Mark 50-60 AD

The Gospel of Mark - Munger Place Church
Mark’s epistle to Jews.

This shortest of the four New Testament gospels might have been the first to have been written. It often tells of Jesus’ ministry in more detail than either Matthew or Luke (for example, the miracle stories at Mk 5:1–20 or Mk 9:14–29). Mark stresses Jesus’ message about the kingdom of God now breaking into human life as good news (Mk 1:14–15) and Jesus himself as the gospel of God (Mk 1:18:3510:29). Jesus is the Son whom God has sent to rescue the Jewish nation by serving and by sacrificing his life (Mk 10:45).

The opening verse about good news in Mark (Mk 1:1) serves as a title for the entire book. This presentation of who Jesus really is (Mk 1:1–13) is rounded out with a brief reference to the temptation of Jesus and how Satan’s attack fails. Jesus as Son of God will be victorious. Mark summarizes what Jesus proclaims as gospel: ‘fulfillment, the nearness of the kingdom, and the need for repentance and for faith’. After the call of the first four disciples, all fishermen (Mk 1:16–20), we see Jesus engaged in teaching (Mk 1:212227), preaching (Mk 1:3839), healing (Mk 1:29–313440–45), and exorcising demons (Mk 1:22–2734–39). The content of Jesus’ teaching is chiefly in parables (Mk 4) about the kingdom. His cures, especially on the sabbath (Mk 3:1–5); his claim to forgive sins (Mk 2:3–12); all stir up opposition that will lead to Jesus’ death (Mk 3:6).Jesus is portrayed as immensely popular with the people in Galilee during his ministry (Mk 2:23:74:1). Yet opposition mounts. Scribes charge that Jesus is possessed by Beelzebub (Mk 3:22), And all too often his own disciples do not understand Jesus (Mk 4:13406:528:17–21). The disciples do not grasp the mystery being revealed (Mk 9:3210:3238). One of them will betray him, Judas (Mk 14:10–1143–45); one will deny him, Peter (Mk 14:27315466–72); all eleven men will desert him (Mk 14:2750).

The framework of Mark’s Gospel is partly geographical: Galilee (Mk 1:14–9:49), through the area “across the Jordan” (Mk 10:1) and through Jericho (Mk 10:46–52), to Jerusalem (Mk 11:1–16:8). Only rarely does Jesus go into Gentile territory (Mk 5:1–207:24–37).  

Mark shares with Paul, as well as with other parts of the New Testament, an emphasis on election (Mk 13:2022) and upon the gospel as Christ and his cross (cf. 1 Cor 1:23). Yet in Mark the person of Jesus is also depicted with an unaffected naturalness. He reacts to events with authentic human emotion: pity (Mk 1:44), anger (Mk 3:5), triumph (Mk 4:40), sympathy (Mk 5:366:34), surprise (Mk 6:9), admiration (Mk 7:2910:21), sadness (Mk 14:33–34), and indignation (Mk 14:48–49).

Although the book is anonymous, it has traditionally been assigned to John Mark, in whose mother’s house (at Jerusalem) Jewish Christians assembled (Acts 12:12). This Mark (Marcus) was a cousin of Barnabas (Col 4:10) and accompanied Barnabas and Paul on a missionary journey (Acts 12:2513:2-5315:36–39). He appears in Pauline letters (2 Tm 4:11Phlm 24) and with Peter (1 Pt 5:13).

Traditionally, the gospel is said to have been written before A.D. 70, between A.D. 50-60

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