Lars Kierspel, «'Dematerializing' Religion: Reading John 2–4 as a Chiasm», Vol. 89 (2008) 526-554
After offering a critical analysis of Moloney’s synthetical parallelism for John 2–4, this article argues for a chiastic structure of the Cana-to-Cana cycle which directs the reader from the visible signs (2,1-12+4,43-54) and physical properties of religion (2,13-22+4,1-42) to Jesus as the metaphysical agent of
God’s salvation and judgment (3,1-21+3,22-36). The new 'dematerialized' faith thereby subverts expectations of material restoration and reorients the believing eye not towards a sanctuary but towards the Son.
“Dematerializing†Religion: Reading John 2–4 as a Chiasm
The structural arrangement of John 2–4 has been variously
understood from a simple geographical movement to more complex
parallelisms of different kinds. While it might be safe to say that the
majority of current Johannine scholars ascribes to the literary unity
of these three chapters, no proposal for their particular structure has
received the honor of holding the consensus. This lack of agreement
goes hand in hand with a gap in thorough discussions of existing
proposals. The prologue, the farewell discourse, the signs and
various literary devices and symbols have preoccupied students of
the Gospel at length. But a monograph about the literary coherence
and structure of the Gospel’s opening chapters after the prologue has
yet to appear. This article probes into the area first by a critical
investigation of Moloney’s sequential reading of the text, followed
by a suggested chiastic structure that incorporates many strengths of
common, scattered, and possibly new observations alike (1).
I. Synthetic Parallelism: Moloney’s proposal for John 2–4
1. Moloney’s Structure of John 2–4
In his essay from 1978 as well as in his commentary on the
Gospel of John twenty years later Francis Moloney argued for a
Cana-to-Cana cycle in John 2–4. He further identifies the uniting
thread of the texts as “radical openness to the word of Jesus as a
criterion of true faith†(2) as the author leads “the reader through a
(1) English quotations from the Gospel of John have been taken from the New
American Standard Version unless otherwise noted.
(2) F.J. MOLONEY, “From Cana to Cana (John 2,1-4,54)â€, Studia Biblica 2 (ed.
E.A. LIVINGSTONE) (JSNTSupp. 2; Sheffield 1979) 192; Women First Among the
Faithful (Notre Dame, IN 1986) 97-100; The Gospel of John (Sacra Pagina 4;
Collegeville, MN 1998) 148, 156-157 (sum); also 68-69 (Mary and complete
faith), 79-80 (Jews and unbelief); 97 (Nicodemus and partial belief, also pp.
91.93), 107 (John the Baptist and authentic belief), 118-119 (Samaritan woman
and unbelief), 127 (Samaritan woman and partial belief), 148 (Samaritans and
authentic belief).