St Mark's Gospel: The Kingdom of God
The Kingdom of God: Three Parables (4:1–9, 14–20; 4:26–29; 4:30–32)
The Kingdom of God (Basileia tou Theou) is a central theme of Mark's Gospel. Jesus announces "The Kingdom of God has come near. Repent and believe the good news" (1:15). The three parables in Mark 4 explore how this kingdom comes and grows.
Parable of the sower (4:1–9, 14–20): Jesus tells of a farmer scattering seed that falls on four types of ground. He later gives his disciples a private explanation:
| Ground | Seed represents | What it means |
|---|---|---|
| Path | Word of God heard but immediately snatched away | Satan takes the message away |
| Rocky ground | Hears with joy but has no root; falls away when trouble comes | No depth; accepts message superficially |
| Thorns | Hears but is choked by "the worries of this life, the deceitfulness of wealth, and the desires for other things" | World crowds out the Kingdom |
| Good soil | Hears, accepts, produces a crop — 30, 60, or 100 times what was sown | Genuine, fruitful discipleship |
Parable of the growing seed (4:26–29): A farmer scatters seed and sleeps while the seed grows by itself — he "does not know how." The earth produces grain on its own (automate — of itself). When the harvest comes, he sends in the sickle. This parable emphasises the mysterious, unstoppable growth of the Kingdom — not driven by human effort but by God's power.
Parable of the mustard seed (4:30–32): The Kingdom is like a mustard seed — "the smallest of all seeds on earth." When planted, it grows into "the largest of all garden plants" with branches large enough for birds to nest in. This parable contrasts insignificant beginnings with enormous impact.
What Does the Kingdom of God Mean? Different Understandings
The spec requires students to know different ways in which the Kingdom of God might be understood. These are not all mutually exclusive.
| Understanding | What it means | Key evidence in Mark |
|---|---|---|
| Present reality | The Kingdom is already here, active in Jesus' ministry, healing, and teaching | "The Kingdom of God has come near" (1:15); exorcisms as signs of Satan's defeat |
| Future hope | The Kingdom will be fully established at the end of time — an eschatological reality | "You will see the Son of Man coming in clouds with great power" (13:26) |
| Personal inner state | The Kingdom begins in a person's heart — repentance and faith bring it into one's inner life | Sower parable: the receptive heart is "good soil" |
| Community | The Kingdom is expressed in communities of justice, service, and love — the church as Kingdom-community | Feeding of 5,000; greatest commandment (12:28–34) |
Most Christian theologians hold that the Kingdom is "already and not yet" — present in Jesus' ministry but awaiting full realisation. Liberation theologians (e.g. Gustavo Gutiérrez) emphasise the Kingdom as a present call to social transformation. Some traditions (e.g. dispensationalist) emphasise the future, literal, earthly kingdom.
For exam questions on the Kingdom of God, identify at least two contrasting understandings and link each to a specific passage or Jesus' teaching.
Jesus and the Children; The Rich Man (10:13–16; 10:17–27)
Jesus and the children (10:13–16): People bring children to Jesus but the disciples rebuke them. Jesus is "indignant" and says: "Let the little children come to me, and do not hinder them, for the kingdom of God belongs to such as these. Truly I tell you, anyone who will not receive the kingdom of God like a little child will never enter it." He then blesses the children.
The passage establishes that Kingdom entry is not through status, achievement, or wealth — but through childlike receptiveness: humility, trust, and dependence. In 1st-century society, children had low social status — Jesus' words are countercultural.
The rich man (10:17–27): A man runs to Jesus and asks: "What must I do to inherit eternal life?" Jesus lists the commandments; the man says he has kept them all. Jesus, looking at him with love, says: "One thing you lack. Go, sell everything you have and give to the poor, and you will have treasure in heaven. Then come, follow me." The man goes away sad because he has great wealth.
Jesus then says: "How hard it is for the rich to enter the kingdom of God!" and "It is easier for a camel to go through the eye of a needle than for a rich man to enter the kingdom of God." The disciples are astonished. Jesus adds: "With man this is impossible, but not with God; all things are possible with God."
This passage should be understood alongside 10:13–16: where children receive humbly, the rich man clings. The emphasis is not that wealth automatically disqualifies but that attachment to it does.
The Greatest Commandment (12:28–34)
A teacher of the law asks Jesus: "Of all the commandments, which is the most important?" Jesus answers with two:
- "Love the Lord your God with all your heart and with all your soul and with all your mind and with all your strength" (Deuteronomy 6:4–5, the Shema)
- "Love your neighbour as yourself" (Leviticus 19:18)
Jesus declares: "There is no commandment greater than these."
The teacher of the law responds approvingly, saying love of God and neighbour is worth "more than all burnt offerings and sacrifices." Jesus tells him: "You are not far from the kingdom of God."
| Element | Significance |
|---|---|
| Quotation of the Shema | Affirms the heart of Jewish monotheism — Jesus stands within tradition |
| Love of neighbour as equal command | Ethics and worship are inseparable — social justice is a religious duty |
| "Not far from the Kingdom" | Intellectual assent alone is insufficient; the man must go further and follow |
| Teacher approves Jesus | Rare positive encounter with a religious leader in Mark |
1st century significance: Jesus synthesised the 613 Torah commands into a double principle — revolutionary in its simplicity. 21st century significance for Christians: the greatest commandment is the basis of Christian social ethics — informing responses to poverty, injustice, and care for others.
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Jesus and Those Disregarded: Leprosy, Tax Collectors, and Outsiders (1:40–45; 2:13–17; 7:24–30)
Jesus repeatedly crosses the social and religious boundaries that excluded people in 1st-century Jewish society.
The man with leprosy (1:40–45): A man with leprosy kneels before Jesus: "If you are willing, you can make me clean." Jesus is "filled with compassion," reaches out, and touches him — breaking the purity laws that required lepers to avoid contact and call out "Unclean! Unclean!" Jesus heals him and instructs him to show himself to the priest (fulfilling the Mosaic law on cleansing). Leprosy in 1st-century Judea was not only a medical condition but a social and religious exclusion.
The call of Levi (2:13–17): Jesus calls Levi, a tax collector, to follow him. He then eats at Levi's house with "many tax collectors and sinners." Pharisees ask the disciples: "Why does he eat with tax collectors and sinners?" Jesus hears and replies: "It is not the healthy who need a doctor, but the sick. I have not come to call the righteous, but sinners."
Tax collectors (telonai) in 1st-century Palestine were Jewish agents of Roman taxation — widely regarded as traitors and collaborators. To eat with them was to declare social solidarity.
The Syro-Phoenician woman's daughter (7:24–30): In Gentile territory, a Greek woman begs Jesus to drive a demon out of her daughter. Jesus initially responds: "First let the children eat all they want, for it is not right to take the children's bread and toss it to the dogs." The woman replies: "Even the dogs under the table eat the children's crumbs." Jesus declares her daughter healed: "For such a reply, you may go; the demon has left your daughter." The daughter is healed at a distance.
This episode is one of the most challenging in Mark — Jesus appears to refuse a Gentile. The woman's faith and reply lead to an extension of healing beyond Jewish boundaries. Significance: Jesus' mission ultimately encompasses Gentiles, despite beginning with Israel.
Healing the Epileptic Boy; The Widow; The Anointing (9:14–29; 12:41–44; 14:1–9)
The epileptic boy (9:14–29): The disciples have failed to heal a boy with an unclean spirit. The father cries: "I do believe; help me overcome my unbelief!" Jesus rebukes the spirit and the boy is healed. When disciples ask why they could not do it, Jesus says: "This kind can come out only by prayer." This passage emphasises the limits of the disciples' faith and the necessity of dependence on God.
The widow at the treasury (12:41–44): Jesus watches people put money into the Temple treasury. Many rich people put in large amounts. A poor widow puts in two small copper coins — the minimum possible. Jesus calls the disciples: "This poor widow has put more into the treasury than all the others. They all gave out of their wealth; but she, out of her poverty, put in everything — all she had to live on."
This passage subverts wealth-as-virtue: true generosity is proportional, not absolute. The widow's gift exceeds all others in terms of sacrifice. Significance: Kingdom values invert the world's assessment of worth.
The anointing at Bethany (14:1–9): While Jesus is dining in Bethany, a woman pours an alabaster jar of expensive perfume (nard) over his head. Disciples object indignantly: this perfume is worth more than a year's wages and should have been given to the poor. Jesus defends her: "She has done a beautiful thing to me. The poor you will have with you, and you can help them whenever you want. But you will not always have me. She did what she could… Wherever the gospel is preached throughout the world, what she has done will also be told, in memory of her."
This woman, unnamed in Mark, is promised lasting remembrance — a promise fulfilled whenever this passage is read. Her act of extravagant love contrasts with Judas' impending betrayal.
Common Exam Mistakes
1. Saying the mustard seed is literally "the smallest seed in the world"
Jesus uses the mustard seed as his audience would have known it — culturally and locally the smallest seed routinely sown. It is not a literal botanical claim. The point is the contrast between small beginnings and great growth.
2. Treating the Syro-Phoenician episode as straightforwardly racist
Jesus' apparent refusal requires careful handling. Some scholars read it as Jesus testing the woman; others as a genuine human moment of boundary that faith overcomes; others as Mark's community working through questions of Gentile inclusion. Present the interpretive range rather than a single verdict.
3. Confusing the widow's coins with the widow at Zarephath
The widow at the treasury (Mark 12:41–44) is a different account from Elijah and the widow of Zarephath (1 Kings 17). Keep these separate.
4. Missing the significance of Jesus touching the leper
The act of touch is the theologically significant act — Jesus is not merely healing but deliberately crossing a purity boundary, signalling that the Kingdom of God overrides ritual exclusion. An answer that only describes the healing and omits the touch misses the main point.
5. Reducing "all things are possible with God" to a general statement
In context (10:27), this refers specifically to the rich entering the Kingdom — which is humanly impossible. The statement is God's ability to transform people's relationship to wealth and possessions, not a general promise about all circumstances.
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