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Hear, O Israel!

Mark 12:28-34 closes out a passage describing a series of debates between Jesus and the important political factions in Jerusalem with one of the scribes asking him, “What is the greatest commandment?” Scribes were not just people who made copies of the Scripture but were considered to be experts on it. Ezra was “a scribe […]

Looking Up

There is a lot of εὐαγγέλιον (eu-ang-el-i-on: good news, gospel) in the story of blind Timaeus Bartimaios, who made his living begging just outside Jericho. I find it interesting that we know him by name, unlike almost every other person Jesus encountered as he travelled through Judea and Samaria. To me this indicates his name […]

Give It Back

In chapter 12 of Mark’s Gospel there is an account of the Pharisees and Herodians laying a trap for Jesus. They imagined he would be backed into a rhetorical corner by their clever question. One answer would allow them to portray him as seditious to the Roman authorities. The opposite would separate him from a […]

Respecting the Son

Toward the end of the Parable of the Vineyard in Mark 12, the vineyard owner sends his son to collect the portion of the fruit due him from the farmers to whom he had leased it. After having sent numerous servants, all of whom had been disrespected, beaten, or even murdered, to accomplish the task, […]

Let Go!

There is a passage in the Gospel of Mark where Peter says to Jesus, “See, we have left everything and followed you.” This sentence contains a Greek word which, in my opinion, is the most profound in the New Testament: ὰφίημι (af-ee’-ay-mee). It’s a compound word, combining the preposition “from” and one of the verbs […]

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