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THE GOSPEL
ACCORDING TO
MARK
Commentary by DAVID BROWN
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CHAPTER 9
@Mr
9:1-13. JESUS IS TRANSFIGURED--CONVERSATION ABOUT
ELIAS. ( = @Mt
16:28-17:13 Lu 9:27-36).
See on Lu 9:27-36.
@Mr
9:14-32. HEALING OF A DEMONIAC BOY--SECOND EXPLICIT
ANNOUNCEMENT OF HIS APPROACHING DEATH AND RESURRECTION. (
= @Mt
17:14-23 Lu 9:37-45).
Healing of the Demoniac Boy (@Mr
9:14-29).
14. And when he came to his disciples, he saw a great
multitude about them, and the scribes questioning with
them--This was "on the next day, when they were
come down from the hill" (@Lu
9:37). The Transfiguration appears to have taken place
at night. In the morning, as He came down from the hill on
which it took place--with Peter, and James, and John--on
approaching the other nine, He found them surrounded by a
great multitude, and the scribes disputing or discussing
with them. No doubt these cavillers were twitting the
apostles of Jesus with their inability to cure the
demoniac boy of whom we are presently to hear, and
insinuating doubts even of their Master's ability to do
it; while they, zealous for their Master's honor, would no
doubt refer to His past miracles in proof of the contrary.
15. And straightway all the people--the multitude.
when they beheld him,
were greatly amazed--were astounded.
and running to him
saluted him--The singularly strong expression of
surprise, the sudden arrest of the discussion,and the rush
of the multitude towards Him, can be accounted for by
nothing less than something amazing in His appearance.
There can hardly be any doubt that His countenance
still retained traces of His transfiguration-glory.
(See @Ex
34:29,30). So BENGEL, DE WETTE, MEYER, TRENCH, ALFORD.
No wonder, if this was the case, that they not only ran to
Him, but saluted Him. Our Lord, however, takes no notice
of what had attracted them, and probably it gradually
faded away as He drew near; but addressing Himself to the
scribes, He demands the subject of their discussion, ready
to meet them where they had pressed hard upon His
half-instructed and as yet timid apostles.
16. And he asked the scribes, What question ye with
them?--Ere they had time to reply, the father of the
boy, whose case had occasioned the dispute, himself steps
forward and answers the question; telling a piteous tale
of deafness, and dumbness, and fits of epilepsy--ending
with this, that the disciples, though entreated, could not
perform the cure.
17. And one of the multitude answered, and said,
Master, I have brought unto thee my son--"mine
only child" (@Lu
9:38).
which hath a dumb spirit--a
spirit whose operation had the effect of rendering his
victim speechless, and deaf also (@Mr
9:25). In Matthew's report of the speech (@Mt
17:15), the father says "he is lunatic";
this being another and most distressing effect of the
possession.
18. And wheresoever he taketh him, he teareth him; and
he foameth, and gnasheth with his teeth, and pineth away--rather,
"becomes withered," "dried up," or
"paralyzed"; as the same word is everywhere else
rendered in the New Testament. Some additional particulars
are given by Luke, and by our Evangelist below.
"Lo," says he in @Lu
9:39, "a spirit taketh him, and he suddenly
crieth out; and it teareth him that he foameth again, and
bruising him hardly [or with difficulty] departeth from
him."
and I spake to thy
disciples that they should cast him out; and they could
not--Our Lord replies to the father by a severe rebuke
to the disciples. As if wounded at the exposure before
such a multitude, of the weakness of His disciples' faith,
which doubtless He felt as a reflection on Himself, He
puts them to the blush before all, but in language fitted
only to raise expectation of what He Himself would do.
19. He answereth him, and saith, O faithless generation--"and
perverse," or "perverted" (@Mt
17:17 Lu 9:41).
how long shall I be with
you? how long shall I suffer you?--language implying
that it was a shame to them to want the faith necessary to
perform this cure, and that it needed some. patience to
put up with them. It is to us surprising that some
interpreters, as CHRYSOSTOM and CALVIN, should represent
this rebuke as addressed, not to the disciples at all, but
to the scribes who disputed with them. Nor does it much,
if at all, mend the matter to view it as addressed to
both, as most expositors seem to do. With BENGEL, DE WETTE,
and MEYER, we regard it as addressed directly to the nine
apostles who were unable to expel this evil spirit. And
though, in ascribing this inability to their "want of
faith" and the "perverted turn of mind"
which they had drunk in with their early training, the
rebuke would undoubtedly apply, with vastly greater force,
to those who twitted the poor disciples with their
inability, it would be to change the whole nature of the
rebuke to suppose it addressed to those who had no
faith at all, and were wholly perverted. It was
because faith sufficient for curing this youth was to be
expected of the disciples, and because they should by that
time have got rid of the perversity in which they had been
reared, that Jesus exposes them thus before the rest. And
who does not see that this was fitted, more than anything
else, to impress upon the by-standers the severe loftiness
of the training He was giving to the Twelve, and the
unsophisticated footing He was on with them?
Bring him unto me--The
order to bring the patient to Him was instantly obeyed;
when, lo! as if conscious of the presence of his Divine
Tormentor, and expecting to be made to quit, the foul
spirit rages and is furious, determined to die hard, doing
all the mischief he can to this poor child while yet
within his grasp.
20. And they brought him unto him: and when he saw him,
straightway the spirit tare him--Just as the man with
the legion of demons, "when he saw Jesus, ran
and worshipped Him" (@Mr
5:6), so this demon, when he saw Him,
immediately "tare him." The feeling of terror
and rage was the same in both cases.
and he fell on the
ground, and wallowed foaming--Still Jesus does
nothing, but keeps conversing with the father about the
case--partly to have its desperate features told out by
him who knew them best, in the hearing of the spectators;
partly to let its virulence have time to show itself; and
partly to deepen the exercise of the father's soul, to
draw out his faith, and thus to prepare both him and the
by-standers for what He was to do.
21. And he asked his father, How long is it ago since
this came unto him? And he said, Of a child,
&c.--Having told briefly the affecting features of the
case, the poor father, half dispirited by the failure of
the disciples and the aggravated virulence of the malady
itself in presence of their Master, yet encouraged too by
what he had heard of Christ, by the severe rebuke He had
given to His disciples for not having faith enough to cure
the boy, and by the dignity with which He had ordered him
to be brought to Him--in this mixed state of mind, he
closes his description of the case with these touching
words:
22. but if thou canst do anything, have compassion on
us, and help us--"us," says the father; for
it was a sore family affliction. Compare the language of
the Syrophoenician woman regarding her daughter,
"Lord, help me." Still nothing is done:
the man is but struggling into faith: it must come
a step farther. But he had to do with Him who breaks not
the bruised reed, and who knew how to inspire what He
demanded. The man had said to Him, "If Thou canst
do."
23. Jesus said unto him, If thou canst believe--The
man had said, "If Thou canst do anything." Jesus
replies.
all things are possible
to him that believeth--"My doing all depends on
thy believing." To impress this still more, He
redoubles upon the believing: "If thou canst believe,
all things are possible to him that believeth." Thus
the Lord helps the birth of faith in that struggling soul;
and now, though with pain and sore travail, it comes to
the birth, as TRENCH, borrowing from OLSHAUSEN, expresses
it. Seeing the case stood still, waiting not upon the
Lord's power but his own faith, the man becomes
immediately conscious of conflicting principles, and rises
into one of the noblest utterances on record.
24. And straightway the father of the child cried out,
and said with tears, Lord, I believe: help thou mine
unbelief--that is, "It is useless concealing from
Thee, O Thou mysterious, mighty Healer, the unbelief that
still struggles in this heart of mine; but that heart
bears me witness that I do believe in Thee; and if
distrust still remains, I disown it, I wrestle with it, I
seek help from Thee against it." Two things are very
remarkable here: First, The felt and owned presence of
unbelief, which only the strength of the man's faith
could have so revealed to his own consciousness. Second, His
appeal to Christ for help against his felt unbelief--a
feature in the case quite unparalleled, and showing, more
than all protestations could have done, the insight he had
attained into the existence of a power in Christ more
glorious them any he had besought for his poor child.
The work was done; and as the commotion and confusion in
the crowd was now increasing, Jesus at once, as Lord of
spirits, gives the word of command to the dumb and deaf
spirit to be gone, never again to return to his victim.
26. And the spirit cried, and rent him sore, and came
out of him; and he was as one dead; insomuch that many
said, He is dead--The malignant, cruel spirit, now
conscious that his time was come, gathers up his whole
strength, with intent by a last stroke to kill his victim,
and had nearly succeeded. But the Lord of life was there;
the Healer of all maladies, the Friend of sinners, the
Seed of the woman, "the Stronger than the strong man
armed," was there. The very faith which Christ
declared to be enough for everything being now found, it
was not possible that the serpent should prevail.
Fearfully is he permitted to bruise the heel, as in
this case; but his own head shall go for it--his
works shall be destroyed (@1Jo
3:8).
27. But Jesus took him by the hand, and lifted him up;
and he arose.
28. Why could not we cast him out?
29. And he said unto them, This kind can come forth by
nothing but by prayer and fasting--that is, as nearly
all good interpreters are agreed, "this kind of evil
spirits cannot be expelled," or "so desperate a
case of demoniacal possession cannot be cured, but by
prayer and fasting." But since the Lord Himself says
that His disciples could not fast while He was with them,
perhaps this was designed, as ALFORD hints, for their
after-guidance--unless we take it as but a definite way of
expressing the general truth, that great and difficult
duties require special preparation and self-denial. But
the answer to their question, as given in @Mt
17:20,21 is fuller: "And Jesus said unto them,
Because of your unbelief. For verily I say unto you, If ye
have faith as a grain of mustard seed, ye shall say unto
this mountain, Remove hence to yonder place, and it shall
remove; and nothing shall be impossible unto you" (@Mt
17:20). See on Mr 11:23. "Howbeit this kind goeth
not out but by prayer and fasting" (@Mt
17:21), that is, though nothing is impossible to
faith, yet such a height of faith as is requisite for such
triumphs is not to be reached either in a moment or
without effort--either with God in prayer or with
ourselves in self-denying exercises. Luke (@Lu
9:43) adds, "And they were all amazed at the
mighty power of God"--"at the majesty" or
"mightiness of God," in this last miracle, in
the Transfiguration, &c.; or, at the divine
grandeur of Christ rising upon them daily.
Second Explicit Announcement of His Approaching Death
and Resurrection (@Mr
9:30-32).
30. And they departed thence, and passed--were
passing along.
through Galilee; and he
would not that any man should know it--By comparing @Mt
17:22,23 and @Lu
9:43,44 with this, we gather, that as our Lord's
reason for going through Galilee more privately than usual
on this occasion was to reiterate to them the announcement
which had so shocked them at the first mention of it, and
thus familiarize them with it by little and little, so
this was His reason for enjoining silence upon them as to
their present movements.
31. For he taught his disciples, and said unto them--"Let
these sayings sink down into your ears" (@Lu
9:44); not what had been passing between them as to
His grandeur, but what He was now to utter.
The Son of man is
delivered--The use of the present tense expresses how
near at hand He would have them to consider it. As BENGEL
says, steps were already in course of being taken to bring
it about.
into the hands of men--This
remarkable antithesis, "the Son of man shall
be delivered into the hands of men," it is
worthy of notice, is in all the three Evangelists.
and they shall kill him--that
is, "Be not carried off your feet by all that
grandeur of Mine which ye have lately witnessed, but bear
in mind what I have already told you and now distinctly
repeat, that that Sun in whose beams ye now rejoice is
soon to set in midnight gloom."
and after he is killed,
he shall rise the third day.
32. But they understood not that saying--"and
it was hid from them, [so] that they preceived it
not" (@Lu
9:45).
and were afraid to ask
him--Their most cherished ideas were so completely
dashed by such announcements, that they were afraid of
laying themselves open to rebuke by asking Him any
questions. But "they were exceeding sorry" (@Mt
17:23). While the other Evangelists, as WEBSTER and
WILKINSON remark, notice their ignorance and their fear,
Matthew, who was one of them, retains a vivid recollection
of their sorrow.
@Mr
9:33-50. STRIFE AMONG THE TWELVE WHO SHOULD BE
GREATEST IN THE KINGDOM OF HEAVEN, WITH RELATIVE
TEACHING--INCIDENTAL REBUKE OF JOHN FOR EXCLUSIVENESS. ( =
@Mt
18:1-9 Lu 9:46-50).
Strife among the Twelve, with Relative Teaching (@Mr
9:33-37).
33. What was it that ye disputed among yourselves by
the way?--From this we gather that after the ,painful
communication He had made to them, the Redeemer had
allowed them to travel so much of the way by themselves;
partly, no doubt, that He might have privacy for Himself
to dwell on what lay before Him, and partly that they
might be induced to weigh together and prepare themselves
for the terrible events which He had announced to them.
But if so, how different was their occupation!
34. But they held their peace: for by the way they had
disputed among themselves, who should be the greatest--From
@Mt
18:1 we should infer that the subject was introduced,
not by our Lord, but by the disciples themselves, who came
and asked Jesus who should be greatest. Perhaps one or two
of them first referred the matter to Jesus, who put them
off till they should all be assembled together at
Capernaum. He had all the while "perceived the
thought of their heart" (@Lu
9:47); but now that they were all together "in
the house," He questions them about it, and they are
put to the blush, conscious of the temper towards
each other which it had kindled. This raised the whole
question afresh, and at this point our Evangelist takes it
up. The subject was suggested by the recent announcement
of the Kingdom (@Mt
16:19-28), the transfiguration of their Master, and
especially the preference given to three of them at that
scene.
35. If any man desire to be first, the same shall be
last of all, and servant of all--that is, "let
him be" such: he must be prepared to take the last
and lowest place. See on Mr 10:42-45.
36. And he took a child--"a little child"
(@Mt
18:2); but the word is the same in both places, as
also in @Lu
9:47.
and set him in the midst
of them: and when he had taken him in his arms--This
beautiful trait is mentioned by out Evangelist alone.
he said unto them--Here
we must go to Matthew (@Mt
18:3,4) for the first of this answer: "Verily I
say unto you, except ye be converted, and become as little
children, ye shall not enter into the kingdom of Heaven:
" that is, "Conversion must be thorough; not
only must the heart be turned to God in general, and from
earthly to heavenly things, but in particular, except ye
be converted from that carnal ambition which still rankles
within you, into that freedom from all such feelings which
ye see in this child, ye have neither part nor lot in the
kingdom at all; and he who in this feature has most of the
child, is highest there." Whosoever, therefore, shall
"humble himself as this little child, the same is
greatest in the kingdom of heaven": "for he that
is [willing to be] least among you all, the same shall be
great" (@Lu
9:48).
37. Whosoever shall receive one of such children--so
manifesting the spirit unconsciously displayed by this
child.
in my name--from
love to Me.
receiveth me; and
whosoever shall receive me, receiveth not me, but Him that
sent me--(See on Mt 10:40).
Incidental Rebuke of John for Exclusiveness (@Mr
9:38-41).
38. And John answered him, saying, Master, we saw one
casting out devils in thy name, and he followeth not us:
and we forbade him, because he followeth not us--The
link of connection here with the foregoing context lies,
we apprehend, in the emphatic words which our Lord had
just uttered, "in My name." "Oh,"
interposes John--young, warm, but not sufficiently
apprehending Christ's teaching in these
matters--"that reminds me of something that we have
just done, and we should like to know if we did right. We
saw one casting out devils "in Thy name,"
and we forbade him, because he followeth not us. Were we
right, or were we wrong?" Answer--"Ye were
wrong." "But we did it because he followeth not
us." "No matter."
39. But Jesus said, Forbid him not: for there is no man
which shall do a miracle in my name, that can lightly
speak evil of me--soon, that is, readily "speak
evil of me."
40. For he that is not against us is on our part--Two
principles of immense importance are here laid down:
"First, No one will readily speak evil of Me who has
the faith to do a miracle in My name; and second, If such
a person cannot be supposed to be against us, ye
are to consider him for us." Let it be
carefully observed that our Lord does not say this man
should not have "followed them," nor yet
that it was indifferent whether he did or not; but simply
teaches how such a person was to be regarded, although
he did not--namely, as a reverer of His name and a
promoter of His cause.
41. For whosoever shall give you a cup of water to
drink in my name, because ye belong to Christ, verily I
say unto you, he shall not lose his reward--(See on Mt
10:42).
Continuation of Teaching Suggested by the Disciple's
Strife (@Mr
9:42-50).
What follows appears to have no connection with the
incidental reproof of John immediately preceding. As that
had interrupted some important teaching, our Lord hastens
back from it, as if no such interruption had occurred.
42. For whosoever shall offend one of these little ones
that believe in me--or, shall cause them to stumble;
referring probably to the effect which such unsavory
disputes as they had held would have upon the inquiring
and hopeful who came in contact with them, leading to the
belief that after all they were no better than others.
it is better for him
that a millstone were hanged about his neck--The word
here is simply "millstone," without expressing
of which kind. But in @Mt
18:6 it is the "ass-turned" kind, far
heavier than the small hand-mill turned by female slaves,
as in @Lu
17:35. It is of course the same which is meant here.
and he were cast into
the sea--meaning, that if by such a death that
stumbling were prevented, and so its eternal consequences
averted, it would be a happy thing for them. Here follows
a striking verse in @Mt
18:7, "Woe unto the world because of
offences!" (There will be stumblings and falls and
loss of souls enough from the world's treatment of
disciples, without any addition from you: dreadful will be
its doom in consequence; see that ye share not in it).
"For it must needs be that offences come; but woe to
that man by whom the offence cometh!" (The struggle
between light and darkness will inevitably cause
stumblings, but not less guilty is he who wilfully makes
any to stumble).
43. And if thy hand offend thee, cut it off: it is
better for thee to enter into life maimed, than having two
hands to go into hell--See @Mt
5:29,30. The only difference between the words there
and here is that there they refer to impure inclinations;
here, to an ambitious disposition, an irascible or
quarrelsome temper, and the like: and the injunction is to
strike at the root of such dispositions and cut off the
occasions of them.
47. And if thine eye offend thee, pluck it out: it is
better for thee to enter into the kingdom of God with one
eye, than having two eyes to be cast into hell-fire--On
the words "hell" and "hell-fire," or
"the hell of fire," see on Mt
5:22.
48. Where their worm dieth not, and the fire is not
quenched--See on Mt
5:30; The "unquenchablesness" of this fire
has already been brought before us (see on Mt
3:12); and the awfully vivid idea of an undying worm,
everlastingly consuming an unconsumable body, is taken
from the closing words of the evangelical prophet (@Isa
66:24), which seem to have furnished the later Jewish
Church with its current phraseology on the subject of
future punishment (see LIGHTFOOT).
49. For every one shall be salted with fire, and every
sacrifice shall be salted with salt--A difficult
verse, on which much has been written--some of it to
little purpose. "Every one" probably means
"Every follower of mine"; and the
"fire" with which he "must be salted"
probably means "a fiery trial" to season him.
(Compare @Mal
3:2, &c.). The reference to salting the sacrifice
is of course to that maxim of the Levitical law, that
every acceptable sacrifice must be sprinkled with salt, to
express symbolically its soundness, sweetness,
wholesomeness, acceptability. But as it had to be roasted
first, we have here the further idea of a salting with
fire. In this case, "every sacrifice," in the
next clause, will mean, "Every one who would be found
an acceptable offering to God"; and thus the whole
verse may perhaps be paraphrased as follows: "Every
disciple of Mine shall have a fiery trial to undergo, and
everyone who would be found an odor of a sweet smell, a
sacrifice acceptable and well-pleasing to God, must have
such a salting, like the Levitical
sacrifices." Another, but, as it seems to us,
farfetched as well as harsh, interpretation--suggested
first, we believe, by MICHAELIS, and adopted by
ALEXANDER--takes the "every sacrifice which must be
salted with fire" to mean those who are "cast
into hell," and the preservative effect of
this salting to refer to the preservation of the lost not
only in but by means of the fire of hell.
Their reason for this is that the other interpretation
changes the meaning of the "fire," and the
characters too, from the lost to the saved, in these
verses. But as our Lord confessedly ends His discourse
with the case of His own true disciples, the transition to
them in @Mr
9:48 is perfectly natural; whereas to apply the
preservative salt of the sacrifice to the preserving
quality of hell-fire, is equally contrary to the
symbolical sense of salt and the Scripture representations
of future torment. Our Lord has still in His eye the
unseemly jarrings which had arisen among the Twelve, the
peril to themselves of allowing any indulgence to such
passions, and the severe self-sacrifice which salvation
would cost them.
50. Salt is good; but if the salt have lost his
saltness--its power to season what it is brought into
contact with.
wherewith will ye season
it?--How is this property to be restored? See on Mt
5:13.
Have salt in yourselves--See
to it that ye retain in yourselves those precious
qualities that will make you a blessing to one another,
and to all around you.
and--with respect to
the miserable strife out of which all this discourse has
sprung, in one concluding word.
have peace one. with
another--This is repeated in @1Th
5:13.
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