St Mark's Gospel: The Ministry of Jesus
John's Preparation, Baptism and Temptation (1:1–13)
Mark's Gospel opens without a birth narrative — it begins with John the Baptist preparing the way for Jesus (1:1–8). Mark quotes Isaiah 40:3 ("a voice crying in the wilderness: prepare the way of the Lord") to present John as the prophesied forerunner. John baptises in the Jordan, calling people to repentance. He announces that one "more powerful" is coming who will baptise "with the Holy Spirit."
Jesus' baptism (1:9–11): Jesus comes from Nazareth and is baptised by John. As he comes out of the water, he sees the heavens torn open and the Spirit descending "like a dove." A voice from heaven declares: "You are my Son, whom I love; with you I am well pleased." This is the first use of the title Son of God in Mark — asserted by God himself.
Jesus' temptation (1:12–13): Immediately after baptism, the Spirit drives Jesus into the desert for 40 days where he is tempted by Satan. Angels minister to him. Mark's account is brief compared to Matthew/Luke — no detail of the temptations is given, only their fact.
(Extra context — Matthew 4:1–11 and Luke 4:1–13 give the three named temptations; AQA only requires Mark's version.)
| Passage | Key event | Significance |
|---|---|---|
| 1:1–8 | John prepares the way | Jesus fulfils Old Testament prophecy |
| 1:9–11 | Baptism — voice and dove | God publicly identifies Jesus as Son |
| 1:12–13 | Temptation in the desert | Jesus faces evil and is sustained |
Early Ministry: Healing, Authority and Rejection (2:1–12; 5:21–43; 6:1–6)
The paralysed man (2:1–12): Friends lower a paralysed man through a roof to reach Jesus. Jesus first says "Son, your sins are forgiven" — which shocks the scribes, who argue only God can forgive sins. Jesus then heals the man physically, saying "But that you may know that the Son of Man has authority on earth to forgive sins…" and commands the man to walk. This passage presents Jesus with both healing and forgiving authority, and introduces conflict with religious leaders.
Jairus' daughter (5:21–24a, 35–43): Jairus, a synagogue ruler, begs Jesus to heal his dying daughter. While Jesus is on his way, word arrives that the girl has died. Jesus says "Don't be afraid, just believe" and continues. At the house he takes the girl's hand and says "Talitha koum" (Aramaic: "little girl, get up"). She rises. Jesus instructs her parents to give her food and says nothing to anyone. Mark preserves the Aramaic phrase, suggesting an early eyewitness source.
Rejection at Nazareth (6:1–6): In his home town, people are astonished at Jesus' wisdom but take offence at him — "Isn't this the carpenter? Mary's son?" Jesus says: "A prophet is not without honour except in his own town, among his relatives and in his own home." He performs few miracles there because of their lack of faith. This passage shows Jesus' humanity (known locally) and the role of faith in encountering him.
The Feeding of the Five Thousand (6:30–44)
The feeding of the five thousand (6:30–44) is the only miracle of Jesus recorded in all four Gospels, marking it as a particularly significant tradition.
The disciples return from their mission and Jesus takes them to a quiet place. A large crowd follows. Jesus has "compassion" on them because they are "like sheep without a shepherd." He teaches them, then feeds them with 5 loaves and 2 fish, provided by the disciples. Jesus takes the loaves, looks to heaven, blesses and breaks them. All 5,000 men (plus women and children) eat, and 12 baskets of fragments are collected.
Significance:
| Detail | Possible significance |
|---|---|
| Compassion on the crowd | Jesus as the good shepherd (Ezekiel 34) |
| Looking to heaven and blessing | Echoes of Eucharistic action; foreshadows Last Supper |
| 12 baskets left over | 12 tribes of Israel; abundance beyond expectation |
| 5,000 fed | Moses fed Israel in the wilderness — Jesus as a new Moses |
Contrasting views on historicity:
- Traditional Christian view: a supernatural multiplication of food, demonstrating Jesus' divine power over nature.
- Rationalist explanation: Jesus' example inspired the crowd to share food they had brought; the miracle was one of generosity rather than multiplication.
- Historical-critical view: the narrative drew on Elisha's feeding miracle (2 Kings 4:42–44) and was developed theologically; its primary significance is theological, not reportorial.
Caesarea Philippi and the Transfiguration (8:27–33; 9:2–9)
Caesarea Philippi (8:27–33) is the pivotal scene of Mark's Gospel. Jesus asks his disciples: "Who do people say I am?" They report popular views: John the Baptist, Elijah, or one of the prophets. Jesus then asks: "But who do you say I am?" Peter answers: "You are the Messiah/Christ." Jesus orders them to tell no one — the Messianic Secret, a distinctive feature of Mark's Gospel.
Jesus then begins to teach that the Son of Man must suffer, be rejected, be killed, and rise again — the first passion prediction. Peter rebukes him. Jesus rebukes Peter: "Get behind me, Satan! You do not have in mind the concerns of God, but merely human concerns." Peter expected a conquering Messiah; Jesus defines the role differently.
The Transfiguration (9:2–9): Six days later, Jesus takes Peter, James, and John up a high mountain. Jesus is transformed (metamorphoo — transfigured) before them: his clothes become "dazzling white, whiter than anyone in the world could bleach them." Moses and Elijah appear and talk with him. Peter offers to build three shelters. A cloud appears and a voice says: "This is my Son, whom I love. Listen to him!" — the second divine affirmation of Sonship in Mark. Jesus commands silence.
| Element | Significance |
|---|---|
| Moses and Elijah | Law and Prophets fulfilled in Jesus |
| Cloud | Symbol of God's presence (Shekinah) in Hebrew scripture |
| "Listen to him" | Jesus supersedes even Moses — the voice of ultimate authority |
| Three disciples | Peter, James and John — the inner circle, also present at Gethsemane |
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Later Ministry: Service, Faith and Entry to Jerusalem (10:32–52; 11:1–11)
Jesus' passion prediction (10:32–34): The third and most detailed passion prediction — Jesus tells the Twelve explicitly: the Son of Man will be betrayed to the chief priests and teachers of the law. They will condemn him to death and hand him over to the Gentiles, who will mock him, spit on him, flog him, and kill him. Three days later he will rise. The disciples are described as astonished and afraid.
Request of James and John (10:35–45): James and John ask to sit at Jesus' right and left hand in glory. Jesus asks if they can drink "the cup I drink" (suffer as he will suffer) — they say yes. Jesus says this is not his to grant, but belonging to it falls to those it is prepared for. To the indignant other disciples, Jesus teaches: "Whoever wants to become great among you must be your servant… For even the Son of Man did not come to be served, but to serve, and to give his life as a ransom for many."
This verse (10:45) is theologically crucial: it presents Jesus' death as a ransom — a deliberate act of self-giving service, not a defeat.
Bartimaeus (10:46–52): A blind beggar, Bartimaeus, calls out: "Jesus, Son of David, have mercy on me!" — using a messianic title. Jesus heals him on the basis of his faith: "Go, your faith has healed you." Bartimaeus immediately follows Jesus. This is significant as the last healing before the entry into Jerusalem.
Entry into Jerusalem (11:1–11): Jesus rides into Jerusalem on a colt — an animal no one has ridden. Crowds spread cloaks and branches, shouting "Hosanna! Blessed is he who comes in the name of the Lord! Blessed is the coming kingdom of our father David!" — acclaiming Jesus as the Davidic Messiah. The deliberate choice of an unridden colt suggests a conscious, humble claim to kingship. (The Zechariah 9:9 fulfilment quotation appears in Matthew 21:4–5, not in Mark.)
The Titles of Jesus in Mark's Gospel
Mark's Gospel employs four key titles for Jesus. The spec requires you to understand what each meant for 1st century Jews, how Jesus himself used and understood each title (as shown in Mark), and what each means for 21st century Christians.
| Title | Meaning for 1st century Jews | Jesus' own use in Mark | Significance for 21st century Christians |
|---|---|---|---|
| Son of Man | Human figure (Ezekiel); apocalyptic figure from Daniel 7:13 who comes on clouds with authority | Jesus' most frequent self-designation in Mark. Used when predicting his suffering (8:31, 9:31, 10:33), asserting his authority (2:10, 2:28), and describing his future coming (13:26). Its ambiguity may be deliberate — both human vulnerability and divine authority | Jesus as fully human and divinely authoritative; he chose a term that transcended political messianic expectation |
| Son of God | Davidic king; close relationship with God; righteous Israel | Rarely claimed by Jesus himself in Mark. Declared by God (1:11, 9:7) and recognised by demons (1:24). At his trial Jesus accepts it (14:62). The Messianic Secret suggests Jesus avoided public use of it | Christians affirm this as Jesus' divine nature — the second person of the Trinity |
| Christ / Messiah | Anointed one — expected Davidic king who would restore Israel's political independence | Peter's declaration (8:29) is accepted but immediately redefined: the Messiah must suffer and be rejected (8:31). Jesus redefines messiahship as suffering servanthood, not conquest | Fulfilled in Jesus as the suffering, dying, and rising servant; the Messiah who liberates from sin rather than political oppression |
| Son of David | Royal descendant of David; the expected Messiah who would restore the Davidic kingdom | Bartimaeus calls Jesus this (10:47); crowds acclaim it at the entry (11:10). Significantly, Jesus then questions whether the Messiah even need be David's son (12:35–37) — suggesting he both fulfils and transcends this category | Jesus fulfils the Davidic line but in a spiritual and eternal, not political, sense |
Jesus as teacher and miracle worker: Mark presents a dual portrait. Jesus teaches with "authority, not like the scribes" (1:22) and performs miracles that demonstrate the in-breaking of God's kingdom. Two contrasting views:
- Traditional/orthodox view: The miracles are historical events demonstrating Jesus' divine nature — genuine supernatural interventions.
- Liberal/historical-critical view: The miracles are theological statements about Jesus' identity, expressed in the narrative forms of the day. What matters is the meaning they convey, not their literal historicity.
Common Exam Mistakes
1. Confusing the three passion predictions
Mark 8:31 (first — "must suffer"), 9:31 (second — brief), and 10:32–34 (third — most detailed, mentions Gentiles specifically). Questions may ask which prediction is being described — give the chapter and verse.
2. Saying Jesus "performed miracles to prove he was God"
Mark's Jesus does not perform miracles for proof — he often commands silence afterwards (the Messianic Secret). A stronger answer links miracles to the Kingdom of God breaking in, or to Jesus' compassion, rather than to proof of divinity.
3. Misquoting "Talitha koum"
The Aramaic phrase means "little girl, get up" — not "little girl, arise to eternal life" or any extended reading. Use the exact phrase and translation.
4. Treating Peter's confession as unambiguous approval
Peter confesses Jesus as Messiah but immediately rebukes Jesus' passion prediction, and is himself rebuked. The passage shows both insight and misunderstanding — not simple triumph.
5. Forgetting what the Transfiguration voice says
The heavenly voice at the baptism says "You are my Son" (to Jesus). At the Transfiguration it says "This is my Son, listen to him" (to the disciples). The difference is significant — the Transfiguration directs the disciples to Jesus' authority.
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