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THE GOSPEL
ACCORDING TO
MARK
Commentary by DAVID BROWN
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CHAPTER 8
@Mr
8:1-26. FOUR THOUSAND MIRACULOUSLY FED--A SIGN FROM
HEAVEN SOUGHT AND REFUSED--THE LEAVEN OF THE PHARISEES AND
SADDUCEES--A BLIND MAN AT BETHSAIDA RESTORED TO SIGHT. ( =
@Mt
15:32-16:12).
This section of miscellaneous matter evidently follows the
preceding one in point of time, as will be seen by
observing how it is introduced by Matthew.
Feeding of the Four Thousand (@Mr
8:1-9).
1. In those days the multitude being very great,
&c.
2. I have compassion on the multitude--an
expression of that deep emotion in the Redeemer's heart
which always preceded some remarkable interposition for
relief. (See @Mt
14:14 20:34 Mr 1:41 Lu 7:13; also @Mt
9:36, before the mission of the Twelve; compare @Jud
2:18 10:16).
because they have now
been with me--in constant attendance.
three days, and have
nothing to eat:
3. And if I send them away fasting to their own houses,
they will faint by the way--In their eagerness they
seem not to have thought of the need of provisions for
such a length of time; but the Lord thought of it. In
Matthew (@Mt
15:32) it is, "I will not send them away
fasting"--or rather, "To send them away fasting
I am unwilling."
4. From whence can a man satisfy these men with bread
here in the wilderness?--Though the question here is
the same as when He fed the five thousand, they evidently now
meant no more by it than that they had not the
means of feeding the multitude; modestly leaving the Lord
to decide what was to be done. And this will the more
appear from His not now trying them, as before, by saying,
"They need not depart, give ye them to eat"; but
simply asking what they had, and then giving His
directions.
5. And he asked them, How many loaves have ye? And they
said, Seven--It was important in this case, as in the
former, that the precise number of the loaves should be
brought out. Thus also does the distinctness of the two
miracles appear.
9. And they that had eaten were about four thousand:
and he sent them away--Had not our Lord distinctly
referred, in this very chapter and in two successive
sentences, to the feeding of the five thousand and of the
four thousand as two distinct miracles, many critics would
have insisted that they were but two different
representations of one and the same miracle, as they do of
the two expulsions of the buyers and sellers from the
temple, at the beginning and end of our Lord's ministry.
But even in spite of what our Lord says, it is painful to
find such men as NEANDER endeavoring to identify the two
miracles. The localities, though both on the eastern side
of the lake, were different; the time was different; the
preceding and following circumstances were different; the
period during which the people continued fasting was
different--in the one case not even one entire day, in the
other three days; the number fed was different--five
thousand in the one case, in the other four thousand; the
number of the loaves was different--five in the one case,
in the other seven; the number of the fishes in the one
case is definitely stated by all the four
Evangelists--two; in the other case both give them
indefinitely--"a few small fishes"; in the one
case the multitude were commanded to sit down "upon
the green grass"; in the other "on the
ground"; in the one case the number of the baskets
taken up filled with the fragments was twelve, in the
other seven; but more than all, perhaps, because
apparently quite incidental, in the one case the name
given to the kind of baskets used is the same in all the
four narratives--the cophinus (see on Mr
6:43); in the other case the name given to the kind of
baskets used, while it is the same in both the narratives,
is quite different--the spuris, a basket large
enough to hold a man's body, for Paul was let down in one
of these from the wall of Damascus (@Ac
9:25). It might be added, that in the one case the
people, in a frenzy of enthusiasm, would have taken Him by
force to make Him a king; in the other case no such
excitement is recorded. In view of these things, who could
have believed that these were one and the same miracle,
even if the Lord Himself had not expressly distinguished
them?
Sign from Heaven Sought (@Mr
8:10-13).
10. And straightway he entered into a ship--"into
the ship," or "embarked."
with his disciples, and
came into the parts of Dalmanutha--In Matthew (@Mt
15:39) it is "the coasts of Magdala."
Magdala and Dalmanutha were both on the western shore of
the lake, and probably not far apart. From the former the
surname "Magdalene" was probably taken, to
denote the residence of Mary Magdalene. Dalmanutha may
have been a village, but it cannot now be identified with
certainty.
11. seeking of him a sign from heaven, tempting him--not
in the least desiring evidence for their conviction, but
hoping to entrap Him. The first part of the answer is
given in Matthew alone (@Mt
16:2,3): "He answered and said unto them, When it
is evening, ye say, It will be fair weather; for the sky
is red. And in the morning, It will be foul weather
to-day: for the sky is red and lowering [sullen, gloomy].
Hypocrites! ye can discern the face of the sky; but can ye
not discern the signs of the times?" The same
simplicity of purpose and careful observation of the
symptoms of approaching events which they showed in common
things would enable them to "discern the signs of the
times"--or rather "seasons," to which the
prophets pointed for the manifestation of the Messiah. The
scepter had departed from Judah; Daniel's seventy weeks
were expiring, &c.; and many other significant
indications of the close of the old economy, and
preparations for a freer and more comprehensive one, might
have been discerned. But all was lost upon them.
12. And he sighed deeply in his spirit--The
language is very strong. These glimpses into the interior
of the Redeemer's heart, in which our Evangelist abounds,
are more precious than rubies. The state of the Pharisaic
heart, which prompted this desire for a fresh sign, went
to His very soul.
and saith, Why doth this
generation--"this wicked and adulterous
generation" (@Mt
16:4).
seek after a sign?--when
they have had such abundant evidence already.
There shall no sign be
given unto this generation--literally, "If there
shall be given to this generation a sign"; a Jewish
way of expressing a solemn and peremptory determination to
the contrary (compare @Heb
4:5 Ps 95:11, Margin). "A generation
incapable of appreciating such demonstrations shall not be
gratified with them." In @Mt
16:4 He added, "but the sign of the prophet
Jonas." (See on Mt 12:39,40.)
13. And he left them--no doubt with tokens of
displeasure.
The Leaven of the Pharisees and Sadducees (@Mr
8:14-21).
14. Now the disciples had forgotten to take bread,
neither had they in the ship with them more than one loaf--This
is another example of that graphic circumstantiality which
gives such a charm to this briefest of the four Gospels.
The circumstance of the "one loaf" only
remaining, as WEBSTER and WILKINSON remark, was more
suggestive of their Master's recent miracles than the
entire absence of provisions.
15. And he charged them, saying, Take heed, beware of
the leaven of the Pharisees--"and of the
Sadducees" (@Mt
16:6).
and of the leaven of
Herod--The teaching or "doctrine" (@Mt
16:12) of the Pharisees and of the Sadducees was quite
different, but both were equally pernicious; and the
Herodians, though rather a political party, were equally
envenomed against our Lord's spiritual teaching. See on Mt
12:14. The penetrating and diffusive quality
of leaven, for good or bad, is the ground of the
comparison.
16. And they reasoned among themselves, saying, It is
because we have no bread--But a little while ago He
was tried with the obduracy of the Pharisees; now He is
tried with the obtuseness of His own disciples. The nine
questions following each other in rapid succession (@Mr
8:17-21) show how deeply He was hurt at this want of
spiritual apprehension, and worse still, their low
thoughts of Him, as if He would utter so solemn a warning
on so petty a subject. It will be seen, however, from the
very form of their conjecture, "It is because we
have no bread," and our Lord's astonishment that they
should not by that time have known better with what He
took up His attention--that He ever left the whole care
for His own temporal wants to the Twelve: that He did
this so entirely, that finding they were reduced to their
last loaf they felt as if unworthy of such a trust, and
could not think but that the same thought was in their
Lord's mind which was pressing upon their own; but that in
this they were so far wrong that it hurt His
feelings--sharp just in proportion to His love--that such
a thought of Him should have entered their minds! Who
that, like angels, "desire to look into these
things" will not prize such glimpses above gold?
17. have ye your heart yet hardened?--How strong an
expression to use of true-hearted disciples! See on Mr
6:52.
18. Having eyes, see ye not? and having ears, hear ye
not?--See on Mt 13:13.
and do ye not remember?
19. When I brake the five loaves among five thousand--"the
five thousand."
how many baskets full of
fragments took ye up? &c.
21. How is it that ye do not understand?--"do
not understand that the warning I gave you could not have
been prompted by any such petty consideration as the want
of loaves in your scrip." Profuse as were our Lord's
miracles, we see from this that they were not wrought at
random, but that He carefully noted their minutest
details, and desired that this should be done by those who
witnessed, as doubtless by all who read the record of
them. Even the different kind of baskets used at the two
miraculous feedings, so carefully noted in the two
narratives, are here also referred to; the one smaller, of
which there were twelve, the other much larger, of which
there were seven.
Blind Man at Bethsaida Restored to Sight (@Mr
8:22-26).
22. And he cometh to Bethsaida--Bethsaida Julias,
on the northeast side of the take, whence after this He
proceeded to Cęsarea Philippi (@Mr
8:27).
and they bring a blind
man unto him, and besought him to touch him--See on Mr
7:32.
23. And he took the blind man by the hand, and led him
out of the town--Of the deaf and dumb man it is merely
said that "He took him aside" (@Mr
7:33); but this blind man He led by the hand
out of the town, doing it Himself rather than employing
another--great humility, exclaims BENGEL--that He might
gain his confidence and raise his expectation.
and when be had spit on
his eyes--the organ affected--See on Mr 7:33.
and put his hands upon
him, he asked him if he saw aught.
24. And he looked up, and said, I see men as trees,
walking--This is one of the cases in which one edition
of what is called the received text differs from another.
That which is decidedly the best supported, and has also
internal evidence on its side is this: "I see men;
for I see [them] as trees walking"--that is, he could
distinguish them from trees only by their motion; a minute
mark of truth in the narrative, as ALFORD observes,
describing how human objects had appeared to him during
that gradual failing of sight which had ended in
blindness.
25. After that he put his hands again upon his eyes,
and made him look up; and he was restored, and saw every
man clearly--Perhaps the one operation perfectly
restored the eyes, while the other imparted
immediately the faculty of using them. It is the
only recorded example of a progressive cure, and it
certainly illustrates similar methods in the spiritual
kingdom. Of the four recorded cases of sight restored, all
the patients save one either came or were
brought to the Physician. In the case of the man born
blind, the Physician came to the patient. So some
seek and find Christ; of others He is found who seek Him
not.
26. Neither go into the town, nor tell it to any in the
town--Besides the usual reasons against going about
"blazing the matter," retirement in this case
would be salutary to himself.
@Mr
8:27-38. PETER'S NOBLE CONFESSION OF CHRIST--OUR
LORD'S FIRST EXPLICIT ANNOUNCEMENT OF HIS APPROACHING
SUFFERINGS, DEATH, AND RESURRECTION--HIS REBUKE OF PETER,
AND WARNING TO ALL THE TWELVE. ( = @Mt
16:13-27 Lu 9:18-26).
For the exposition, see on Mt 16:13-28.
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