Q: After the women encountered the angels, did the women immediately tell the disciples? Matthew and Luke say they did, but Mark says that they told no one because they were afraid.
A: Thats not precisely what the accounts say. Matthew 28:8 says that the women departed quickly from the tomb and ran to report it to the disciples. That does not require that they actually told the disciples right away. Luke 24:9 says that the women returned from the tomb and reported all these things to the eleven and to the rest, but this, too, does not require that they actually told the disciples immediately. They were wasting no time searching for the disciples, but it is possible that they could not locate them all easily. It is also possible that after a short period of hurried effort to find specific disciples, the women who left the tomb ahead of Mary Magdalene decided to wait until a certain time in the day when the disciples had agreed to meet together -- say, 9:00 in the morning, the hour of prayer. But my main point here is that granting that (a) the women left the tomb quickly to report to the disciples and (b) the women did, later that day, report to the disciples, is not a contradiction with (c) the women did not tell the disciples immediately about their experience at the tomb.
About Mark 16:8: two verses later, 16:10-11 relates that Mary Magdalene went and reported her experience at the tomb to those who had been with Jesus. So it seems clear that, unless one avoids considering 16:10-11 (and the SAB does not do this when discussing other alleged contradictions), the womens silence was intended to be seen as temporary. Even if one were to reject 16:9-20, the reader would be left with 16:8 which -- despite the insistence of highly imaginative commentators that this is an exquisite, irony-laced, sophisticated ending -- ends awkwardly, practically in mid-sentence. This makes it difficult to maintain that Mark did not intend for readers to view the womens silence as something temporary (for one thing, this would raise the question, how did Peter/Mark know about it?). While the women were on the way to report to the disciples, they were afraid to tell anyone, because they were afraid; however they told the disciples when they reached them.
Yours in Christ,
Waterrock
A: Thats not precisely what the accounts say. Matthew 28:8 says that the women departed quickly from the tomb and ran to report it to the disciples. That does not require that they actually told the disciples right away. Luke 24:9 says that the women returned from the tomb and reported all these things to the eleven and to the rest, but this, too, does not require that they actually told the disciples immediately. They were wasting no time searching for the disciples, but it is possible that they could not locate them all easily. It is also possible that after a short period of hurried effort to find specific disciples, the women who left the tomb ahead of Mary Magdalene decided to wait until a certain time in the day when the disciples had agreed to meet together -- say, 9:00 in the morning, the hour of prayer. But my main point here is that granting that (a) the women left the tomb quickly to report to the disciples and (b) the women did, later that day, report to the disciples, is not a contradiction with (c) the women did not tell the disciples immediately about their experience at the tomb.
About Mark 16:8: two verses later, 16:10-11 relates that Mary Magdalene went and reported her experience at the tomb to those who had been with Jesus. So it seems clear that, unless one avoids considering 16:10-11 (and the SAB does not do this when discussing other alleged contradictions), the womens silence was intended to be seen as temporary. Even if one were to reject 16:9-20, the reader would be left with 16:8 which -- despite the insistence of highly imaginative commentators that this is an exquisite, irony-laced, sophisticated ending -- ends awkwardly, practically in mid-sentence. This makes it difficult to maintain that Mark did not intend for readers to view the womens silence as something temporary (for one thing, this would raise the question, how did Peter/Mark know about it?). While the women were on the way to report to the disciples, they were afraid to tell anyone, because they were afraid; however they told the disciples when they reached them.
Yours in Christ,
Waterrock
