Gospel Meditation # 181 The Twelve Apostles

GOSPEL MEDITATION # 181

The Twelve Apostles

Mark 3:13-21

  1. Find a quiet place without distractions.
  2. Be comfortably alert, still, and at peace.
  3. Say the Lord’s Prayer. Sing or cant the Jesus Prayer.
  4. Pray for family, friends, neighbors, and yourself.
  5. Slowly and carefully read the passage of Scripture.
  6. From memory, determine the central points.
  7. What mountain Jesus ascended before He called the disciples to be apostles is not known but could be mount of the Sermon.
  8. He “called to him” is a very key phrase. John 15:16 explains it also. On what basis is the call dependent? No one knows except that it is those who Jesus “desired.” It certainly was not based on skill, faithfulness, or grand future achievements.
  9. Jesus appointed the twelve, which is like saying “ordained” them and carries the idea of ‘setting aside.’
  10. Jesus named them “apostles” and this means ‘sent ones’ or missionaries. Their job was to proclaim the Gospel of the kingdom of God.
  11. But before the commission of sending the twelve would be “with him.” This is first and foremost. They would be disciples or learners before they would be apostles.
  12. Herein is the reason for the teaching ministry of the Church, that is to equip the Church for the work of ministry. (see Ephesians 4:11-16) This is why churches have Bible Studies, expositional sermons and the reason for Bible colleges and seminaries.
  13. Jesus sends them to “PREACH” and along with it to cast out demons. The connection is not apparent on the surface, but those sent to preach know how vital is the work of casting out of demons. The devil attacks the Church’s sent ones.
  14. The Twelve included Judas who betrayed Him. We will likely never understand why Jesus did this.
  15. The Adversary attacked Jesus and the newly appointed Twelve immediately – overwhelmed by needy people.
  16. Jesus’ family, probably including Mary, watching events, concluded their own was insane and made an attempt at an intervention. No one can grasp this stunning event.

Gospel Meditation #180

GOSPEL MEDITATION #180

Mark 3:1-12

A Man with a Withered Hand and

A Great Crowd Follows Jesus

  1. Find a quiet place without distractions.
  2. Be comfortably alert, still, and at peace.
  3. Say the Lord’s Prayer. Sing or cant the Jesus Prayer.
  4. Pray for family, friends, neighbors, and yourself.
  5. Slowly and carefully read the passage of Scripture.
  6. From memory, determine the central points.
  7. A Sabbath, which for pious Jews meant no work on that day. Even healing would have been considered work.
  8. Was the man a ‘plant’? There were enemies of Jesus

there who wanted to accuse Him.

  1. Jesus was angry, and grieved, at the hard heartedness of

those who would accuse Him. A righteous anger?

  1. The healing produced a deadly, unrighteous anger in

Jesus’ enemies and they, the Pharisees and Herodians,

who would ordinarily have been at odds with each other,

now unite against Jesus and want to destroy (kill) Him.

  1. In sharp contrast, large crowds are attracted to Jesus.

These came from all over that part of the world save

Samaria, where there was a rival religious system.

  1. Jesus, perhaps sensing the danger from the large throng,

had a small boat ready for Him. Likely He pushed off a

little from the shore and taught from there.

  1. There were healings and demons cast out. The demons

were the ones who knew who Jesus was, incredibly, and

He refuse their testimony. What a turn of events.

Gospel Meditation # 192 Mark 6:45-56

GOSPEL MEDITATION # 192

The Gospel of Mark #23

Jesus walks of the Water and

Jesus Heals the Sick in Gennesaret

  1. Find a quiet place, alone and apart from distractions.
  2. Be comfortably alert, still and at peace.
  3. Say the Lord’s Prayer. Sing or cant the Jesus Prayer

4          Pray for family, friends, neighbors, and yourself.

  1. Slowly and carefully read the passage of Scripture.
  2. Reread it. From memory, determine the central points.
  3. Jesus needed to create distance between Himself and the Twelve. There was a danger into being forced to declare His Messiahship following the great miracle.
  4. The disciple may have wondered why they had been sent away, but then between 3 and 6am there came Jesus walking on the water.
  5. In 1 Corinthians 12 4-11, we find one of Holy Spirit gifts is miracles, and the feeding and the walking fit.
  6. He would have passed by except for the invitation; seems Jesus waits for the invitation with us too.
  7. A ghost, a “phantasma” from the Greek; the disciples had plenty of cultural and superstitious baggage yet.
  8. Not really grasping the 5000 fed, they were again astounded when the wind ceased.
  9. Gennesaret, a very fertile valley 1 and ½ miles west of the sea of Galilee that stretched south 3 and ½ miles—again the crowds caught up with the Jesus and the twelve, which is understandable given the incredible miracles they had witnessed—and again, no time to rest and teach.

14.       We are desperate when something touches our body; rarely are we troubled when the illness has to do with the heart. And when so, the troubling is a gift of the Holy Spirit. This must be the healing we seek from

Gospel Meditation # 179 Jesus is Lord of the Sabbath

GOSPEL MEDITATION # 179

Mark 2: 23-28

Jesus is Lord of the Sabbath

 

  1. Find a quiet place without distractions.
  2. Be comfortably alert, still, and at peace.
  3. Say the Lord’s Prayer. Sing or cant the Jesus Prayer.
  4. Pray for family, friends, neighbors, and yourself.
  5. Slowly and carefully read the passage of Scripture.
  6. From memory, determine the central points.
  7. Sabbath, the 7th day, God rested or ceased His creating work. Rules abounded around it and created impossible situation for common people.
  8. The legalists must have been tracking Jesus and accused Him of breaking Sabbath law when He and His disciples ‘gleaned’ food from the fields that were purposefully left for the poor.
  9. The Pharisees did not care if the people went hungry; their concern was breaking the Sabbath law and gleaning of the wheat was considered work.
  10. Religious people love law keeping; makes us feel good while ignoring heart felt worship and love for God and others.
  11. And we are all tending to this; faith and love are so much more intangible. Rules and more rules is the way of the world.
  12. Jesus was not promoting lawlessness; rather His intent was to teach mercy and human kindness.
  13. David and his followers were desperately hungry when they came across the old Tabernacle and there on the table was the Bread of the Presence. 2 rows, each loaves per row, directed in the Torah to be baked each Sabbath, new replacing the old.
  14. The old six would be thrown out and David and his men seized 6 loaves and ate them. The story in 1 Samuel 21 was know to all. Sabbath laws were heartless and damaging to humans.
  15. Jesus used the historical example as if it were intended to be prophetic and dramatized the fact that He was in fact Lord of the Sabbath.

Gospel Meditation #178

GOSPEL MEDITATION #178

Mark 2:18-22 – A Question About Fasting

  1. Find a quiet place without distractions.
  2. Be comfortably alert, still, and at peace.
  3. Say the Lord’s Prayer. Sing or cant the Jesus Prayer.
  4. Pray for family, friends, neighbors, and yourself.
  5. Slowly and carefully read the passage of Scripture.
  6. From memory, determine the central points.
  7. The Day of Atonement – Leviticus 23:26-32 – was a day of fasting. For how long and both food and drink or food only – we do not know the actual nature of the practice.
  8. Fasting took on a life of its own and became so strange that Jesus commented on in Matthew 6:16-18 and pointed out that it had became a religious show.
  9. The Prophet Isaiah, 58:1-14, had done much the same nearly 8 centuries earlier.
  10. The Pharisees and John the Baptist’s followers fasted. Jesus’ followers did not so came the “WHY? Question.
  11. It was intended to fix blame, but Jesus gave three quick answers.
  12. He, the bridegroom was with the guests and a celebration was underway – no fasting.
  13. Unshrunk cloth is not to be put on old clothes as a patch when washed, a tear will be the result– Jesus’ words and deeds are unshrunk or new cloth.
  14. Old wineskins, already stretched by fermenting juice, must be used only one time. New wine requires new wineskins.
  15. Fasting was something that developed over the centuries and is not among the commandments. But religious people like rules and rituals so fasting took on a life of its own.
  16. Jesus points to a time, verse 20, when His followers will fast. That fast is described in Mark 8:34.

 

Gospel Meditation # 177 Mark 2:13-17, Jesus Calls Levi

GOSPEL MEDITATION #177

Mark 2:13-17 Jesus Calls Levi

  1. Find a quiet place without distractions.
  2. Be comfortably alert, still, and at peace.
  3. Say the Lord’s Prayer. Sing or cant the Jesus Prayer.
  4. Pray for family, friends, neighbors, and yourself.
  5. Slowly and carefully read the passage of Scripture.
  6. From memory, determine the central points.
  7. Crowds are hearing Jesus teaching, here by the Sea of Galilee, likely near to Capernaum.
  8. Levi, otherwise known as Matthew which is likely a nickname and means “gift of Yahweh”.
  9. “Son of Alphaeus” – his father’s name is Alphaeus –James, another disciple, also had a father named Alphaeus. (see Matthew 10:3) Matthew and James not brothers though, or so it is thought by most scholars.
  10. Tax booth, at Capernaum, which was one of 3 main tax collecting stations set up by the Romans to tax traders heading to and from Egypt. The others being at Jericho and Caesarea. Levi would be a sub-contractor and would have employees present to act as security.
  11. “Follow me” – a command and Levi obeyed, instantly.
  12. Levi threw a big party and his friends and associates

showed up – a bunch of sinners despised by Pharisees.

  1. The blaming question, “why” is on the lips of the legalists.

After the healing of the paralytic, the religious authorities

would be looking for ammunition to show that Jesus is not

reputable.

  1. Note that Jesus had no problem with being in, and eating

with, the very lowest of the low.

  1. Jesus’ response was that He was in fact doing what He

came to do – to call sinners to Himself.

  1. Jesus only calls sinners to Himself. They alone will seek

forgiveness. Those, clothed in their own righteousness, will

never seek Jesus.

  1. A sinner – the first spiritual truth we learn.

Gospel Meditation # 176 Jesus Heals a Paralytic Mark 2:1-12

GOSPEL MEDITATION #176

The Gospel of Mark

Jesus heals a Paralytic — Mark 2:1-12

  1. Find a quiet place without distractions.
  2. Be comfortably alert, still, and at peace.
  3. Say the Lord’s Prayer. Sing or cant the Jesus Prayer
  4. Pray for family, friends, neighbors, and yourself.
  5. Slowly and carefully read the passage of Scripture.
  6. Reread it. From memory, determine the central points.
  7. Jesus at home, question is, His or Peter’s.
  8. Whenever healing is reported, crowds gather.
  9. Jesus was preaching, not healing however.
  10. Four guys had a dear friend they wanted to bring to Jesus.
  11. With great boldness they did something unusual, they took apart a roof and lowered their friend down to Jesus.
  12. Jesus’ response: “My son, your sins are forgiven.” Let it be noted that the Greek simply has teknon meaning child.
  13. Scribes, doctors of the Law, saw Jesus’ statement as blasphemy as they knew only God can forgive sin, this only by means of a proper sacrifice.
  14. Jesus knew what was in their hearts, possibly by means of the charismatic gift of knowledge. (see 1 Cor. 12:8)
  15. Jesus wanted the scribes to know that what He said was true by healing the paralytic completely.
  16. To bring the point home, He asked which was easier – to forgive or heal. Of course, the idea is, well it is fine to forgive sins but that was an empty gesture at minimum.
  17. The man who could not walk did and also lugged his mattress home with him — no other proof needed.
  18. For sure, no one had ever seen anything like it. The point, the lesson, Jesus had in mind was that He was far more than a healer, He had authority, there and then, to forgive sin.

 

Gospel Meditation, Jesus Heals a Man with an Unclean Spirit, Mark 1:21-34

GOSPEL MEDITATION # 174

Mark 1:21-34

Jesus heals a man with an unclean spirit &

Jesus heals many

  1. Find a quiet place, alone and apart from distractions.
  2. Be comfortably alert, still and at peace.
  3. Say the Lord’s Prayer. Sing or cant the Jesus Prayer
  4. Pray for family, friends, neighbors, and yourself.
  5. Slowly and carefully read the passages of Scripture.
  6. Reread them. From memory, determine the central points.
  7. Jesus teaching in a synagogue in Capernaum, may indicated that Jesus was somewhat known. It has been suggested that Jesus had relocated to that city.
  8. Jesus’ presence stirred up a demon in a man who was ‘demonized’. The demon(s) knew Jesus was the “Holy One of God” in startling contrast to anyone else present.
  9. Jesus told “them” to be silent and come out of the demonized man.
  10. It was not neat and clean; there was a commotion and loud screaming from the man as the demons fought their exit.
  11. This ‘exorcism’ was far different than anything the observers had experienced before. Here was someone with authority. And Jesus’s fame spread.
  12. Leaving the synagogue He entered the home of the brothers Peter and Andrew, which must have been less than a Sabbath’s walk away from the synagogue. James and John were also present, and the four constituted all of Jesus’ disciples at that point.
  13. Peter’s mother was ill, she had a fever, and the family told Jesus about it. He took her by the hand, lifted her up, and the fever left her – she was healed. She was strong enough, immediately, that she commenced to serve them.
  14. The word spread, about both the expelling of demons and the healing, so that people needing help descended upon Jesus at Peter’s family home.

Jesus Calls the First Disciples

GOSPEL MEDITATION # 173

Jesus Calls the First Disciples

Mark 1:16-20

  1. Find a quiet place, alone and apart from distractions.
  2. Be comfortably alert, still and at peace.
  3. Say the Lord’s Prayer. Sing or cant the Jesus Prayer
  4. Pray for family, friends, neighbors, and yourself.
  5. Slowly and carefully read the passage of Scripture.
  6. Reread it. From memory, determine the central points.
  7. Baptized by John, tempted by Satan, arriving back in Nazareth of Galilee, Jesus begins to call disciples.
  8. No one of the Twelve volunteered; they all were called or chosen by Jesus directly.
  9. Jesus had met Andrew and Simon (Peter), and likely James and John, at the time of the baptism by John.
  10. Perhaps Jesus had asked about where they lived and worked. He sought them out. First Andrews and Peter.
  11. “Follow Me” Jesus said, and this served as an invitation to join Him as a disciple. Generally students applied directly to rabbis in order to join their rabbinical school.
  12. “Fishers of men” – a metaphor, not to be taken literally. Now people, whom the Father seeks and loves, will be the focus of the rest of their lives.
  13. Immediately they followed Jesus. Likely they returned home to say goodbye and pack a bag. Not told this though.
  14. Then James and John – two sets of brothers, all fisherman, and who probably knew each other.
  1. It is an adventure of the highest order to follow Jesus, one

from which we never retire. And Jesus is always walking

just ahead of us, encouraging us along the way.

 

Mark 1:9-15

GOSPEL MEDITATION #172

Mark 1:9-15

The Baptism, Temptation and Beginning of Jesus’s Ministry

  1. Find a quiet place, alone and apart from distractions.
  2. Be comfortably alert, still and at peace.
  3. Say the Lord’s Prayer. Sing or cant the Jesus Prayer
  4. Pray for family, friends, neighbors, and yourself.
  5. Slowly and carefully read the passage of Scripture.
  6. Reread it. From memory, determine the central points.
  7. Jesus submits to John’s baptism, and no one is sure exactly why. He did not need cleansing from sin.
  8. John at first refused to baptize Jesus, but then Jesus responded that it was “to fulfill all righteousness.” (see Matthew 3:15) It remains a mystery.
  9. The voice from heaven, the Father, affirms the Son, and not only to those present but also to and for Jesus, the Son.
  10. Verse 11 is a sharp reminder that Jesus is completely human as well as deity, the paradox of the God-man.
  11. Here again we see the humanity of the Messiah, being tempted, and by the devil in fact. Was it possible for Jesus to fall into the temptation: the answer must be yes. If not, Jesus would be a ‘fake’ man like the Gnostics reasoned.
  12. “Forty days” – may be taken symbolically as forty for a symbol for that which was dreadful.
  13. Angels ministered to Jesus, and in what manner we do not know and it is not helpful to attempt to fill in the gaps.
  14. John is arrested soon after the baptism, perhaps the plan of God since John’s ministry was completed.
  15. Jesus begins now with the declaration that the kingdom of God is at hand, or begun. Where Jesus is, there is the kingdom.
  16. Repent and believe in the gospel – nothing has changed.