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THE GOSPEL
ACCORDING TO
MARK
Commentary by DAVID BROWN
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CHAPTER 10
@Mr
10:1-12. FINAL DEPARTURE FROM GALILEE--DIVORCE. ( = @Mt
19:1-12 Lu 9:51).
See on Mt 19:1-12.
@Mr
10:13-19. LITTLE CHILDREN BROUGHT TO CHRIST. ( = @Mt
19:13-15 Lu 18:15-17).
See on Lu 18:15-17.
@Mr
10:17-31. THE RICH YOUNG RULER. ( = @Mt
19:16-30 Lu 18:18-30).
See on Lu 18:18-30.
@Mr
10:32-45. THIRD EXPLICIT AND STILL FULLER ANNOUNCEMENT
OF HIS APPROACHING SUFFERINGS, DEATH, AND
RESURRECTION--THE AMBITIOUS REQUEST OF JAMES AND JOHN, AND
THE REPLY. ( = @Mt
20:17-28 Lu 18:31-34).
Third Announcement of His approaching Sufferings,
Death, and Resurrection (@Mr
10:32-34).
32. And they were in the way--on the road.
going up to Jerusalem--in
Perea, and probably somewhere between Ephraim and Jericho,
on the farther side of the Jordan, and to the northeast of
Jerusalem.
and Jesus went before
them--as GROTIUS says, in the style of an intrepid
Leader.
and they were amazed--or
"struck with astonishment" at His courage in
advancing to certain death.
and as they followed,
they were afraid--for their own safety. These artless,
lifelike touches--not only from an eye-witness, but one
whom the noble carriage of the Master struck with wonder
and awe--are peculiar to Mark, and give the second Gospel
a charm all its own; making us feel as if we ourselves
were in the midst of the scenes it describes. Well might
the poet exclaim:
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"The Saviour,
what a noble flame
Was kindled in His breast,
When, hasting to Jerusalem,
He march'd before the
rest!"
COWPER |
And he took again the
twelve--referring to His previous announcements on
this sad subject.
and began to tell them
what things should happen unto him--"were going
to befall Him." The word expresses something already
begun but not brought to a head, rather than something
wholly future.
33. Saying, Behold, we go up to Jerusalem--for the
last time, and--"all things that are written by the
prophets concerning the Son of man shall be
accomplished" (@Lu
18:31).
the Son of man shall be
delivered unto the chief priests and unto the scribes; and
they shall condemn him to death, and shall deliver him to
the Gentiles--This is the first express statement that
the Gentiles would combine with the Jews in His death; the
two grand divisions of the human race for whom He died
thus taking part in crucifying the Lord of Glory, as
WEBSTER and WILKINSON observe.
34. And they shall mock him, and shall scourge him, and
shall spit upon him, and shall kill him: and the third day
he shall rise again--Singularly explicit as this
announcement was, Luke (@Lu
18:34) says "they understood none of these
things; and this saying was hid from them, neither knew
they the things which were spoken." The meaning of
the words they could be at no loss to understand, but
their import in relation to His Messianic kingdom they
could not penetrate; the whole prediction being right in
the teeth of their preconceived notions. That they should
have clung so tenaciously to the popular notion of an
"unsuffering" Messiah, may surprise us;
but it gives inexpressible weight to their after-testimony
to a suffering and dying Saviour.
Ambitious Request of James and John--The Reply (@Mr
10:35-45).
35. And James and John, the sons of Zebedee, come unto
him, saying--Matthew (@Mt
20:20) says their "mother came to Him with her
sons, worshipping Him and desiring," &c. (Compare
@Mt
27:56, with @Mr
15:40). Salome was her name (@Mr
16:1). We cannot be sure with which of the parties the
movement originated; but as our Lord, even in Matthew's
account, addresses Himself to James and John, taking no
account of the mother, it is likely the mother was merely
set on by them. The thought was doubtless suggested to her
sons by the recent promise to the Twelve of "thrones
to sit on, when the Son of man should sit on the throne of
His glory" (@Mt
19:28); but after the reproof so lately given them (@Mr
9:33, &c.). they get their mother to speak for
them.
Master, we would that
thou shouldest do for us whatsoever we shall desire--thus
cautiously approaching the subject.
36. And he said unto them, What would ye that I should
do for you?--Though well aware what was in their mind
and their mother's, our Lord will have the unseemly
petition uttered before all.
37. Grant unto us that we may sit, one on thy right
hand, and the other on thy left hand, in thy glory--that
is,Assign to us the two places of highest honor in the
coming kingdom. The semblance of a plea for so
presumptuous a request might possibly have been drawn from
the fact that one of the two usually leaned on the breast
of Jesus, or sat next Him at meals, while the other was
one of the favored three.
38. But Jesus said unto them, Ye know not what ye ask--How
gentle the reply to such a request, preferred at such a
time, after the sad announcement just made!
can ye drink of the cup
that I drink of?--To "drink of a cup" is in
Scripture a figure for getting one's fill either of good
(@Ps
16:5 23:5 116:13 Jer 16:7) or of ill (@Ps
75:8 Joh 18:11 Re 14:10). Here it is the cup of
suffering.
and be baptized with the
baptism that I am baptized with--(Compare for the
language, @Ps
42:7). The object of this question seems to have been
to try how far those two men were capable of the
dignity to which they aspired and this on the principle
that he who is able to suffer most for His sake will be
the nearest to Him in His kingdom.
39. And they said unto him, We can--Here we see
them owning their mother's petition for them as their own;
and doubtless they were perfectly sincere in professing
their willingness to follow their Master to any suffering
He might have to endure. As for James, he was the first of
the apostles who was honored, and showed himself able to
be baptized with his Master's baptism of blood (@Ac
12:1,2); while John, after going through all
the persecutions to which the infant Church was exposed
from the Jews, and sharing in the struggles and sufferings
occasioned by the first triumphs of the Gospel among the
Gentiles, lived to be the victim, after all the rest had
got to glory, of a bitter persecution in the evening of
his days, for the word of God and for the testimony of
Jesus Christ. Yes, they were dear believers and blessed
men, in spite of this unworthy ambition, and their Lord
knew it; and perhaps the foresight of what they would have
to pass through, and the courageous testimony He would yet
receive from them, was the cause of that gentleness which
we cannot but wonder at in His reproof.
And Jesus said unto
them, Ye shall indeed drink of the cup that I drink of;
and with the baptism that I am baptized withal shall ye be
baptized--No doubt this prediction, when their
sufferings at length came upon them, cheered them with the
assurance, not that they would sit on His right and left
hand--for of that thought they would be heartily
ashamed--but that "if they suffered with Him, they
should be also glorified together."
40. But to sit on my right hand and on my left hand in
not mine to give; but it shall be given to them for whom
it is prepared--"of My Father" (@Mt
20:23). The supplement which our translators have
inserted is approved by some good interpreters, and the
proper sense of the word rendered "but" is
certainly in favor of it. But besides that it makes the
statement too elliptical--leaving too many words to be
supplied--it seems to make our Lord repudiate the right to
assign to each of His people his place in the kingdom of
glory; a thing which He nowhere else does, but rather the
contrary. It is true that He says their place is
"prepared for them by His Father." But that is
true of their admission to heaven at all; and yet from His
great white throne Jesus will Himself adjudicate the
kingdom, and authoritatively invite into it those on His
right hand, calling them the "blessed of His
Father"; so little inconsistency is there between the
eternal choice of them by His Father, and that public
adjudication of them, not only to heaven in general, but
each to his own position in it, which all Scripture
assigns to Christ. The true rendering, then, of this
clause, we take it, is this: "But to sit on My right
hand and on My left hand is not Mine to give, save to them
for whom it is prepared." When therefore He says,
"It is not Mine to give," the meaning is,
"I cannot give it as a favor to whomsoever I please,
or on a principle of favoritism; it belongs
exclusively to those for whom it is prepared,"
&c. And if this be His meaning, it will be seen how
far our Lord is from disclaiming the right to assign to
each his proper place in His Kingdom; that on the
contrary, He expressly asserts it, merely announcing that
the principle of distribution is quite different from what
these petitioners supposed. Our Lord, it will be observed,
does not deny the petition of James and John, or
say they shall not occupy the place in His kingdom
which they now improperly sought:--for aught we know, that
may be their true place. All we are sure of is, that
their asking it was displeasing to Him "to whom all
judgment is committed," and so was not fitted to gain
their object, but just the reverse. (See what is taught in
@Lu
14:8-11). One at least of these brethren, as ALFORD
strikingly remarks, saw on the right and on the left hand
of their Lord, as He hung upon the tree, the crucified
thieves; and bitter indeed must have been the remembrance
of this ambitious prayer at that moment.
41. And when the ten heard it, they began to be much
displeased with James and John--or "were moved
with indignation," as the same word is rendered in @Mt
20:24. The expression "began to be,"
which is of frequent occurrence in the Gospels, means that
more passed than is expressed, and that we have but the
result. And can we blame the ten for the indignation which
they felt? Yet there was probably a spice of the old
spirit of rivalry in it, which in spite of our Lord's
recent lengthened, diversified, and most solemn warnings
against it, had not ceased to stir in their breasts.
42. But Jesus called them to him, and saith unto them,
Ye know that they which are accounted to rule--are
recognized or acknowledged as rulers.
over the Gentiles
exercise lordship over them: and their great ones exercise
authority upon them--as superiors exercising an
acknowledged authority over inferiors.
43. But so shall it not be among you: but whosoever
will be great among you, shall be your minister--a
subordinate servant.
44. And whosoever of you will be the chiefest--or
"first."
shall be--that is,
"let him be, or "shall be he who is prepared to
be."
servant of all--one
in the lowest condition of service.
45. For even the Son of man came not to be ministered
unto, but to minister, and to give his life a ransom for
many--"instead of many," that is, "In
the kingdom about to be set up, this principle shall have
no place. All My servants shall there be equal; and the
only greatness known to it shall be the greatness of
humility and devotedness to the service of others. He that
goes down the deepest in these services of self-denying
humility shall rise the highest and hold the chiefest
place in that kingdom; even as the Son of man, whose
abasement and self-sacrifice for others, transcending all,
gives Him of right a place above all!" As "the
Word in the beginning with God," He was
ministered unto; and as the risen Redeemer in our nature
He now is ministered unto, "angels and
authorities and powers being made subject unto Him"
(@1Pe
3:22); but not for this came He hither. The Served of
all came to be the Servant of all; and His last act was
the grandest Service ever beheld by the universe of
God--"HE GAVE HIS LIFE A RANSOM FOR MANY!",
&c. Many" is here to be taken, not in contrast
with few or with all, but in opposition to one--the
one Son of man for the many sinners.
@Mr
10:46-52. BLIND BARTIMAEUS HEALED. ( = @Mt
20:29-34 Lu 18:35-43).
See on Lu 18:35-43.
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