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A Solitary Place

April 29, 2019 by Andrew Forrest in Gospels 2019

Reading Mark, one gets the sense of how exhausting ministry must have been for Jesus. This is why he routinely tells people--and even the demons--to keep quiet about his identity: when word gets out--as it inevitably does--he is hounded by the crowds.

I'm not thronged by crowds when I leave the house, and neither are you. But, I do face a challenge Jesus did not face: through the little phone in my pocket and the access it provides to the wider world, millions of people are clamoring for my attention.

If Jesus needed to withdraw to a solitary place to be alone in the mornings, what about us?

(And don't take your phone with you.)

Today's Scripture

Mark 1:29-45


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April 29, 2019 /Andrew Forrest
Gospel of Mark, Gospels 2019, Mark 1, Mark 1:29-45, Mark 1:35, Silence, Solitude
Gospels 2019
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Jesus & the Demonic

April 28, 2019 by Andrew Forrest in Gospels 2019

Mark tells us that the central message of Jesus was that the Kingdom of God has arrived through him. This message provokes immediate conflict, and one of the forms this conflict takes in Mark's Gospel is spiritual conflict with the demonic powers. For many modern Americans, the idea of demonic oppression is lunacy. Yet, I don't think you can read Mark and conclude that the conflict Jesus has with demons is merely metaphorical. I have personally never seen a demon, but I do know that Christians in other parts of the world have a much wider view of spiritual conflict than most Americans, and I know enough about life to admit that there do seem to be evil forces at work warping and tempting human desires. That said, however, the point of today's reading is not the reality of evil, but the power of Christ over evil. I find this comforting: Jesus is stronger. Period.

Today’s Scripture

Mark 1:14-28

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April 28, 2019 /Andrew Forrest
Demoniac, demons, Gospel of Mark, Gospels 2019, Kingdom of God, Mark 1, Mark 1:14-28, spiritual warfare
Gospels 2019
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The Gospel According to Mark

April 26, 2019 by Andrew Forrest in Gospels 2019

For the next 2 months, I'm going to be reading and blogging through the Gospel of Mark. Here's what you need to know.

These Are Saint Peter's Memoirs

The earliest tradition we have (dating from the end of the 1st century AD!) links Mark to the Apostle Peter, and Marks's Gospel is filled with the kind of eyewitness details that one would expect from Peter's preaching: details that do not make any difference to the plot, but are the kind odd details an eyewitness would remember. For example, when Jesus is about to feed the 5,000, Mark tells us, "Then he commanded them all to sit down on the green grass" (Mark 6:39, emphasis added), or when Jesus heals Jairus's daughter, Mark, who is writing in Greek, records the Aramaic phrase that Jesus actually used: "Taking her by the hand he said to her, 'Talitha cumi,' which means, 'Little girl, I say to you, arise'" (Mark 5:41). Neither the detail about the green grass nor the recounting of Jesus's literal words makes any difference to the story; they are the kind of details that Peter the eyewitness would never forget. There are many more eyewitness details like this.

Mark Has Arranged Peter's Preaching to Make a Point

And yet Mark has done more than just put down on paper Peter’s eyewitness testimony about Jesus: Mark has shaped his material to bring a particular question into prominence. That question is the central question of history, Who Is Jesus? That is the question that Jesus puts to Peter, “Who do you say that I am?” (Mark 8:29), and it is the question that ultimately every person must answer for himself or herself.

Mark's is the Shortest Gospel

Mark begins not with the birth of Jesus--as do Matthew and Luke--nor with a meditation on on the cosmic significance of Jesus--as does John. Rather, Mark begins with the wild prophet John the Baptist baptizing the adult Jesus in the Judean Wilderness. From that startling beginning, Mark's Gospel hurtles forward, skipping over much of the teaching material in the other gospels (there is no "Sermon on the Mount" in Mark, e.g.) and the famous parables of Jesus, all leading up to the horrifying crucifixion of the Son of God. Mark's is a mysterious, powerful little book.

Let's Begin

And so, I'd like to invite you to read along with me each weekday, starting today and finishing on Tuesday, July 2. Each day's reading will take less than 5 minutes to read--you can do this. To help, each weekday I'll write a brief reflection on that day's reading. Here's today's:

The baptism of Jesus in the River Jordan by John the Baptist seems to have been one of the spiritual highpoints of Jesus's life, and the moment when his identity of the incarnate Son of God was confirmed:

9 At that time Jesus came from Nazareth in Galilee and was baptized by John in the Jordan. 10 Just as Jesus was coming up out of the water, he saw heaven being torn open and the Spirit descending on him like a dove. 11 And a voice came from heaven: “You are my Son, whom I love; with you I am well pleased.”

Mark 1:9-11

And yet immediately after that moment of spiritual intensity, the Holy Spirit leads Jesus into the desert to be tested:

12 At once the Spirit sent him out into the wilderness, 13 and he was in the wilderness forty days, being tempted by Satan. He was with the wild animals, and angels attended him.

Mark 1:12-13

Here's the point: don't make the mistake of thinking that the hard times you're facing mean that the Lord has abandoned you. In fact, it might be because of his love for you that the hard times have come: diamonds are only made when pressure is applied.

Today's Scripture

Mark 1:1-15

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In addition to my weekday blogging on Mark's Gospel, I also write occasionally about other topics. Subscribe here to be notified when I publish a new post.

P.S. All Subscribers Will Get My Free Whitepaper!

If you sign up for my Andrew Forrest newsletter, I’ll send you a white paper I’ve written called “The Simple Technique Anyone Can Immediately Use to Become a Better Communicator”.

April 26, 2019 /Andrew Forrest
Baptism of Jesus, eyewitnesses, Gospel of Mark, Gospels 2019, John the Baptist, Mark 1, Mark 1:1-15, Memoirs of St- Peter, Temptation
Gospels 2019
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