E.g. J.H. Eaton, Kingship and the Psalms (SBT 2/32; London: SCM Press, 1976),p. I l l ; cf. H.-J. Kraus, Theology of the Psalms (trans. K. Crim; Minneapolis: Augs
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RE. Watts I BiblicalInterpretation 15 (2007) 307-322 311
kingship "in judgment" over the nations expressed uniquely through
his Davidic king (w. 1-4; cf. Mark 1:15). Only on this basis, andindeed to legitimate God's righteousness which after all is the only
ground for the psalmist's hope, does he then recite Israel's sins and the
land's subsequent despoliation (w. 5-20). It is because of God's righ
teousness and already celebrated compassion (2:33-36; 4:25; 5:2-5,
14-15; 6:6; 7:8; etc.) that the psalmist requests the Lord to raise up a
royal son of David who will rule the nations.
But as Brad Embry argues, the author has a larger concern:8
the very
point of the Psalms of Solomons messianic hope is the restoration of
the purity of the people, especially as focused on the city, and above all
the temple, (cf. Ezek. 36, esp. w. 22-33, where the return means the
restoration of the Davidic kingship culminating in that of Yahweh's
sanctuary as per 37:24-28 and the subsequent chapters). Thus the
Davidic Messiah's primary task is to exercise the rule of God (w. 1, 46
which theme begins and ends the entire chapter) in order to purify
Jerusalem (w. 22, 27, 30b, 32, 36, 45; cf. 1:8; 2:2-3, 19; 7:2; 8:11-13;
11:7; 18:5).9
He will expose corrupt officials by the strength of his
word (v. 36) and expel defiling sinners whether Jew or Gentile (w. 22-
25, 27-28). To this end, he will be taught by God (v. 31) and, sinless,
empowered by the Holy Spirit, and mighty in deed (w. 36, 37-38,
40b), he will instruct Israel in righteousness (w. 10, 15, 18, 32), faith
fully shepherding them in holiness and freedom from oppression (w.
40-41) while showing compassion to all nations who honor him (v.
34b).
The Markan parallels are obvious. Empowered by the Spirit (1:10;3:29) and mighty in deed (esp. 1:27), Jesus gathers a holy people(1:16-20; 3:13-35; 8:34-38), teaches (esp. e.g., 1:22; 11:18b),
10and
shepherds Israel (6:34), while having compassion on Gentiles who
reverence him (7:24-30). Much ofJesus' ministry concerns the purifi
cation of God's people.11
His debates with the authorities, particularly
8)B. Embry, "The Psalms ofSolomon and the New Testament: Intertextuality and the
Need for a Re-Evaluation," JSP 13 (2002), pp. 99-136.9)
Embry, "Psalms," p. 113.
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from Jerusalem, frequently concern purity (e.g., 2:7, 16; 3:30; 7:2,
14), and he expels "unclean spirits" (1:23, 26, 27; 3:11, 5:2, 8, 13;
7:25; 9:25; cf. 6:7), heals defiling illnesses (1:41; 5:25-34), and teaches
Torah. Jerusalem is also central, where in the climax of his gospel
replete with allusions to Davidic psalmsJesus addresses the temple s
abuses (11:13-18) and exposes, by his strong word, corrupt officials
(11:27-12:40). His death and resurrection constitute the beginning of
a new purified temple (see below).
For 4Q174 and the Psalms ofSolomon God's raising up of Psalm 2 s
Davidic son was fundamentally about the purification of Israel, Jerusalem, and above all the temple.12 So also apparently for Mark.
2. The Transfiguration
Within Mark's symbolic new exodus world, the unmistakable even if
inexact parallels with Exodus 24 and 34 cast the transfiguration as a
new Sinai.13
That the first Psalm 2 allusion occurred in the context of
water and desert and this second on a mountainall iconic features of
Israel's exodus storysuggests they are linked in Mark's mind: if Jesus
is designated God's son at the baptism then at the mountain we hear
what this entails. The presence of Malachi's two witnesses (Mai. 4:4-
5)Elijah representing the new-exodus-awaiting post-exilic genera
tion and Moses the ancestral exodus tradition of the fathers to whom
they must be reconciled14imply that the glorified Jesus is the com
ing Lord whose way they must prepare (Mai. 3:1; cf. Mark 1:1-3).
Thus on this new Sinai, Ps. 2:7 undergirds the summons to accept notTorah perse (Mal. 4:4) but Jesus' words, and in particular the imme
diately preceding passion prediction and the call to cross-bearing
discipleship (8:34-9:1).
pp. 91-128; J.E. Phelan Jr., "The Function of Mark's Miracles," Covenant Quarterly
48 (1990), pp. 3-14; cf. A. Stettler, "Sanctification in the Jesus Tradition," Bib 85
(2004), pp. 153-78.12)
On new temple expectation in general, see e.g., R.J. McKelvey, The New Temple
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RE. Watts I BiblicalInterpretation 15 (2007) 307-322 313
If Psalm 2 at the baptism puts Jesus at the center of Israels hopes
for the temple and Jerusalem, its reappearance at the Shekinah-bathed
and tabernacle-laden Transfiguration introduces two crucial deviations
from contemporary understandings. In Marks new exodus the funda
mental messianic task of purifying Jerusalem, the temple, and God s
people is achieved through suffering, death, and subsequent resurrec
tion. For Psalms of Solomon 17 and 4Q174, although apostate Jews are
part of the problem, the real enemy is the idolatrous nations. In Mark
the foe is entirely from within: the Jerusalem aristocracy of elders, chief
priests, and scribes (8:31).
Psalm 118
1. The "Triumphal Entry"
Mark's first citation of a Psalm and of any OT text in the setting of
Jerusalem occurs at the point of Jesus' approach. Since Jesus' funda
mental task is to purify the city and its temple, it is not surprising thatPsalm 118 is intimately connected with the eschatological new exodus
restoration of the temple.
Although the main speaker is unidentified, if we take verses 10-16
as straightforwardly describing the defeat of Israel's national foes (cf.
Ps. 2:1-3), Psalm 118 is "royal song of thanksgiving for military vic
tory" written as part of a processional liturgy for the Davidic kings (cf.
Targ. Ps. 118:22-28).15 Attended by the congregation and celebrating
God's exodus-like intervention on his behalf (w. 14-17; cf. Exod.15:2, 6),
16the king approaches the temple (w. 19-20; in the Targ. Ps.
118 the gates of the city, v. 19, and those of the sanctuary, v. 20, are
conjoined). Once inside the rejoicing crowds (w. 22-24) call for the
priestly blessing (v. 25) who, responding "from within the house of the
Lord," blesses the one who comes in the name of the Lord (v. 26; cf.
Ps. 2:8). If Psalm 2 affirms the divine promise of Davidic authority
over the threatening nations, Psalm 118 celebrates its realization.
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That Psalm 118 concludes the Hallel (Pss. 113-118), also known as
the "Egyptian Hallet' because of the thorough-going exodus theology
(b. Ber. 56a; cf. Mek. Exod. 13:1-4), suggests that it was already associ
ated with the eschatological new exodus restoration of the temple.17
It
was traditionally connected with Passover and subsequently other
feasts, and in later literature, as was Psalm 2, with messianic salvation
and the restoration of Jerusalem and the temple.18
Although we lack
explicit evidence from the first century, the early new exodus configu
ration ofthe Hattel, the combination of Davidic and temple restoration
themes in some prophetic texts (notably e.g., Ezekiel 37; cf. Jer. 17:25-26; 22:4-5; 33:14-18; Ezek. 34:23-31), even the retention of these
royal psalms in the Psalter long after the demise of the Davidic house,
and Mark's unselfconscious messianic application within his new exo
dus schema, suggest that Psalm 118 was already understood along
these lines.
Although Mark has repeatedly recounted Jesus' purifying authority
over unclean spirits and defiling illnesses, he withholds any public
messianic confession until just prior to his approach to the city therebyreinforcing the link between the two. In short order Bartimaeus con
fesses him "son of David" (10:47) and in a significant alteration to Ps.
118:26b the crowds enthusiastically acclaim: "blessed is the coming
kingdom of our ancestor David" (Mark 11:10a). If contemporary
interpretations of Psalm 2 anticipated the restoration of the temple,
then the use ofPsalm 118 in the context ofthe celebratory introitus of
Jesus and the attendant crowds points to its fulfillment. For Mark,
Jesus is indeed the coming Davidic king, fresh from his decisive victo
ries over the demonic, the one through whom many hoped corrupt
officials would be driven out and the temple purified and restored.
Mark's subsequent almost terse comment in 11:11a that after entering
Jerusalem Jesus went into the templementioned here for the first
timeand looked around at everything not only accords with the
17 )E. Zenger, "The Composition and Theology of the Fifth Book of Psalms, Psalms
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practice of ancient formal entries19
but makes good sense as a precur
sor to his action there.The nature of this action is already hinted at in the textual altera
tion in 11:10 which omits the priests' "we bless you (LXX: have
blessed you) from the house of the Lord." Unlike Psalm 118 and in
keeping with Mark's emphasis on the enemy within, Jesus receives no
such greeting from the temple authoritiesan act of insurrection if
traditional entries are anything to go by (cf. Jer. 7:1 Is in Mark
11:17)20
and Israel's unwelcome king remains outside the city
(11:11b). Not dissimilar to the Essene critique, the temple itself, seatof those who have rejected Jesus' understanding of holiness, has
become the centre ofopposition.
2. The RejectedStone
The second citation of Psalm 118 (w. 22-23 in Mark 12:10-11) takes
up this theme. Consonant with the contemporary implications of
Psalm 2, Jesus has driven out those who defile the temple (Mark
11:15-19; Pss. Sol. 17:22-25, 27-28) and exposed corrupt officials
(Mark 11:27-33; Pss. Sol. 17:36). Continuing his response to their
question as to his authority and presumably while still in the temple,
he tells the story ofthe wicked tenants (Mark12:1-12) which although
employing traditional Jewish metaphors (e.g., Sifre Deut. 312; Tank.
Lev 7.6; Pes. K. 16.9; Gen R. 42.3; ExodR. 30.17; Midr. Prov. 19.21)'21
draws especially on Isa. 5:l-7's juridical parable.22
The focus is again the temple with the fenced vineyard, vat, and
tower representing Zion, its altar, and sanctuary (cf. 4Q500:3-7; t.
Me'il. 1.16 and t. Suk. 3.15 citing Isa. 5:1-2; Targ. Isa. 5:1-7; 1 En.
19 )E.g. D.R. Catchpole, "The Triumphal' Entry," in E. Bammel, and CED. Moule
(eds.), Jesus and the Politicsof His Day (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press,
1984), pp. 319-34; P.B. Duff, "The March of the Divine Warrior and the Advent of
the Greco-Roman King: Marks Account of Jesus' Entry into Jerusalem," JBL 111
(1992), pp. 55-71.20 )
CA. Evans, Mark 8:27-16:20(WBC, 34B; Nashville: Thomas Nelson, 2001), p.
139.
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89:56, 67, 72-73). "Beloved," only here and in the divine attestations
in the baptism and transfiguration, recalls Psalm 2 and its associated
traditions and responds to the hierarchs' question: Jesus' authority over
the temple derives from his being the owners unique beloved son
come to purify it. But whereas the original Isaianic version announced
the sanctuary's destruction (cf. Targ. Isa. 5:5) here the threat is again
solelyfocused on the apostate and murderous "tenant" temple leader
ship (cf. 4Q162 which reads Isa. 5:1-7 eschatologically, with the guilty
party being "the men of mockery in Jerusalem" who "have rejected the
Law of the Lord and cast off the word of Israel's Holy One," cf. Mark
1:24).
The "rejected stone" thus echoes the first passion prediction (cf.
, only here and in 8:31 which prediction as we saw
was confirmed by Psalm 2 in the transfiguration) and Jesus' coming
death ("builders" commonly refers to "teachers" or "religious leaders;"
CD 4:19-20; 8:12, 18; 19:31; b. Ab. 114a; b. Ber. 64a; Cant. R. 1.5;
cf. Acts 4:11; 1 Cor 3:10).23
Nevertheless, in a probable allusion to his
subsequent resurrection (integral to all three passion predictions), Jesus
declares that as God had done for his earlier Davidic son he would
surely do eschatologically for his greater messianic one. As Psalm 2
promised and Psalm 118 celebrated, the vindicated Davidic king
would receive his inheritance (', Ps. 2:8; cf. in
Mark 12:7) even if presently threatened by his surrounding "wicked
tenant" foes (cf. Ps. 118:7, 11-12) likened in 4Q174 to Psalm 2's
rebellious nations.
But what ofthe hopes of a restored temple, not least of Psalm 118?
Although the stone-saying can refer to an amazing reversal and is later
taken to mean David's irresistible accession to the throne (cf. Targ. Ps.
118:22), Sol. 22:3 and 24:3 take Ps. 118:22 to mean the stone that
completes Solomon's temple. Since in Qumran the community con
ceived of itself as a temple (e.g., 1QS 8.5-14; CD 3.19-4:6),24
albeit
only until such time as the eschatological temple appeared under the
23 )J.D.M. Derrett, "'The Stone that the Builders Rejected'," in Studies in the New
Testament. II. (Leiden: Brill, 1978), pp. 60-67.
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auspices of the Davidic Messiah (4Q174), it is not unlikely that in
typical fashion Mark's Jesus draws several distinct hopes into himself.That is, in answer to the question "by what authority?" (11:27-33) he
is at once the Davidic beloved son who will purify Jerusalem and its
templenow so defiled that on prophetic precedent it cannot escape
destruction (e.g., Jer. 7:11 in Mark 11:17; cf. eh. 13)and simultane
ously, assuming the architectural imagery of the immediately following
parable, the chief stone of a new temple consisting of a reconstituted
vineyard Israel gathered around himself (cf. Mark 3:34-35; 10:42-
45).25
Again in the light of 4Q174 and Psalms of Solomon 17 s understand
ing of Psalm 2, the rationale for Mark's chiastic structuring of the two
Psalm 118 citations around Jesus' temple demonstration is clear. The
temple is under judgment (11:12-25) because of the corruption of its
superintendents and their rebellion against God's Davidic agent sent
to restore it (11:1-11 and 11:27-12:12). The temple leadership are
thus aligned with Psalms 2 and 118's rebellious nations (cf. 4Q174
and Pss. Sol. 17). But again as Psalm 2 promised and Psalm 118 cele
brated the son of David's apparently overwhelming foes will be
defeated by Yahweh's intervention, and the rejected messianic stone
will become the chief stone, this time ofa new purified and holy peo
ple-temple (cf. Mark 14:58; 1 Pet. 2:4-7).
Psalm 110
1. David's Son, David's Lord
Having just emerged as Israel's teacher parexcellence (Mark 12:13-34),
Jesus' next appeal to a psalm presses still further the question of his
identity, again cast in Davidic terms and explicitly set in the temple
(12:35). Yet another Davidic psalm, Psalm 110 appears to be a reinter-
pretation of Psalm 2, heightening several of its themes.26
Instead of the
king, Yahweh now speaks, commanding him to rule in the midst of
his foes (w. lb, 2b) as the nations, apparently having ignored the
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warnings ofPs. 2:10-11, suffer grislydefeat (w. 5-6). Whereas Ps. 2:6
simply observes that the king is installed on Yahweh's holy hill here his
relationship to the sanctuary is uniquely expressed in terms of a
Melchizedekian priest-king (v. 4).27
But it is the command, heightening Ps. 2:7 s "son" designation, that
the king sit enthroned at the Lord's right hand (Ps. 110:1; cf. LXX
109:3 s ) which inspired the most reflection, apparently
informing the exaltation of several eschatological figures including a)
the Isaianic servant where "high and lifted up" is elsewhere in Isaiah
only used ofthe Lord (52:13; cf. 6:1; 14:13-14; 33:10), b) Dan. 7:13 s
one like a "son ofman,"28
and later c) Melchizedek in HQMelch [13]
2:9-11,29
and d) 1 Enoch's "the Chosen One"also drawing on both
the Isaianic servant and the Danielle "son of man"who sits on God's
throne (51:3; 55:4; 61:8; 62:2).30
It also led Rabbi Akiba to posit two
thrones in heaven, thereby incurring a sharp rebuke for profaning the
presence (b. Hag. 14a; b. Sank 38b; cf. Hekhalot Rabbati where David
wears a radiate crown and sits on a throne offire beside God's31
).32
Against this backdrop and on the critical though apparently common assumption that David is both the author of the psalm and
speaking "by the Holy Spirit" ofthe Messiah, Mark's Jesus exploits the
tension that emerges when David calls his messianic son "Lord."
often introduces an unsettling fact33
and the implied confounded
silence suggests that his interlocutors felt this tension too. Granted the
Scriptures nowhere formally designate the Messiah "Son of David,"
the point is clear enough. If David calls the Messiah "Lord" then his
27 )The -
1 is difficult; cf. LXX .
28 )Donald M. Hay, Glory at the Right Hand (Nashville: Abingdon, 1973), p. 26;
Martin Hengel, Studies in Early Christology (Edinburgh: T. & T. Clark, 1995), pp.
180-84.29 )
Cf. Paul Rainbow, "Melchizedek as a Messiah at Qumran," BBR 7 (1997), pp.
179-94 (184); Marcus, The Way of the Lord, p. 133.30 )
J. VanderKam, "Righteous One, Messiah, Chosen One, and Son of Man in 1
Enoch 37-71," in J.H. Charlesworth (ed.), The Messiah (Minneapolis: Fortress Press,
1992), pp. 169-91.31 )
Hengel, Studies, p. 195.
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full status, as the subsequent influence of Psalm 110 suggests, cannot
be exhausted by the scribes' mere "son of David,"34
which returns us
again to the question of Jesus' authority (11:27-33).
The manner of Jesus' arrival in the city and his action in the temple
(both more messianic than prophetic at least in terms of contempo
rary interpretations of Psalm 2), combined with his claim to be the
owner's "beloved" son and his citation ofPs. 118:22-23 constitute an
implicit messianic declaration. His question here would have little
point if he had not and such a reading helps explain the high priest's
later forthright question (14:61). Consequently, if the scribes esteemed
David, how much more David's messianic son whom David himself
calls Lord?
Although not explicit in Psalms of Solomon 17, the majority of other
Jewish eschatologies also envisaged some priestly component.35
It is
intriguing that although Jesus has been engaged throughout in the
priestly activities of teaching (often on purity) and declaring individu
als clean,36 it is only after his Davidic entry and his actions and
masterfully confounding teaching in the temple precincts that heappeals to Psalm 110the one text that explicitly speaks ofa Davidic
priest-king. The scribes need also to understand that the Messiah is
also Israel's supreme authority on purity in Israel's teaching and wor
ship. The combination would not be unusual, and for some perhaps
expected (cf. e.g., the Hasmoneans, 1 Mace 14:41; T. Mos. 6:1; Jub.
32:1; T.Levi 18).
But "Lord" almost certainly means more. As Psalm 110 apparently
informed later exaltation trajectories, so too Jesus is identified withIsaiah's finally exalted servant
37and Daniel's son of man. But Mark's
opening sentence announces Yahweh's personal return to his temple
(cf. the Malachi overtones of the transfiguration), and in forgiving sins
as a prelude to healing and subduing the sea he does what only Yah-
34) The occasional claim that Jesus is denying that the Messiah is the son of David
seems highly unlikely.
35) See Crispin Fletcher-Louis, "Jesus as the High Priestly Messiah: Part 1," JSJHA(2006), pp. 155-75.36)
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320 RE. WattsIBiblical Interpretation 15(2007) 307-322
weh himself can do.38
More than the Melchizedekian Davidic
priest-king who is responsible for the Lord's house, Jesus looks remark
ably like Davids Lord and thus the veryLord ofthe house.
Finally, if only Jesus' identity was at stake, Ps. 110:1a would have
sufficed. But his inclusion of the second strophethe crushing of all
enemies (Ps. 110:1b; cf. w. 5-6)makes the threat inherent in reject
ing him that much more explicit. Ps. 2:10-1 l's warning is about to
become a reality.
2. Seated on the RightHand ofPower
In what is more accurately Jesus' pre-trial hearing, the temple is again
centerstage in the one specific accusation that he has blasphemed the
sanctuary ()though Mark has hitherto spoken only of the
by declaring it thereby implying that the temple
was idolatrous to the core (cf. LXX Lev. 26:1, 30; Isa. 2:18; 10:11;
Dan. 5:4, 23; 6:28).39
Similarly, the high priest's question, not surpris
ingly given the expectations noted above and Jesus' recent words and
actions, straightforwardly assumes a link between temple and the Messiah.
In explicating this, his first public affirmation of messianic identity
(Mark 14:62), Jesus' second reference to Ps. 110:1 reaffirms his divine
ly mandated status as the Davidic heir who shares in God's rule
buttressed by the chiastically arranged Dan. 7:13 citation itself de
pendent on the psalm (cf. the same combination in the laterMidr. Ps.
2.9). Jesus' confronting "you will see" focuses on the consequence of
this enthronement. Those who oppose him will, like the idolatrousnations, come under God's judgment (Ps. 110:5-6; cf. 4Q174's use of
Psalm 2), the circumlocutory "the power" (cf. 1 En. 62:7; Sifre Num.
112) resonating with the psalm's account ofGod's "powerful" scepter
wielded in the day of his "power" against the enemies of his Melchize
dekian king (cf. LXX Ps. 109:2-3). In claiming the highest possible
status Jesus implicitly characterizes his opponents as Yahweh's enemies.
38 )On Marks identification of Jesus with Yahweh, B. Blackburn, TheiosAner and the
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RE Watts I BiblicalInterpretation 15 (2007) 307-322 321
Psalm 22
The Abandoned Messiah?
Although Mark's Passion is thoroughly colored by motifs from the
"Righteous Sufferer Psalms" in general, Psalm 22 is clearly the domi
nant scriptural influence.40
Yet another Davidic psalm, it is unique in
its depths of humiliating suffering and seeming divine abandonment,
sudden and overwhelming deliverance, and far-reaching praise whereby
Yahweh's universal dominion is declared not only to the ends of the
earth but also to generations unborn.Psalm 22 influenced several Jewish traditions (e.g., Wis. 2:12-20;
5:1-7; 2 Bar15:7-8; 48:49-50), some in anticipation of eschatological
deliverance (e.g., 1QH 5:31). In 4QPsf
[88] VII, 6-8; IX, 12; X, 7-14
Ps. 22:14-17 describes the endtime sufferings from which faithful
Zion is delivered as the land and city are purified of Belial and the
wicked scattered (cf. Pss. Sol. 17; Midr. Ps. 22 in which verse 32 speaks
of the rebuilding of the temple).41
The later Targ. Ps. 22, interpreting
David's enemies as Gentiles (v. 13), envisages their universal submission (w. 28-29) perhaps along with Israel's return (v. 32). Nevertheless,
there is no evidence that Psalm 22 was understood messianically, prob
ably if Peter (Mark 8:31-33) the crowd (15:29-32) and the later Targ.
Isa. 53:3-11 are any guide, because God's abandoning the Messiah was
inconceivable. But after three passion predictions Mark's Jesus faces no
such obstacle. While not minimizing his suffering, that only verse 1 is
cited hardly warrants skirting the fact that each passion prediction,
Psalms 2, 118, and 110, and Psalm 22 itself fully expect final deliver
ance. The bystanders understanding his cry as calling for Elijah's
intervention along with their "wait and see" response (Mark 15:35)
suggests that they also hear in Ps. 22:1 the expectation of rescue.
The temple is again prominent and connected with Jesus' identity.
The passersby, recalling the earlier accusation (14:58), "blaspheme"
him who having blasphemed the temple is now the one who faces
destruction (15:29-30) and the immediately following chief priests'
and scribes' Messiah jibe (15:31-32) echoes the conjunction of the two
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322 RE. WattsIBiblical Interpretation 15 (2007) 307-322
in the preceding hearing. Likewise, the concluding scene has the tem
ple's curtain torn (15:38) as the centurion declares Jesus to be
(15:39).
If Ps. 22:1 is implicitly an appeal for deliverance and vindication,
reading Jesus' final great cry as despairing seems incongruous (v. 37;
cf. v. 34). In Mark occurs elsewhere only as unclean spir
its encounter Jesus (1:26; 5:7). I suggest, given the foregoing and its
immediate impact on the temple, that it too expresses Jesus' power42
(cf. John's one occurrence when Jesus raises Lazarus, 11:43) as in its
most common NT use, in Revelation, where it expresses God's sover
eign authority over his creation (e.g., 1:10; 5:12; 7:2, 10; 8:13, etc.),
echoing the Sinai theophany (Deut. 4:11; 5:22; cf. 1 Sam. 7:10) and
God's sudden moment of delivering judgment on the ungodly who
gather against Zion (Isa. 29:5-6; cf. Ezek. 3:12; Sib. Or. 3.669; 5.61-
63).
We come then full circle. In Mark's beginning, the voice through
the rent heavens at Jesus' baptism declared him to be God's messi
anic son sent to purge and restore the temple. Here at the climacticmoment on the cross, Jesus again reveals his divine authority. His
"great cry" rends the hostile temple's curtain thereby both demon
strating and effecting the reality that it, not he, is the one "forsaken"
(Liu Proph. 12:11-12; cf. T.Levi 10:3; b. Git. 56b).43
But Ps. 22:27,
30-31 also declares that all the families of the nations would wor
ship before him. So also then, as the transfigured understanding of
Psalm 2 comes to full expression, in fulfillment of Psalm 22 s hope
and Isa. 56:7 s vision of a house of prayer for all nations (Mark11:17), a Roman centurion, no less, becomes the Gentile firstfruits
ofa newly reconstituted people- as he confesses
before its messianic suffering chief stone that Jesus and not Caesar
is "son of G/god."44
42 ) R.H. Gundry, Mark: A Commentaryon HisApobgyfor the Cross (Grand Rapids:Eerdmans, 1993), pp. 948-50.
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^ s
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