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THE GOSPEL
ACCORDING TO
MARK
Commentary by DAVID BROWN
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CHAPTER 2
@Mr
2:1-12. HEALING OF A PARALYTIC. ( = @Mt
9:1-8 Lu 5:17-26).
This incident, as remarked on @Mt
9:1, appears to follow next in order of time after the
cure of the leper (@Mr
1:40-45).
1. And again he entered into Capernaum--"His
own city" (@Mt
9:1).
and it was noised that
he was in the house--no doubt of Simon Peter (@Mr
1:29).
2. And straightway many were gathered together,
insomuch that there was no room to receive them, no, not
so much as about the door--This is one of Mark's
graphic touches. No doubt in this case, as the scene
occurred at his informant's own door, these details are
the vivid recollections of that honored disciple.
and he preached the word
unto them--that is, indoors; but in the hearing,
doubtless, of the multitude that pressed around. Had He
gone forth, as He naturally would, the paralytic's faith
would have had no such opportunity to display itself. Luke
(@Lu
5:17) furnishes an additional and very important
incident in the scene--as follows: "And it came to
pass on a certain day, as He was teaching, that there were
Pharisees and doctors of the law sitting by, which were
come out of every town," or village, "of
Galilee, and Judea, and Jerusalem." This was the
highest testimony yet borne to our Lord's growing
influence, and the necessity increasingly felt by the
ecclesiastics throughout the country of coming to some
definite judgment regarding Him. "And the power of
the Lord was [present] to heal them"--or, "was
[efficacious] to heal them," that is, the sick that
were brought before Him. So that the miracle that is now
to be described was among the most glorious and worthy to
be recorded of many then performed; and what made it so
was doubtless the faith which was manifested in connection
with it, and the proclamation of the forgiveness of the
patient's sins that immediately preceded it.
3. And they come unto him--that is, towards the
house where He was.
bringing one sick of the
palsy--"lying on a bed" (@Mt
9:2).
which was borne of four--a
graphic particular of Mark only.
4. And when they could not come nigh unto him for the
press--or, as in Luke (@Lu
5:19), "when they could not find by what way they
might bring him in because of the multitude," they
"went upon the housetop"--the flat or
terrace-roof, universal in Eastern houses.
they uncovered the roof
where he was: and when they had broken it up, they let
down the bed--or portable couch
wherein the sick of the
palsy lay--Luke (@Lu
5:19) says, they "let him down through the
tilling with his couch into the midst before Jesus."
Their whole object was to bring the patient into the
presence of Jesus; and this not being possible in the
ordinary way, because of the multitude that surrounded
Him, they took the very unusual method here described of
accomplishing their object, and succeeded. Several
explanations have been given of the way in which this was
done; but unless we knew the precise plan of the house,
and the part of it from which Jesus taught--which may have
been a quadrangle or open court, within the buildings of
which Peter's house was one, or a gallery covered by a
veranda--it is impossible to determine precisely how the
thing was done. One thing, however, is clear, that we have
both the accounts from an eye-witness.
5. When Jesus saw their faith--It is remarkable
that all the three narratives call it "their
faith" which Jesus saw. That the patient himself had
faith, we know from the proclamation of his forgiveness,
which Jesus made before all; and we should have been apt
to conclude that his four friends bore him to Jesus merely
out of benevolent compliance with the urgent entreaties of
the poor sufferer. But here we learn, not only that his
bearers had the same faith with himself, but that Jesus
marked it as a faith which was not to be defeated--a faith
victorious over all difficulties. This was the faith for
which He was ever on the watch, and which He never saw
without marking, and, in those who needed anything from
Him, richly rewarding.
he said unto the sick of
the palsy, Son--"be of good cheer" (@Mt
9:2).
thy sins be forgiven
thee--By the word "be," our translators
perhaps meant "are," as in Luke (@Lu
5:20). For it is not a command to his sins to depart,
but an authoritative proclamation of the man's pardoned
state as a believer. And yet, as the Pharisees understood
our Lord to be dispensing pardon by this saying,
and Jesus not only acknowledges that they were right, but
founds His whole argument upon the correctness of it, we
must regard the saying as a royal proclamation of the
man's forgiveness by Him to whom it belonged to dispense
it; nor could such a style of address be justified on any
lower supposition. (See on Lu
7:41, &c.).
6. But there were certain of the scribes--"and
the Pharisees" (@Lu
5:21)
sitting there--those
Jewish ecclesiastics who, as Luke told us (@Lu
5:17), "were come out of every village of
Galilee, and Judea, and Jerusalem," to make their
observations upon this wonderful Person, in anything but a
teachable spirit, though as yet their venomous and
murderous feeling had not showed itself.
and reasoning in their
hearts.
7. Why doth this man thus speak blasphemies? who can
forgive sins but God only?--In this second question
they expressed a great truth. (See @Isa
43:25 Mic 7:18 Ex 34:6,7, &c.). Nor was their
first question altogether unnatural, though in our Lord's
sole case it was unfounded. That a man, to all appearances
like one of themselves, should claim authority and power
to forgive sins, they could not, on the first blush of it,
but regard as in the last degree startling; nor were they
entitled even to weigh such a claim, as worthy of a
hearing, save on supposition of resistless evidence
afforded by Him in support of the claim. Accordingly, our
Lord deals with them as men entitled to such evidence, and
supplies it; at the same time chiding them for rashness,
in drawing harsh conclusions regarding Himself.
8. Why reason ye these things in your hearts--or,
as in Matthew, (@Mt
9:4) "Wherefore think ye evil in your
hearts?"
9. Whether is it easier to say to the sick of the
palsy, Thy sins be forgiven thee--or "are
forgiven thee";
or to say, Arise, and
take up thy bed and walk?--"Is it easier to
command away disease than to bid away sin? If, then, I do
the one which you can see, know thus that I have done the
other, which you cannot see."
10. But that ye may know that the Son of man hath power
on earth to forgive sins--that forgiving power dwells
in the Person of this Man, and is exercised by Him while
on this earth and going out and in with you.
(he saith to the sick of
the palsy),
11. I say unto thee, Arise, and take up thy bed, and go
thy way into thine house--This taking up the portable
couch, and walking home with it, was designed to prove the
completeness of the cure.
12. And immediately he arose, took up the bed--"Sweet
saying!" says BENGEL: "The bed had borne the
man: now the man bore the bed."
and went forth before
them all--proclaiming by that act to the multitude,
whose wondering eyes would follow him as he pressed
through them, that He who could work such a glorious
miracle of healing, must indeed "have power on earth
to forgive sins."
We never saw it on this
fashion--"never saw it thus," or, as we say,
"never saw the like." In Luke (@Lu
5:26) it is, "We have seen strange [unexpected]
things to-day"--referring both to the miracles
wrought and the forgiveness of sins pronounced by Human
Lips. In Matthew (@Mt
9:8) it is, "They marvelled, and glorified God,
which had given such power unto men." At forgiving
power they wondered not, but that a man, to all appearance
like one of themselves, should possess it!
@Mr
2:13-17. LEVI'S (OR MATTHEW'S) CALL AND FEAST. ( = @Mt
9:9-13 Lu 5:27-32).
See on Mt 9:9-13.
@Mr
2:18-22. DISCOURSE ON FASTING. ( = @Mt
9:14-17 Lu 5:33-39).
See on Lu 5:33-39.
@Mr
2:23-28. PLUCKING CORN-EARS ON THE SABBATH DAY. ( = @Mt
12:1-8 Lu 6:1-5).
See on Mt 12:1-8.
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