Tag Archives: Mark 16

October 20, 2023 Bible Study — The Spirit Is Willing, But the Flesh Is Weak

Today, I am reading and commenting on  Mark 14-16.

Shortly after telling Jesus that even if all others abandoned Him, he, Peter, would stand with Him, Peter fell asleep while Jesus was praying in deep distress. After admonishing Peter, and the other disciples, for falling asleep, Jesus said something which should resonate with all of us.  “The spirit is willing, but the flesh is weak.”  I think that this statement by Jesus about His disciples with Him there in the Garden of Gethsemane applies to us as well and shows how well He understands us.  In many ways, my spirit wishes to serve God, but my flesh is weak and I fail.

I want to highlight that the only followers of Jesus whom the writer records as being present at His crucifixion were women.  I find that significant because it paints a negative picture of His male disciples.  In addition, this account indicates that it was women to whom news of Christ’s resurrection was  first reported.  And why is either of those things important?  Because they make the idea that Jesus’ disciples made up the story of His resurrection implausible.  If the early Christians had made up the story, those who led the early Church would have been cast in a more positive light.  They would have been the ones who stood by Jesus as He went to the cross.  They would have been the ones to discover the empty tomb.

I use the daily Bible reading schedule from “The Bible.net” for my daily Bible reading.

October 20, 2022 Bible Study — While The Other Disciples Did Not Betray Jesus, Were They Really Any Better?

Today, I am reading and commenting on  Mark 14-16.

I want to look at the juxtaposition here of Jesus telling the Twelve that one of them will betray Him, then later telling them that all of them will fall away.  I believe that these two are so close together in the narrative to remind us that while we may not actively betray Jesus as Judas did, at some point we will fail to stand up for Him, just as the other eleven did.  Which brings me to Peter, who emphatically stated that he would stand by Jesus, even if no one else did.  We often focus on Peter’s later denial, but his mistake was in thinking that he was more able to stand up for Jesus, that he could stand when all else fell away.  God gave Peter three chances to live up to his claim to be more faithful than everyone else, to stand with Jesus when no one else would.  God did this in order to make Peter understand that he was not stronger, more faithful than everyone else.  However, when the messenger spoke to the women at the Tomb on Sunday morning, the messenger told the women to tell Jesus’ disciples and Peter that Jesus would meet them in Galilee.  So, God reminded Peter that even though he was not better than the others, he was still one of them, and God still loved him.

I use the daily Bible reading schedule from “The Bible.net” for my daily Bible reading.

October 20, 2021 Bible Study — The Poor You Will Always Have With You

Today, I am reading and commenting on  Mark 14-16.

Every time I read the story about the woman who anointed Jesus with oil I always feel like there is more to it than I am seeing.  Perhaps someone reading this blog will be able to provide me such an insight.  So, I get one clear message from this story: we should not feel that our every thought, action, and expenditure must be to help the poor.  Further, sometimes we should do things to show our love to those around us.  Jesus made a point that wherever the Gospel is preached the story of what this woman did will be preached.  Which suggests that the message of this story is critical.  I was going to stop with that, but I had one more thought on this story.  When Jesus told those saying that she should have sold the perfume and given the money to the poor, He quoted from Deuteronomy 15:11.  The context of that verse tells us that we should give to the poor generously, that we should not be tightfisted towards them.  This woman was acting in a generous open-handed manner, while those rebuking her had a grudging heart.

I want to write a bit about chapter 16.  After much thought over the years I have become convinced the Mark ended his Gospel at verse 16:8.  I believe that the rest of chapter 16 is an accurate account, but was added to the Gospel from other sources.  I really think that Mark intended to end his Gospel with the cliff hanger of the women fleeing from the tomb, bewildered and afraid.  He wanted us to come away with the feeling that early that Sunday morning those who followed Jesus were bewildered and afraid, not just the women.  He wanted us to see the contrast between how they acted later and how they felt that morning.

I use the daily Bible reading schedule from “The Bible.net” for my daily Bible reading.

October 20, 2020 Bible Study Pampering Each Other

I am using the daily Bible reading schedule from “The Bible.net” for my daily Bible reading.

Today, I am reading and commenting on Mark 14-16

Today’s passage starts out with Mark’s account of the woman who anointed Jesus.  Each Gospel contains such an account, but there are differences between them.  Perhaps there were two such events, or perhaps people remembered the details differently (and if there were two such events, people may have mixed up details between the two events).  However, the fact that all four Gospels contain such a story with a similar emphasis in what Jesus says about it tells is that this story contains an important message.  It seems to me that Jesus tells us here that there is a place for spending our resources on luxuries.  While we should make strong efforts to help those in greater need than ourselves, it is not only not wrong to spend some of our resources on making others feel better, we should do so from time to time.

There other part of this passage that I want to write about today is Peter’s denial of Jesus.  When Jesus predicted that all of His disciples would desert Him, Peter vehemently denied that he would ever do such a thing.  Peter insisted that he would stand by Jesus’ side even if everyone else abandoned Him.  Despite his best intentions, when push came to shove, Peter was unable to keep his promise.  One important lesson here is that we can never know how we will hold up under pressure until we experience that pressure.  However, even though Peter failed to hold up this time, we also know that later he did stand up for Jesus in the face of persecution.  I want to note also that Peter did not deny Jesus just once or twice.  He had three opportunities to stand by Jesus’ side in Jesus’ darkest hour and could not do so.  We will also sometimes fail Christ when the chips are down, but we need to repent of our failure and accept God’s forgiveness.  Our failures to stand up for God do not mean that we are forever damned.

October 20, 2019 Bible Study — The Desire To Pray and the Failure To Do So

I am using the daily Bible reading schedule from “The Bible.net” for my daily Bible reading.

Today, I am reading and commenting on Mark 14-16

I am sure I have written this in the past.  When I was younger, Jesus’ instructions to the two disciples He sent ahead to prepare for the Passover meal were related to me as an example of Jesus’ ability to see the future.  It was suggested that He prophetically knew the man would be where he would be and would be willing to allow them to use his room for their Passover meal.  However, as I read it now it seems clear to me that Jesus had made previous arrangements to eat the Passover meal in this man’s room with His disciples.  On the other hand, Jesus’ prediction that one of the Twelve would betray Him is indeed a prophetic pronouncement.  Every time I read that I wonder what went through Judas’ mind at that moment.  

When I read the various accounts of Jesus praying in the Garden of Gethsemane I have two separate reactions.  First is the desire and wish to pray as Jesus did when difficulty and struggling confront me: “Please take this suffering from me, but Your will be done, not mine.”  I want to ask God to take the suffering away from me, but I want to submit to that suffering if it is necessary to accomplish His will.  Second is an empathy with the disciples inability to stay awake.  All too often when I attempt to pray in the ways I think that I should I find myself falling asleep.  As with so many other passages on prayer, this passage reminds me that my prayer life comes nowhere close to where it should.

October 20, 2018 Bible Study — Mark’s Account Ends Abruptly

I am using the daily Bible reading schedule from “The Bible.net” for my daily Bible reading.

Today, I am reading and commenting on Mark 14-16.

    My first thought when reading this was that Judas went to the priests and agreed to betray Jesus immediately after the woman anointed Jesus with perfume. All of the Gospels agree that he did this shortly after that event, which suggests that it provided the impetus for him to do so. My next thought was that Judas must have been disconcerted by Jesus declaring that one of the Twelve would betray Him so shortly after he had agreed to do so. What must have gone through Judas’ mind at that moment?

“How does he know?”

“He can’t possibly know.”

“He must be guessing, but why would he say that?”

From there I wondered what the rest of the disciples thought when Jesus instituted Communion, when He said that the bread was His body and the wine His blood. Especially in light of the fact that shortly before that He had said that one of them would betray Him. When we read it we cannot help but think about it in the context of His crucifixion, but the disciples had not yet processed the idea that Jesus would die, let alone die on the Cross.

    Bible scholars tell us that the most reliable early copies of the Gospel of Mark end with Chapter 16 verse 8: “The women fled from the tomb, trembling and bewildered, and they said nothing to anyone because they were too frightened.” To us, that seems like an abrupt ending, but it is important to remember that Mark wrote this Gospel while Peter was still alive. He would have perceived that his audience knew the rest of the story. I think that Mark’s true ending was verses 6 and 7:

but the angel said, “Don’t be alarmed. You are looking for Jesus of Nazareth, who was crucified. He isn’t here! He is risen from the dead! Look, this is where they laid his body. Now go and tell his disciples, including Peter, that Jesus is going ahead of you to Galilee. You will see him there, just as he told you before he died.”

Jesus was risen and they would not find Him among the dead. Perhaps Mark added verse 8 to explain why it took some time for people to start proclaiming that Jesus had risen from the dead. Or, perhaps, he just felt like he needed some conclusion other than the quote to end his account.
    I want to make one final point. The verses which come after verse 8 have been part of the Gospel of Mark that I believe God intends for us to read them. I have faith that God is in control of history and that if they did not represent His words they would have faded from history, just as other writings which were viewed as Scripture for a time have.

October 20, 2017 Bible Study — I Am No Better Than Anyone Else

I am using the daily Bible reading schedule from “The Bible.net” for my daily Bible reading.

Today, I am reading and commenting on Mark 14-16.

    We will not know in this lifetime why Judas Iscariot betrayed Jesus. However, the more I read Mark’s account here the more I think that Jesus’ response to the woman who anointed Him with perfume, and to the disciple who questioned her doing so, played a major role in his decision to do so. The Gospel of John tells us that Judas was the disciple who questioned the woman anointing Jesus with the perfume. Here in Mark, immediately after Jesus rebukes the disciple for belittling the woman’s act, Judas goes out and cuts a deal with the chief priests to betray Jesus. When I wrote the previous I realized the true importance of the story about the woman anointing Jesus. When we look at this we tend to interpret Jesus’ words as an affirmation of the woman’s action, which they were, but that is not the important lesson here. More important than Jesus’ affirmation of the woman’s action was His rebuke of the disciples’ reaction to her act. The woman anointed Jesus in an extravagant act of worship. The disciples scolded her for expressing her joy at being in Jesus’ presence. The lesson here is that we should never do anything which might diminish the joy of being in God’s presence.

    The other story in this passage which I want to write about today is Peter’s denial and Jesus’ prediction of that denial. When Jesus tells the disciples that they will all desert Him in the face of His persecution, Peter quickly asserts that he will not. He insists that he will stand with Jesus even if it means his own death. There is an element of hubris in what Peter is saying. To a degree, he is saying “I know these others will desert you, but I am different from them. I am better than they and will stand with you.” It is that hubris which leads to his denials. The other aspect is that Peter does not yet understand what is going to happen despite what Jesus has been telling them for weeks, if not months. I think that Peter believed, at least in part, that the betrayal and arrest would be the signal for Jesus to throw of his “disguise” and reveal Himself as the conquering Messiah. And Peter would be there, the loyal follower ready to support the now victorious King. To me that explains why Peter followed Jesus to the high priest’s house. He expected that it would be there that Jesus would reveal Himself and His power. Peter was there to stand up when Jesus declared Himself to say, “Here I am Lord. Let’s take the battle to them.” It was devastating for Peter when he realized that he was not who he thought he was. He was no better than anybody else and neither am I.