Bible Commentaries
Expositor's Dictionary of Texts
Mark 11
Mark 11:7
Nature is thoroughly mediate. It is made to serve. It receives the dominion of man as meekly as the ass on which the Saviour rode. It offers all its kingdoms to man as the raw material which he may mould into what is useful.
—Emerson.
Reference.—XI:9 , 10.—W. J. Butler, Sermons for Working Men, The Oxford Sermon Library, vol. ii. p200.
The Profanation of the Temple
Mark 11:11
What was it that Jesus Christ saw in the Temple? What was it that He determined to cleanse on that day of His wrath which was coming, that day which began with the withered fig-tree and ended with flying barterers, overturned counters, scattered sheep and oxen?
I. He saw meaningless formalism. The sheep and oxen were in the Temple courts for a religious purpose, and the changers are there that nothing but the Temple shekel might intrude upon the reverence due to holy things, and yet Jesus Christ turns out both one and the other. Why is it? There is nothing to compare with the irreverence of habit when we let religion get into a mechanical groove to such an extent that we lose all sense of the object of our religious worship. Surely it has reached the height of irony when He to Whom all worship pointed, He Who was the true Lamb of God, He Who initiated and appointed the service of the Temple for Himself, must stand there alone and unknown in His Temple, and He to Whom Israel looked as their peace, should be constrained to visit Israel only in wrath.
II. His eye lightens on a more positive insult still to His Father's house. The sheep and the oxen, as they herded together in the Temple courts, were a living proof that the Jew had forgotten the great reverence due to holy places and holy things.
We feel we must ask ourselves with some earnestness, Does He trace in my worship itself that reverence which He ought to find for the presence of God and the honour of His holy house? We do not drive out the sheep and oxen of unworthy, wandering, irreverent thoughts which prevent our worship because we do not really feel the presence of God.
III. But besides the irreverence which profanes the sanctuary, our Blessed Lord, as He gazes round the magnificent Temple, cannot but have seen the sight, painful to His holy eyes, of men who had grown away from religion, men in whom religion contributed nothing to the solid welfare of their life, but rather stood outside it: railed off, shut in, like some church in a busy city rarely used, and thinly attended, by worshippers. It must have stood out with a sharp and ghastly contrast before the eyes of Christ on this Palm Sunday evening—the sacrifice of the whole burnt-offering, symbolizing the exhaustion of God's wrath on sin; the trespass-offering as if to do away with the recurrent burden of sin; the peace-offering of a soul at peace with God, this was the meaning of the oxen, and the sheep, and of the doves for purification—this on the one hand; and on the other, there were the loose lives, the broken morality, the cruelty, the deceit, the injustice, the inability to recognize the higher life. Everything to symbolize, and to effect the complete extirpation of sin, with sin scientifically encamped in high places before the very forces which were meant to overthrow it.
Is our religion touching our life? This is the vital question for us all. Or is it merely a crowd of sheep and oxen, a multiplicity of sacrifices outside us, which leave us uninfluenced and untouched? Christ surely looks from the Temple to the life, from the life to the Temple, to see in life sin pursued with an exhaustion of hatred until it is consumed, to see the soul gradually gaining peace with God through Jesus Christ.
—W. C. E. Newbolt, Words of Exhortation, p131.
References.—XI:11.—J. S. Maver, Christian World Pulpit, vol. lxxiii1908 , p247. J. Bannerman, Sermons, p153. Mandell Creighton, University and other Sermons, p48. XI:12-14.—Archbishop Trench, Notes on the Miracles of Our Lord, p357. XI:12-14 , 20-24.—John Laidlaw, The Miracles of Our Lord, p125. XI:12-14 , 20-26.—W. M. Taylor, The Miracles of Our Saviour, p413. XI:13.—Spurgeon, Sermons, vol. x. No555. XI:13 , 14.—A. Maclaren, Expositions of Holy Scripture—St. Mark IX-XVI. p127. XI:14.—J. S. Swan, Short Sermons, p202.
Mark 11:15
"One is struck," says Dr. John Ker (Thoughts, pp102 , 103), "in reading the account of the purifying of the Temple by Christ that He should have bestowed so much thought on what was so sure to become obsolete by His own word, It is finished. We do not read elsewhere of the indignation of our Lord rising to such a height, and taking the form of actual compulsion. It is the seal of Christ set on the sacrecness of the old Temple worship, all the more needed that He was about to remove it; but still more is it a vivid warning against the union between covetousness and religion or rather the form of religion. That evil reached a visible height when the sale of indulgences and the building of St. Peter's went hand in hand. But it has appeared so often, and in all sections of the Church, that the entrance of the money-changers into the Temple may be called the normal danger of Christianity. Drunkenness and sensuality, which had their shrines in the old pagan pantheon, have still a place in the hearts of many professed worshippers in the house of God, but it is Mammon who still sets up his tables in the open court"
Working Towards Ideals
Mark 11:17
"All nations," "of all nations". It was a great reading of the Scriptures; this was a thunder sermon. Jesus Christ was no patriot, Jesus Christ was a philanthropist; the Son of God was no politician, He was a statesman, He grasped the whole situation, and allotted to everyone, east or west, north or south, what was proper to the occasion and the environment.
I. Jesus Christ looked over all the walls of the Temple and the outside parts of the Temple, the low walls that marked definitions of space and in a certain sense of consecration and proprietorship. He recognized the Temple in its unity, the Temple in its ideality, in its high poetic spiritual meaning, and, making a lash, He scourged these fellows from the purlieus of the holy place; for, said Mark 11:22-24
If man has in all ages had enough to encounter, there has, in most civilized ages, been an inward force vouchsafed him, whereby the pressure of things outward might be withstood. Obstruction abounded; but faith also was not wanting. It is by faith that man removes mountains; while he had faith his limbs might be wearied with toiling, his back galled with bearing; but the heart within him was peaceable and resolved.... Faith gave him an inward willingness; a world of strength wherewith to confront a world of difficulty. The true wretchedness is here: that the difficulty remain and the strength be lost; that we have the labour and want the willingness.
—Carlyle on Characteristics.
References.—XI:22.—J. Marshall Lang, Christian World Pulpit, vol11896 , p390. Ambrose Shepherd, ibid. vol. lxiv1903 , p267. Spurgeon, Sermons, vol. xxiv. No1444. XI:22 , 23.—J. Hamilton, Faith in God, p43. R. E. Hutton, The Crown of Christ, vol. i. p187. XI:23 , 24.—J. G. Mark 11:24
What an awful weapon prayer is! Mark 11:24 saved me from madness in my twelve months" sorrows; and it is so simple and so wide—wide as eternity, simple as light, true as God Himself; and yet it is just the last text of Scripture which is talked of, or preached on, or used.
—Charles Kingsley.
Prayer
Mark 11:24
I. It is not quite easy to see what our Lord meant. It is quite easy, however, to see one thing that He did not mean. His disciples certainly did not understand their Teacher to offer them the wishing-cap of a children's tale; they did not understand Him to say that all who pray can get what they want For they must constantly have prayed as they felt to no purpose; yet they prayed and believed in prayer; they could not have disbelieved in it without throwing over their faith altogether.
May not the explanation be something of this kind? Our instinct bears witness to the fact and the belief that prayer is a beneficent force. We realize this dimly, but our Lord with His infinitely greater spiritual sensitiveness and His infinitely clearer spiritual insight saw this as we do not see it—saw it so clearly and so certainly that He can hardly find words strong enough to express His meaning or to impress it on the minds of His followers.
II. Prayer is an instinct; that which we desire deeply enough we pray for.
We may by wilful neglect, by careless indifference, have fallen from the habit; we may have almost persuaded ourselves that it Mark 11:25
"Forgive us," say we, "our offences, as we forgive them that trespasse against us." What else inferre we by that petition, but that we offer Him our soule voide of all revenge and free from all rancour? We nevertheless invoke God and call on His aid, even in the complot of our grievousest faults, and desire His assistance in all manner of injustice and iniquitie.
—Montaigne (Florio's version).
Can you conceive Jesus Christ—nay, any wise man you have happened to meet—amid the unnatural gloom of Elsinore? Is not every action of Hamlet prompted by a fanatical impulse, which tells him that duty consists in revenge alone? And does it require a superhuman effort to recognize that revenge never can be a duty?
—Maeterlinck.
Prayer is the peace of our spirit, the stillness of our thoughts, the evenness of recollection, the seat of meditation, the rest of our cares, and the calm of our tempest; prayer is the issue of a quiet mind, of untroubled thoughts, it is the daughter of charity, and the sister of meekness; and he that prays to God with an angry, that is, with a troubled and discomposed spirit, is like him that retires into a battle to meditate, and sets up his closet in the outquarters of an army.
—Jeremy Taylor.
References.—XI:32.—C. Gore, Christian World Pulpit, vol. xlix1896 , p161. XI:33.—E. B. Speirs, A Present Advent, p307. XII:1-9.—W. Gray Elmslie, Expository Lectures and Sermons, p230. XII:1-12.—A. Maclaren, Expositions of Holy Scripture—St. Mark IX-XVI. p137.
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