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THE GOSPEL
ACCORDING TO
MARK
Commentary by DAVID BROWN
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CHAPTER 13
@Mr
13:1-37. CHRIST'S PROPHECY OF THE DESTRUCTION OF
JERUSALEM, AND WARNINGS SUGGESTED BY IT TO PREPARE FOR HIS
SECOND COMING. ( = @Mt
24:1-51 Lu 21:5-36).
Jesus had uttered all His mind against the Jewish
ecclesiastics, exposing their character with withering
plainness, and denouncing, in language of awful severity,
the judgments of God against them for that unfaithfulness
to their trust which was bringing ruin upon the nation. He
had closed this His last public discourse (@Mt
23:1-39) by a passionate lamentation over Jerusalem,
and a solemn farewell to the temple. "And," says
Matthew (@Mt
24:1), "Jesus went out and departed from the
temple"--never more to re-enter its precincts, or
open His mouth in public teaching. With this act ended
His public ministry. As He withdrew, says OLSHAUSEN,
the gracious presence of God left the sanctuary; and the
temple, with all its service, and the whole theocratic
constitution, was given over to destruction. What
immediately followed is, as usual. most minutely and
graphically described by our Evangelist.
1. And as he went out of the temple, one of his
disciples saith unto him--The other Evangelists are
less definite. "As some spake," says Luke (@Lu
21:5); "His disciples came to Him," says
Matthew (@Mt
24:2). Doubtless it was the speech of one, the
mouthpiece, likely, of others.
Master--Teacher.
see what manner of
stones and what buildings are here--wondering
probably, how so massive a pile could be overthrown, as
seemed implied in our Lord's last words regarding it.
JOSEPHUS, who gives a minute account of the wonderful
structure, speaks of stones forty cubits long [Wars of
the Jews, 5.5.1]. and says the pillars supporting the
porches were twenty-five cubits high, all of one stone,
and that of the whitest marble [Wars of the Jews,
5.5.2]. Six days' battering at the walls, during the
siege, made no impression upon them [Wars of the Jews,
6.4.1]. Some of the under-building, yet remaining, and
other works, are probably as old as the first temple.
2. And Jesus answering said unto him, Seest thou these
great buildings?--"Ye call My attention to these
things? I have seen them. Ye point to their massive and
durable appearance: now listen to their fate."
there shall not be left--"left
here" (@Mt
24:2).
one stone upon another,
that shall not be thrown down--Titus ordered the whole
city and temple to be demolished [JOSEPHUS, Wars of the
Jews, 7.1.1]; Eleazar wished they had all died before
seeing that holy city destroyed by enemies' hands, and
before the temple was so profanely dug up [Wars
of the Jews, 7.8.7].
3. And as he sat upon the Mount of Olives, over against
the temple--On their way from Jerusalem to Bethany
they would cross Mount Olivet; on its summit He seats
Himself, over against the temple, having the city all
spread out under His eye. How graphically is this set
before us by our Evangelist!
Peter and James and John
and Andrew asked him privately--The other Evangelists
tell us merely that "the disciples" did so. But
Mark not only says that it was four of them, but names
them; and they were the first quarternion of the
Twelve.
4. Tell us, when shall these things be? and what shall
be the sign when all these things shall be fulfilled?--"and
what shall be the sign of Thy coming, and of the end of
the world?" They no doubt looked upon the date of all
these things as one and the same, and their notions of the
things themselves were as confused as of the times of
them. Our Lord takes His own way of meeting their
questions.
Prophecies of the Destruction of Jerusalem (@Mr
13:5-31).
5. And Jesus answering them began to say, Take heed
lest any man deceive you:
6. For many shall come in my name, saying, I am Christ--(see
@Mt
24:5)--"and the time draweth nigh" (@Lu
21:8); that is, the time of the kingdom in its full
splendor.
and shall deceive many--"Go
ye not therefore after them" (@Lu
21:8). The reference here seems not to be to pretended
Messiahs, deceiving those who rejected the claims of
Jesus, of whom indeed there were plenty--for our Lord is
addressing His own genuine disciples--but to persons
pretending to be Jesus Himself, returned in glory to take
possession of His kingdom. This gives peculiar force to
the words, "Go ye not therefore after them."
7. And when ye shall hear of wars and rumours of wars,
be ye not troubled--(See on Mr 13:13, and compare @Isa
8:11-14).
for such things must
needs be; but the end shall not be yet--In Luke (@Lu
21:9), "the end is not by and by," or
"immediately." Worse must come before all is
over.
8. These are the beginnings of sorrows--"of
travail-pangs," to which heavy calamities are
compared. (See @Jer
4:31, &c.). The annals of TACITUS tell us how the
Roman world was convulsed, before the destruction of
Jerusalem, by rival claimants of the imperial purple.
9. But take heed to yourselves: for--"before
all these things" (@Lu
21:12); that is, before these public calamities come.
they shall deliver you
up to councils; and in the synagogues ye shall be beaten--These
refer to ecclesiastical proceedings against them.
and ye shall be brought
before rulers and kings--before civil tribunals
next.
for my sake, for a
testimony against them--rather "unto
them"--to give you an opportunity of bearing
testimony to Me before them. In the Acts of the Apostles
we have the best commentary on this announcement. (Compare
@Mt
10:17,18).
10. And the gospel must first be published among all
nations--"for a witness, and then shall the end
come" (@Mt
24:14). God never sends judgment without previous
warning; and there can be no doubt that the Jews, already
dispersed over most known countries, had nearly all heard
the Gospel "as a witness," before the end of the
Jewish state. The same principle was repeated and will
repeat itself to "the end."
11. But when they shall lead you, and deliver you up,
take no thought beforehand--"Be not anxious
beforehand."
what ye shall speak,
neither do ye premeditate--"Be not filled with
apprehension, in the prospect of such public appearances
for Me, lest ye should bring discredit upon My name, nor
think it necessary to prepare beforehand what ye are to
say."
but whatsoever shall be
given you in that hour, that speak ye: for it is not ye
that speak, but the Holy Ghost--(See on Mt 10:19,20.)
13. And ye shall be hated of all men for my name's sake--Matthew
(@Mt
24:12) adds this important intimation: "And
because iniquity shall abound, the love of
many"--"of the many," or "of the
most," that is, of the generality of professed
disciples--"shall wax cold." Sad illustrations
of the effect of abounding iniquity in cooling the love
even of faithful disciples we have in the Epistle of
James, written about the period here referred to, and
too frequently ever since.
but he that shall endure
unto the end, the same shall be saved--See on Mt
10:21,22; and compare @Heb
10:38,39, which is a manifest allusion to these words
of Christ; also @Re
2:10. Luke (@Lu
21:18) adds these reassuring words: "But there
shall not an hair of your heads perish." Our Lord had
just said (@Lu
21:16) that they should be put to death;
showing that this precious promise is far above immunity
from mere bodily harm, and furnishing a key to the right
interpretation of the ninety-first Psalm and such like.
14. But when ye shall see--"Jerusalem
compassed by armies"--by encamped armies; in other
words, when ye shall see it besieged, and
the abomination of
desolation, spoken of by Daniel the prophet, standing
where it ought not--that is, as explained in Matthew
(@Mt
24:15), "standing in the holy place."
(let him that readeth
understand)--readeth that prophecy. That "the
abomination of desolation" here alluded to was
intended to point to the Roman ensigns, as the symbols of
an idolatrous, and so unclean pagan power, may be gathered
by comparing what Luke says in the corresponding verse (@Lu
21:20); and commentators are agreed on it. It is
worthy of notice, as confirming this interpretation, that
in I Maccabees 1:54--which, though aprocryphal Scripture,
is authentic history--the expression of Daniel (@Da
11:31 12:11) is applied to the idolatrous profanation
of the Jewish altar by Antiochus Epiphanes.
then let them that be in
Judea flee to the mountains--The ecclesiastical
historian, EUSEBIUS, early in the fourth century, tells us
that the Christians fled to Pella, at the northern
extremity of Perea, being "prophetically
directed"--perhaps by some prophetic intimation more
explicit than this, which would be their chart--and that
thus they escaped the predicted calamities by which the
nation was overwhelmed.
15. And let him that is on the housetop not get down
into the house, neither enter therein, to take any thing
out of his house--that is, let him take the outside
flight of steps from the roof to the ground; a graphic way
of denoting the extreme urgency of the case, and the
danger of being tempted, by the desire to save his
property, to delay till escape should become impossible.
16. And let him that is in the field not turn back
again for to take up his garment.
17. But woe to them--or, "alas for them."
that are with child, and
to them that give suck in those days--in consequence
of the aggravated suffering which those conditions would
involve.
18. And pray ye that your flight be not in the winter--making
escape perilous, or tempting you to delay your flight.
Matthew (@Mt
24:20) adds, "neither on the sabbath day,"
when, from fear of a breach of its sacred rest, they might
be induced to remain.
19. For in those days shall be affliction, such as was
not from the beginning of the creation which God created
unto this time, neither shall be--Such language is not
unusual in the Old Testament with reference to tremendous
calamities. But it is matter of literal fact that there
was crowded into the period of the Jewish war an amount
and complication of suffering perhaps unparalleled; as the
narrative of JOSEPHUS, examined closely and arranged under
different heads, would show.
20. And except that the Lord had shortened those days,
no flesh--that is, no human life.
should be saved: but for
the elect's sake, whom he hath chosen, he hath shortened
the days--But for this merciful
"shortening," brought about by a remarkable
concurrence of causes, the whole nation would have
perished, in which there yet remained a remnant to be
afterwards gathered out. This portion of the prophecy
closes, in Luke, with the following vivid and important
glance at the subsequent fortunes of the chosen people:
"And they shall fall by the sword, and shall be led
away captive into all nations: and Jerusalem shall be
trodden down of the Gentiles, until the times of the
Gentiles be fulfilled" (@Lu
21:24). The language as well as the idea of this
remarkable statement is taken from @Da
8:10,13. What, then, is its import here? It implies,
first, that a time is coming when Jerusalem shall cease to
be "trodden down of the Gentiles"; which it was
then by pagan, and since and till now is by Mohammedan
unbelievers: and next, it implies that the period when
this treading down of Jerusalem by the Gentiles is to
cease will be when "the times of the Gentiles are
fulfilled" or "completed." But what does
this mean? We may gather the meaning of it from @Ro
11:1-36 in which the divine purposes and procedure
towards the chosen people from first to last are treated
in detail. In @Ro
11:25 these words of our Lord are thus reproduced:
"For I would not, brethren, that ye should be
ignorant of this mystery, lest ye should be wise in your
own conceits; that blindness in part is happened to
Israel, until the fulness of the Gentiles be come
in." See the exposition of that verse, from which it
will appear that "till the fulness of the Gentiles be
come in"--or, in our Lord's phraseology, "till
the times of the Gentiles be fulfilled"--does not
mean "till the general conversion of the world to
Christ," but "till the Gentiles have had their full
time of that place in the Church which the Jews had
before them." After that period of Gentilism,
as before of Judaism, "Jerusalem" and
Israel, no longer "trodden down by the
Gentiles," but "grafted into their own olive
tree," shall constitute, with the believing Gentiles,
one Church of God, and fill the whole earth. What a bright
vista does this open up!
21. And then, if any man shall say to you, Lo, here is
Christ; or, lo he is there; believe him not--So @Lu
17:23. No one can read JOSEPHUS' account of what took
place before the destruction of Jerusalem without seeing
how strikingly this was fulfilled.
to seduce, if it were
possible, even the elect--implying that this, though
all but done, will prove impossible. What a
precious assurance! (Compare @2Th
2:9-12).
23. But take ye heed; behold, I have foretold you all
things--He had just told them that the seduction of
the elect would prove impossible; but since this would be
all but accomplished, He bids them be on their guard, as
the proper means of averting that catastrophe. In Matthew
(@Mt
24:26-28) we have some additional particulars:
"Wherefore, if they shall say unto you, Behold, He is
in the desert; go not forth: behold, He is in the secret
chambers; believe it not. For as the lightning cometh out
of the east, and shineth even unto the west; so shall also
the coming of the Son of man be." See on Lu
17:23,24. "For wheresoever the carcass is, there
will the eagles be gathered together." See on Lu
17:37.
24. But in those days, after that tribulation--"Immediately
after the tribulation of those days" (@Mt
24:29).
the sun shall be
darkened, and the moon shall not give her light.
25. And the stars of heaven shall fall--"and
upon the earth distress of nations, with perplexity; the
sea and the waves roaring; men's hearts failing them for
fear, and for looking after those things which are coming
on the earth" (@Lu
21:25,26).
and the powers that are
in heaven shall be shaken--Though the grandeur of this
language carries the mind over the head of all periods but
that of Christ's Second Coming, nearly every expression
will be found used of the Lord's coming in terrible
national judgments: as of Babylon (@Isa
13:9-13); of Idumea (@Isa
34:1,2,4,8-10); of Egypt (@Eze
32:7,8); compare also @Ps
18:7-15 Isa 24:1,17-19 Joe 2:10,11, &c. We cannot
therefore consider the mere strength of this language a
proof that it refers exclusively or primarily to the
precursors of the final day, though of course in "that
day" it will have its most awful fulfilment.
26. And then shall they see the Son of man coming in
the clouds with great power and glory--In @Mt
24:30, this is given most fully: "And then shall
appear the sign of the Son of man in heaven; and then
shall all the tribes of the earth mourn, and they shall
see the Son of man," &c. That this language finds
its highest interpretation in the Second Personal Coming
of Christ, is most certain. But the question is, whether
that be the primary sense of it as it stands here? Now if
the reader will turn to @Da
7:13,14, and connect with it the preceding verses, he
will find, we think, the true key to our Lord's meaning
here. There the powers that oppressed the
Church--symbolized by rapacious wild beasts--are summoned
to the bar of the Great God, who as the Ancient of days
seats Himself, with His assessors, on a burning Throne:
thousand thousands ministering to Him, and ten thousand
times ten thousand standing before Him. "The judgment
is set, and the books are opened." Who that is guided
by the mere words would doubt that this is a
description of the Final Judgment? And yet nothing is
clearer than that it is not, but a description of a
vast temporal judgment, upon organized bodies of
men, for their incurable hostility to the kingdom of God
upon earth. Well, after the doom of these has been
pronounced and executed, and room thus prepared for the
unobstructed development of the kingdom of God over the
earth, what follows? "I saw in the night visions, and
behold, one like THE SON OF MAN came with the clouds of
heaven, and came to the Ancient of days, and they [the
angelic attendants] brought Him near before Him." For
what purpose? To receive investiture in the kingdom,
which, as Messiah, of right belonged to Him. Accordingly,
it is added, "And there was given Him dominion, and
glory, and a kingdom, that all peoples, nations, and
languages should serve Him: His dominion is an everlasting
dominion, which shall not pass away, and His kingdom that
which shall not be destroyed." Comparing this with
our Lord's words, He seems to us, by "the Son of man
[on which phrase, see on Joh
1:51] coming in the clouds with great power and
glory," to mean, that when judicial vengeance shall
once have been executed upon Jerusalem, and the ground
thus cleared for the unobstructed establishment of His own
kingdom, His true regal claims and rights would be visibly
and gloriously asserted and manifested. See on Lu
9:28 (with its parallels in @Mt
17:1 Mr 9:2), in which nearly the same language is
employed, and where it can hardly be understood of
anything else than the full and free establishment of
the kingdom of Christ on the destruction of Jerusalem.
But what is that "sign of the Son of man in
heaven?" Interpreters are not agreed. But as before
Christ came to destroy Jerusalem some appalling portents
were seen in the air, so before His Personal appearing it
is likely that something analogous will be
witnessed, though of what nature it would be vain to
conjecture.
27. And then shall he send his angels--"with a
great sound of a trumpet" (@Mt
24:31).
and shall gather
together his elect, &c.--As the tribes of Israel
were anciently gathered together by sound of trumpet (@Ex
19:13,16,19 Le 23:24 Ps 81:3-5), so any mighty
gathering of God's people, by divine command, is
represented as collected by sound of trumpet (@Isa
27:13; compare @Re
11:15); and the ministry of angels, employed in all
the great operations of Providence, is here held forth as
the agency by which the present assembling of the elect is
to be accomplished. LIGHTFOOT thus explains it: "When
Jerusalem shall be reduced to ashes, and that wicked
nation cut off and rejected, then shall the Son of man
send His ministers with the trumpet of the Gospel, and
they shall gather His elect of the several nations, from
the four corners of heaven: so that God shall not want a
Church, although that ancient people of His be rejected
and cast off: but that ancient Jewish Church being
destroyed, a new Church shall be called out of the
Gentiles." But though something like this appears to
be the primary sense of the verse, in relation to the
destruction of Jerusalem, no one can fail to see that the
language swells beyond any gathering of a human family
into a Church upon earth, and forces the thoughts onward
to that gathering of the Church "at the last
trump," to meet the Lord in the air, which is to wind
up the present scene. Still, this is not, in our judgment,
the direct subject of the prediction; for @Mr
13:28 limits the whole prediction to the generation
then existing.
28. Now learn a parable of the fig tree--"Now
from the fig tree learn the parable," or the high
lesson which this teaches.
When her branch is yet
tender, and putteth forth leaves--"its
leaves."
29. So ye, in like manner, when ye shall see these
things come to pass--rather, "coming to
pass."
know that it--"the
kingdom of God" (@Lu
21:31).
is nigh, even at the
doors--that is, the full manifestation of it; for till
then it admitted of no full development. In Luke (@Lu
21:28) the following words precede these: "And
when these things begin to come to pass, then look up, and
lift up your heads; for your redemption draweth
nigh"--their redemption, in the first instance
certainly, from Jewish oppression (@1Th
2:14-16 Lu 11:52): but in the highest sense of these
words, redemption from all the oppressions and miseries of
the present state at the second appearing of the Lord
Jesus.
30. Verily I say unto you, that this generation shall
not pass fill all these things be done--or
"fulfilled" (@Mt
24:34 Lu 21:32). Whether we take this to mean that the
whole would be fulfilled within the limits of the
generation then current, or, according to a usual way of
speaking, that the generation then existing would not pass
away without seeing a begun fulfilment of this
prediction, the facts entirely correspond. For either the
whole was fulfilled in the destruction accomplished by
Titus, as many think; or, if we stretch it out, according
to others, till the thorough dispersion of the Jews a
little later, under Adrian, every requirement of our
Lord's words seems to be met.
31. Heaven and earth shall pass away; but my words
shall not pass away--the strongest possible expression
of the divine authority by which He spake; not as Moses or
Paul might have said of their own inspiration, for such
language would be unsuitable in any merely human mouth.
Warnings to Prepare for the Coming of Christ Suggested
by the Foregoing Prophecy (@Mr
13:32-37).
It will be observed that, in the foregoing prophecy, as
our Lord approaches the crisis of the day of vengeance on
Jerusalem and redemption for the Church--at which stage
the analogy between that and the day of final vengeance
and redemption waxes more striking--His language rises and
swells beyond all temporal and partial vengeance, beyond
all earthly deliverances and enlargements, and ushers us
resistlessly into the scenes of the final day.
Accordingly, in these six concluding verses it is manifest
that preparation for "THAT DAY" is what our Lord
designs to inculcate.
32. But of that day and that hour--that is, the
precise time.
knoweth no man--literally,
no one.
no, not the angels which
are in heaven, neither the Son, but the Father--This
very remarkable statement regarding "the Son" is
peculiar to Mark. Whether it means that the Son was not
at that time in possession of the knowledge referred
to, or simply that it was not among the things which He
had received to communicate--has been matter of much
controversy even among the firmest believers in the proper
Divinity of Christ. In the latter sense it was taken by
some of the most eminent of the ancient Fathers, and by
LUTHER, MELANCTHON, and most of the older Lutherans; and
it is so taken by BENGEL, LANGE, WEBSTER and WILKINSON,
CHRYSOSTOM and others understood it to mean that as man
our Lord was ignorant of this. It is taken literally by
CALVIN, GROTIUS, DE WETTE, MEYER, FRITZSCHE, STIER,
ALFORD, and ALEXANDER.
33. Take ye heed, watch and pray; for ye know not when
the time is.
34. For the Son of man is as a man taking a far
journey, &c.--The idea thus far is similar to that
in the opening part of the parable of the talents (@Mt
25:14,15).
and commanded the porter--the
gatekeeper.
to watch--pointing
to the official duty of the ministers of religion to give
warning of approaching danger to the people.
35. Watch ye therefore; for ye know not when the master
of the house cometh, at even, or at midnight, or at the
cock-crowing, or in the morning--an allusion to the
four Roman watches of the night.
36. Lest, coming suddenly, he find you sleeping--See
on Lu 12:35-40; Lu 12:42-46.
37. And what I say unto you--this discourse, it
will be remembered, was delivered in private.
I say unto all, Watch--anticipating
and requiring the diffusion of His teaching by them among
all His disciples, and its perpetuation through all time.
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