Journal for the Study of the New Testament 48.3 March 2026: Special Issue: Jesus, House, Family
Table of Contents with links to open access articles for the Special issue of the Journal for the Study of the New Testament on “Jesus, House, Family”
And as he sat at table in his house, many tax collectors and sinners were sitting with Jesus and his disciples; for there were many who followed him. – Mark 2: 15 RSV
- Introduction to ‘Jesus, House, Family: From Mark 2.15 to Constructions of Discipleship’–Elizabeth Struthers Malbon
- Mark 2.15 in Even Broader Context: A Reflection–Elizabeth Struthers Malbon
- A Retrospective on ‘House’ in the Gospel of Mark: A Reflection–David M. May
- Whose House? Revisiting the Referent of αὐτοῦ in Mark 2.15–Tobias Ålöw [Open Access]
- Revisiting Jesus’s House–J. Andrew Doole [Open Access]
- Home in Time for Dinner: Family and the Call to Discipleship within Mark’s Gospel–Sally Douglas
- The House, the Table, and the Message: Spatial Dynamics in the Synoptic Gospels–Timo Glaser [Open Access]
General Articles
- Ephesians 3.15 as an Allusion to Genesis Abrahamic Covenant Texts in the Context of Household Ecclesiology in Ephesians–Kai Akagi
- Caesar as Title and Name: The Dual Function of καῖσαρ in Mark 12.14–17–Alfredo Delgado Gómez
- Populating the Middle: The Social Location of the Author of Luke-Acts–Timothy J. Murray
- The Range of Rejoicing in Luke-Acts: Exploring the Precision and Power of Luke’s Positive Emotion Terminology–Bart B. Bruehler
- Re-Examining the Statistical Methodology and Onomastic Claims of Gregor and Blais’ Argument from Name Popularity–Jason Wilson Ph.D. & Luuk van de Weghe Ph.D.
Main image: R.A. Stewart Macalister [1870-1950], Bible Side-Lights from the Mound of Gezer. A Record of Excavation and Discovery in Palestine. London: Hodder & Stoughton Publishers, 1906. Figure 37: Foundations of a House, Showing Column Bases. This image is in the public domain.
