The Gospel of Mark is the shortest of the four
canonical Gospels, and is regarded by many as the first Gospel that was written
and that Matthew and Luke have used Mark extensively in writing their own
Gospels.
Unlike the Gospels of Matthew and Luke, which have
Infancy narratives and a genealogy, Mark has neither. His Gospel begins with
the preaching of John the Baptist, continues with the Baptism of Jesus by John
and then moves on to the public ministry of Jesus in Galilee, which is made up
of preaching and healing. The journey of Jesus to Jerusalem takes up a large
part of Mark’s Gospel. Jesus enters Jerusalem triumphantly, but soon encounters
different groups antagonistic to him and matters soon come to a head resulting
in his passion, crucifixion and death. Mark does not have any resurrection
appearances of Jesus, but has only an episode of the empty tomb. The Gospel ends
quite abruptly. The women who go to tomb to anoint the body of Jesus, which was
not there, are told by a young man at the tomb to tell the disciples that Jesus
would go before them to Galilee. However, the women say nothing to anyone
because they were afraid. Since this seems at first glance a strange way to end
the Gospel, verses 9-16 were added to Chapter 16. That these verses were added
later is confirmed by the fact that the style of these verses is quite
different from the rest of Mark’s Gospel and that these verses are a summary of
the resurrection appearances of Jesus in the other Gospels and the Acts of the
Apostles. Various reasons are offered for the ending of Mark at 16:8. Some of
those who think it was unintentional are of the opinion that the original
ending is lost, others that the author died before he could complete the
Gospel. However, there are others who are of the opinion that Mark deliberately
ended the Gospel at 16, 8 and the reason for this is the connection with the
Messianic secret.
There are certain characteristics that are unique
to Mark’s Gospel. These are as under:
1.
Mark
mentions explicitly and plainly that Jesus was baptised by John in the Jordan
(1:9). While Matthew also mentions that it was John who baptised Jesus, he has
a dialogue between Jesus and John before the Baptism. It is only after Jesus
“grants permission” to John that John baptises him. Luke does not mention who
baptised Jesus except that Jesus was also baptised along with the people. One
possible reason for this is that the Evangelists were struggling with how they
were to narrate the Baptism of Jesus and that too at the hands of John who in
all the Gospels is inferior to Jesus. Thus it is assumed that Matthew and Luke
writing after Mark made changes to the Marcan text. This is also given as one
reason for the priority of Mark and the historicity of the Baptism of Jesus.
2.
The
testing of Jesus in the wilderness does not have a dialogue between Jesus and
Satan (1:12-13) like Matthew and Luke have. Mark is the only one of the three
who mentions wild beats in his narrative (1:14).
3.
Jesus’
saying “The Sabbath was made for man, not man for the Sabbath” (2:27) is found
only in Mark. It is possible that Matthew and Luke found this saying too
radical to include in their Gospels.
4.
Mark’s
is the only Gospel in which the family of Jesus come to restrain him because
they think he has lost his mind (3:21-22). Matthew and Luke omit this scene
from their narratives.
5.
Mark
is the only writer in the New Testament who refers to Jesus as “son of Mary”
(6:3). Though some think that Mark refers to Jesus in this manner because
Joseph was dead by that time, a more probable explanation is that the
townspeople of Jesus wanted to insult him by using this title. They could be
saying that they knew who his mother was, but not his father.
6.
Only
in Mark among the Synoptic Gospels does Jesus twice use external methods to
cure (7:31-37 and 8:22-26). In the first of the two, one probable explanation
is that since Jesus is in Gentile territory, he uses the methods of Gentile
faith healers. In the second, since Mark alone has the scene where Jesus asks
the disciples about his identity (8:27-30) immediately after this miracle, he
could be comparing the two stages of the man’s healing to the two answers that
are given about Jesus’ identity.
7.
The
disciples’ in Mark are shown in a very poor light. Though they travel with
Jesus and are with him constantly, they are not able to understand who he
really is despite numerous explanations that Jesus gives about himself and his
mission.
8.
Mark’s
Gospel is known as the Gospel of the Messianic Secret, which is connected with
the command to silence. Often in the Gospel, those who are healed are commanded
or warned not to tell anyone who healed them and demons are always commanded
not to make the identity of Jesus known. The explanation for this which has
found favour with many is that Jesus did not want to be known only as a wonder
worker or exorcist, but as the suffering son of God. This is also why after the
first Passion and Resurrection prediction (8:31), there is no command to
silence {except when they come down from the mountain of Transfiguration and
here a time limit is set namely “until the Son of Man should have risen from
the dead” (9:9)}.
9.
Son
of Man is the major title used of Jesus in Mark. Jesus refers to himself as Son
of Man a number of times in the Gospel (Mark 2:10, 2:28; 8:31; 9:9, 9:12, 9:31;
10:33, 10:45; 14:21, 14:41). Many have seen that this title is a very important
one within Mark’s Gospel, and it has important implications for Mark’s
Christology.
10.
Mark
often uses in his Gospel what is known as “Sandwich construction”. This means
that an incident is begun, interrupted with another incident that is completed,
and then the first incomplete and interrupted incident is completed.
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