
Published online:
23 May 2024
Published in print:
07 November 2023
Online ISBN:
9781531507800
Print ISBN:
9781531505813
Contents
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Crossings in the Gospel of Mark Crossings in the Gospel of Mark
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The Exorcism of the Gerasene Demoniac (Mark 5:1–20) The Exorcism of the Gerasene Demoniac (Mark 5:1–20)
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The Restoration of Jairus’s Daughter (Mark 5:21–24, 35–43) and the Healing of the Hemorrhaging Woman (Mark 5:25–34) The Restoration of Jairus’s Daughter (Mark 5:21–24, 35–43) and the Healing of the Hemorrhaging Woman (Mark 5:25–34)
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The Healing of the Daughter of the Syrophoenician Woman (Mark 7:24–37) The Healing of the Daughter of the Syrophoenician Woman (Mark 7:24–37)
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Theological Foundations: The Word Crosses into Culture Theological Foundations: The Word Crosses into Culture
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Crossings in the Nican Mopohua Crossings in the Nican Mopohua
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Restoration and Life-Giving Agency (Nican Mopohua, §12) Restoration and Life-Giving Agency (Nican Mopohua, §12)
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The Healing of Juan Bernardino, Juan Diego’s Uncle (Nican Mopohua, §§60–78) The Healing of Juan Bernardino, Juan Diego’s Uncle (Nican Mopohua, §§60–78)
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The Life-Giving Construction of Inclusive Communal Relations (Nican Mopohua, §§111–12). The Life-Giving Construction of Inclusive Communal Relations (Nican Mopohua, §§111–12).
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Ongoing Hope in the Word That Crosses Ongoing Hope in the Word That Crosses
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Chapter
1 The Word That Crosses: Life-Giving Encounters with the Markan Jesus and Guadalupe
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Pages
1–24
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Published:November 2023
Cite
Díaz, Miguel H., 'The Word That Crosses: Life-Giving Encounters with the Markan Jesus and Guadalupe', in Miguel H. Díaz (ed.), The Word Became Culture (New York, NY , 2023; online edn, Fordham Scholarship Online, 23 May 2024), https://doi.org/10.5422/fordham/9781531505813.003.0001, accessed 8 May 2025.
Abstract
Chapter 1 explores fundamental theological arguments related to cultural mediations of the word of God as experienced and interpreted from Latinx perspectives. After focusing on crossing encounters in the Gospel of Mark that are life-giving for Jesus’s interlocutors, this chapter explores the Nican Mopohua and Nuestra Señora de Guadalupe as another example of the word becoming culture. These initial reflections open the door to further consideration of how this word continues to assume a cultural face resonant with the particularities of peoples, especially those who suffer marginalization.
Keywords:
crosses, Guadalupe, God, Juan Diego, Jesus Christ, Nican Mopohua, Rahner, revelation, Word
Subject
Biblical Studies
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