Bible Commentaries
Lange's Commentary: Critical, Doctrinal, and Homiletical
Mark 1
PART FIRST
Grand Preparation. Christs kingly appearing by the side of John the Baptist. First Victory and First Withdrawal. The virtual Decision of all subsequent Conflicts and Victories ( Mark 1:1-13).
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FIRST SECTION
JOHN THE BAPTIST
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Mark 1:1-8
(Parallels: Matthew 3:1-12; Luke 3:1-20; John 1:19-28)
1The beginning of the Gospel of Jesus Christ, the Son of God: 2As it is written in the prophets, 1 Behold, I send my messenger before thy face, which shall prepare thy 3 way before thee; 2 The [A] voice of one crying in the wilderness [desert], Prepare ye the way of the Lord, make his paths straight 4 John did baptize in the wilderness, and preach the baptism of repentance for the remission of sins 5 And there went out unto him all the land of Judea, and they of Jerusalem [the Jerusalemites], and were all3 baptizedof [by] him in the river of Jordan, confessing their sins 6 And John was clothed with camels hair, and with a girdle of a skin about his loins; and he did eat locusts 7 and wild honey; And [he] preached, saying, There cometh one mightier than I after me, the latchet of whose shoes I am not worthy to stoop down and unloose 8 I indeed have baptized you with water: but he shall baptize you with the Holy Ghost.
EXEGETICAL AND CRITICAL
Mark 1:1. The beginning of the Gospel.The superscription includes from Mark 1:1-3, closing with the words, make his paths straight. The Evangelist designs by both passages ( Mark 1:2 from behold, etc, and Mark 1:3) to indicate the forerunnership of John. Hence the beginning goes on, according to Meyer, to Mark 1:8, and not, as Ewald says, to Mark 1:15. There is an analogous superscription in Matthew 1:1. When Mark points to John the Baptist as the beginning of the Gospel, he refers to its whole development, and this logically leads to and includes the narrative of the Infancy. But he does not include in his design generally, processes and means: hence John also must come upon the scene as the mature man. In this concise and sudden introduction, the Evangelist himself appears before us in all his own peculiarity. Indeed, this beginning of the Gospel was in the apostolical age the customary commencement of evangelical tradition, and as such always accompanied the apostolical preaching. It always started with the appearance of John the Baptist. The history of the Infancy and the doctrine of the Logos followed later for the initiated, the believers.Of Jesus Christ (genitive of the object), the Son of God.Matthew: The Son of David. In Mark, the theocratic relation of Jesus recedes, as he wrote especially for Gentile Christians.
Mark 1:3. In the wilderness.See on Matthew 4:1. So also Luke 4:1.The baptism of repentance.Baptism as not only obliging to change of mind (μετάνοια), but also exhibiting and symbolizing it.For the remission of sins.Meyer rightly: To be received from the Messiah; and not, as Hoffmann in the Schriftbeweis asserts, as assured by Johns baptism. Thus it denotes the preparatory reference of Johns baptism to Christ, or to the baptism of the Holy Ghost.
Mark 1:5. All the land of Judea, and (even) all they of Jerusalem.Peculiar to Mark, is this strong expression. But it is so far not hyperbolical, as the Baptist had at this crisis overpowered and led captive, not only the consciousness of the people, but that of the hierarchy also.
Mark 1:6. And John was clothed.See on Matthew 3:4.
Mark 1:7. There cometh one mightier than I after me.Present. Decision and vigor of the Baptist, reflecting itself in the view of the Evangelist. Christ is already in the company.To stoop down.Pointing to his self-depreciation and humility. In this picturesqueness, peculiar to Mark.
Mark 1:8. With the Holy Ghost.As Mark does not record the severity of Johns preaching, and his announcement of the judicial work of Jesus, he omits the clause and with fire. Thus the omission proves nothing against the genuineness of the clause.
DOCTRINAL AND ETHICAL
1. Jesus the Christ, and Christ the Son of God, in the full apostolical meaning. Thus the Gospel of the manifestation of the Mighty One of God is described and opened.
2. The Baptist is here, as in the Gospel of John, Mark 1, the representative and final expression of the whole Old Testament. But the Old Testament itself, terminating in him, becomes one great forerunner, and the voice of the Spirit of God in the wilderness, which proclaims the manifestation of Christ; that is, it becomes a compendious introduction to the original New Testament, springing from heaven.
3. John appears here as at once summing up his office as forerunner: 1. Himself the preparer of the way; 2. and the voice summoning to prepare the way. For the prophecies of Isaiah and Malachi, see on Matthew 3:3.
4. The great baptism of John: its seemingly slight, but yet great and decisive, results.
5. John in the desert as a hermit; John arousing the land: preludes of the Lords self-humiliation and withdrawals, and of His victorious comings forth into the world.
HOMILETICAL AND PRACTICAL
The beginning of the Gospel of Christ in the manifestation of the Baptist: 1. In his appearance, as described by the prophets; 2. in his vocation (preaching and baptism); 3. in his demeanor; 4. in his alarming influence; 5. in his reference to Christ.The two Testaments, as they concurrently glorify Christ as the Lord.How far the Lord will have a way prepared for Him, and how far He makes a path for Himself.Repentance and faith a miraculous path through the wilderness.The confession of sin, and its significance for piety: 1. Oftentimes, alas! nothing, or less than nothing; 2. oftentimes very much; 3. oftentimes everything.Johns great renunciation of the world, the silent condition of his great influence.The hermit and the shaken land.Collectedness in secret, victory in the world.The two strong men, with whom the kingdom of heaven breaks into the world: 1. John, the strong man; and2. Christ, the stronger than he.The anointing of the Holy Ghost: the consummation of the baptism of Christ.The greatness of John the Baptist, that he always, and in all things, points out of and beyond himself: 1. A preparer of the way, who summons his people to prepare their own way; 2. baptizing, and preaching the baptism of repentance; 3. the overcomer of the people, who predicts Christ as overcoming himself; 4. pointing from his own water-baptism to the baptism of the Spirit.The baptism of water and the baptism of Spirit.The heroic constancy and decision of John in his work, a symbol for all believers.
Starke:Thus the last messenger of the old covenant points to the first of the new. Thus truth agrees with truth.The New Testament looks back to the Old.The wilderness in which the Baptist appeared, a shadow of this world.Word and sacrament the two essential elements of the preaching office.Preachers furnished with the Spirit and power may have great concourse around them; but Israel soon becomes weary of the manna, John 6:66.
Gerlach:Johns baptism as the conclusion, and consequently also the epitome, of all that the legal economy contained in itself.It was not itself to communicate forgiveness of sins, but prepare the way for it.Even Christians should not despise such preparations through the law for the Gospel.In times of great declension in morals, the servants of the Lord appear with a special self-renunciation even in external things. So the ancient Elijah, 2 Kings 1:8.Gossner:A preacher should be only a messenger who proclaims the coming of the Lord and Saviour.W. L. Bauer:The man of humility, who aimed only to prepare the way.
Footnotes
SECOND SECTION
CHRIST
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Mark 1:9-13
(Parallels: Matthew 3:13 to Matthew 4:11; Luke 3:21 to Luke 4:13; John 1:29-42)
9And it came to pass in those days, that Jesus came from Nazareth of Galilee, and was baptized of [by] John in Jordan 10 And straightway coming up out of [from, απο 4] the water, he saw the heavens opened [parted], and the Spirit, like a dove, descending upon him 11 And there came a voice from heaven, saying, Thou art my beloved Song of Solomon, in whom5 I am well pleased 12 And immediately the Spirit driveth him into the wilderness 13 And he was there in the wilderness forty days tempted of Satan; and was with the wild beasts; and the angels ministered unto him.
EXEGETICAL AND CRITICAL
Mark 1:10. Straightway, εὐθέως.Marks watchword, constantly recurring from this time onwards. But here it means that Jesus only in a formal sense submitted to the Acts, and therefore did not linger in it. Much in the same way as Luke hastily passes over the circumcision of our Lord.He saw the heavens.Not John (as Erasmus and others), but Jesus is the subject of the seeing (Meyer): yet the concurrent and mediate beholding of the Baptist is not excluded; see John 1. That the occurrence should not have been only an external one, but also an internal (Leben Jesu, ii1, S182), Meyer calls fantasy. But it is certain that without the fantasy of theological spiritual insight we cannot penetrate the internal meaning of the text, and must fall now into mere dogmatism, and now into rationalistic perversions.
Mark 1:12. And immediately the Spirit driveth Him.Εκβάλλει is stronger than the ἀνήχθη of Matthew and the ἤγετο of Luke.
Mark 1:13. And He was there forty days tempted of Satan.According to Meyer and others, Mark (with Luke) is here out of harmony with Matthew. This difficulty springs from neglecting to distinguish, 1. between real difference and less exactitude, and2. between the being tempted generally of Satan, and the being tempted in a specifically pregnant and decisive manner. But it is evident that Mark places the crisis of Christs victory already in the baptism. That act of victory over self, and humiliation under the baptism of John, had already assured Him the victory over the now impotent assaults of Satan.With the wild beasts.The older expositors find hi this circumstance a counterpart of the serpent in paradise. Starke:The wilderness was probably the great Arabian desert, and Satan attacked Him also through the beasts. Usteri and others:Christ as the restorer of paradise, and conqueror of the beasts. De Wette:This is a mere pictorial embellishment. Meyer:He is threatened in a twofold manner: Satan tempts Him, and the beasts surround Him. But this is a misleading view. A threefold relation of Jesus is here depicted, 1. to Satan, 2. to the beasts, 3. to the angels; and it is arbitrary to separate the second from the third, and make it the antithesis of the first. There is nothing in the μετά to justify this.The angels.Not merely fortuitous individual angels. By the individuals which minister to Him, the angel-world is represented. Meyer:By the ministering we are not to understand a serving with food, but a sustaining support against Satan and the beasts. This is more than fantasy.The theory concerning the various forms of the history of the temptation, of which Mark is supposed to have used the earliest and simplest, we pass over, as flowing from the well-known scholastic misapprehension of this Evangelists original view and exhibition of the Gospel.Ex ungue leonem! This holds good of Christ, as He is introduced by Mark; and in another sense it holds good of the beginning of the Gospel itself. Remark the expressions: οἱ Ιεροσολυμῖται πάντεςκύψας λῦσαιεἶδε σχιζομένους τοὺς οὐρανούς, etc.
DOCTRINAL AND ETHICAL
1. The self-denial and self-renunciation with which Christ, the Son of God, had lived in the seclusion of Nazareth, was the condition and source of that strength in which He subjected Himself to the baptism of John in the Jordan. This act of subjection sealed His submission under the law, His historical fellowship of suffering with His people, and His passion. The baptism of Christ was consequently the pledge of His perfect self-sacrifice. Hence it was in principle the decision of His conflict and His victory; and therefore it was crowned with His glorification. In this one act there was a consummation of His consciousness as God, of His consciousness as Redeemer, and His consciousness as Victor.
2. Christ really decided, in His baptism, His victory over Satan. He went into the wilderness and made it a paradise. The serpent in this paradise assaults Him, but cannot hurt Him; the wild beasts sink peaceably under His majesty; and the angels of heaven surround and serve Him.
3. John is in the wilderness, and Satan tempts him not. Jesus is led up from the wilderness into the wilderness,that is, into the deepest wildness of the wilderness (this being the residence of the demons, see Com. on Matthew 4),and Satan comes down to assault Him there. But the Evangelist deems it superfluous to remark that Jesus overcame Satan. After what had just preceded, this was self-understood. Moreover, it is in the casting-out of the devils, that Mark presents to us Christs concrete victories over Satan. Yet this victory is intimated in the fact that He maintained His abode in the wilderness for forty days in spite of all the assaults of the devil, and that in that very wilderness the angels ministered to Him. The incarnate Son of God could hold His heavenly court in the place which Satan preëminently arrogated for himself. The Lords relation to His surroundings is threefold1. It is a sovereign and inimical one towards Satan, whose temptations appear only as impotent assaults2. It is a sovereign and peaceful one towards the beasts: they dare not hunt the Lord of creation, nor do they flee before Him. Jesus takes away the curse also from the irrational creation ( Romans 8). According to the same Mark, who places this circumstance at the outset of his Gospel, Jesus commanded at its close that His Gospel should be preached to every creature. See Daniel in the den of lions. Comp. Gthes Das Kind und der Löwe. 3. A sovereign and friendly one towards the angel-world. The world of the angels is subjected to the dominion of Christ: Ephesians 1:21; Colossians 2:10; Hebrews 1.
HOMILETICAL AND PRACTICAL
The abode of Jesus in Nazareth, or His self-humiliation, the foundation of all the Divine victories in His life, Philippians 2:6 seq.The greatness of Christ by the side of the greatness of John.Even in humiliation Christ is above John, in that He voluntarily submits to his baptism.With the submission of Christ to the baptism of John, and what it signified, the whole course of His life, and also His victory over Satan in the wilderness, were decided. Hence His tarrying in the wilderness was the festival before a new career.The perfected unfolding of the consciousness of Christ at His baptism, in its eternal significance.With the self-consciousness of Christ was perfected the consciousness of the Son of God and of the Son of man at one and the same time: Thus, 1. the consciousness of His eternity in His Godhead, and2. of His redeeming vocation in His humanity.The significance of perfect self-knowledge in self-consciousness: 1. Finding self, 2. gaining self, 3. deciding and dedicating self in God.The kindredness and difference between the development of the Redeemers consciousness and that of the sinner: 1. Kindredness: humiliation, exaltation2. Difference: a. Christs humiliation under the judgment of His brethren; b. the sinners under his own judgment;a. Christs exaltation through the contemplation of the communion of the Trinity; b. the sinners exaltation through faith in the fellowship of the Redeemer.As our consciousness, so our history: This holds good, a. of our true consciousness, b. of our false.The abode of the Baptist and of the Lord in the wilderness, a token of the destruction of the satanic kingdom.The inseparable connection between the divine dignity and the redeeming vocation of Christ: 1. He is Christ, and submits to Johns baptism of repentance; 2. He sees the heavens open upon Him, and enters into the depths of the wilderness to contend with Satan.The connection between the Lords baptism and His temptation.The connection between the humiliations and the exaltations of our Lord, an encouraging sign to all who are His.The connection between the invigorations and the new conflicts of Jesus, an admonitory sign to all who are His.Christ takes possession again of the wilderness (the world), without asking leave of Satan whose dwelling it is.Christ in the wilderness Ruler of all: 1. Of the abyss, whose assaults He regards not; 2. of the earth, whose wild beasts and passions sink to rest at His feet; 3. of the heavenly world, whose angels minister to Him.Wherefore the Lion of Judah, according to Mark, so often goes into the wilderness.How the Holy Spirit opens, with the manifestation of Christ, the decisive conflict with the spirit of apostasy.How the Holy Spirit, as the Spirit of might, drives the Lord into the decisive conflict. Even Christ did not go led by self into the contest.Christ changing the wilderness, despite Satan, into a paradise.Adam in paradise, and Christ among the beasts in the wilderness.
Starke:Humility the best adornment of teachers.Jesus of Nazareth (despised): So little does the great God make Himself, and thus at the same time constructs a ladder by which we may go up.Jesus sanctifies through His baptism the laver of regeneration in the word.Rejoice, O soul, in that God is well pleased with His Song of Solomon, and with thee also, who through Him art reconciled to God! But thou must in faith be made one with Him, Ephesians 1:5-6.As soon as we become Gods children, the Holy Ghost leads us; but the cross and temptation come forth-with.What the first Adam lost among and under the beasts, the Second Adam has asserted and regained among the beasts.A pious man has nothing to fear, among either wild beasts or bestial men.
Gerlach:How infinitely high does Christ stand above all human teachers, even those inspired by God.Schleiermacher:The legal excitement which John occasioned, and the excitement which Jesus enkindled.Gossner:Solitude and the wilderness have their temptations equally with the world.Baur:No one is near to celebrate this victory, yet Gods angels are there to glorify Him.
Footnotes
PART SECOND
Royal Appearance of Christ after the Baptist. His Conflicts and Victories in Galilee, in the Old Jewish Church ( Mark 1:14 to Mark 9:50)
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FIRST SECTION
ANNOUNCEMENT OF THE KINGDOM OF HEAVEN
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Mark 1:14-15
(Parallels: Luke 4:14-15; Matthew 4:12-17; John 4:43 seq.)
14Now, after that John was put in prison, Jesus came into Galilee, preaching the15 Gospel of the kingdom of God, And saying6, The time is fulfilled, and the kingdom of God is at hand: repent ye, and believe [in] the Gospel.
EXEGETICAL AND CRITICAL
See on Matthew, Mark 4:12-17.
Mark 1:14. Jesus came.Ewald: He would not let the Baptists work fall to the ground. Meyer, on the contrary: that He might be safe; but see our Notes on Matthew in refutation of this. By the Baptists imprisonment the Baptist community in Israel was broken up; Jesus therefore saw occasion first to receive to Himself the poor people in Gentile Galilee, and that as the representative of John. John was put in prison by the Galilean prince; Jesus summons the people of this prince to repentance, and to faith in the Gospel: this is the true political retaliation, and the sacred way to salvation and the restoration of right.
Mark 1:15. The time, δ̔ καιρός.Not the period, but the right time; the great, fore-ordained, predicted and longed-for time of Messianic expectation; more closely defined by the following the kingdom of God is at hand. (See Galatians 4:4.) Repent, Μετανοεῖτε.See the lexicon for the original meaning and the various significations of the word. [It includes the ideas of reflection, afterthought, and change of mind, i.e, of judgment and of feeling, upon moral subjects, with particular reference to the character and conduct of the penitent himself. Alexander in loc.Ed.] Believe the Gospel, Πιστεύετε ἐν. Galatians 3:26; Ephesians 1:13.By this expression faith is more strongly emphasized. Entering into the Gospel, we have decisive faith. The object of faith in this view is the manifestation of the kingdom of God.
DOCTRINAL AND ETHICAL
1. From the still prayer of the wilderness, or from the new paradise in which Christ had conquered Satan, He has now come forth to endure all the individual conflicts of life for the founding of His eternal kingdom. Adam came from his paradise conquered, to endure in his descendants a constant succession of defeats.
2. As here, so everywhere, the economy of the Gospel takes the place of the economy of the law. The legal economy yields at last to the lawlessness of the world: the economy of faith and salvation triumphs over it even in yielding, and saves with itself also the ideality of the law.
3. An economy of the law which, in its tragical conflict with the spirit of the world, recognizes not the deliverance which is in the coming economy of salvation, like Elias ( 1 Kings 19:13), is thereby converted into an economy of carnal precepts, which finally combines with the world against the economy of salvation. But, on the other hand, true evangelical faith knows how to give its due to the precursory office of the law, just as Christ gave honor to His forerunner, John the Baptist.
4. Almost all the Jews of that time hoped for the kingdom of God; but it was a strange and unrecognized idea, that repentance and faith must be the entrance into it. Jesus begins with the promise, but immediately goes on to the conditions. Gerlach.
5. Mark, like Peter in his first and second Epistle, places the announcement of the kingdom of heaven at the head of his writing. The kingdom is his fundamental thought.
HOMILETICAL AND PRACTICAL
Jesus, in the silent conflicts of the wilderness, prepares for the open conflicts of lifetakes the place of John, delivered to death by the carnal mind1. The history: A testimony, a. that He honored the Baptist, b. that He did not fear the enemy, and c. that He was faithful to His people and His vocation2. The doctrine: a. The witnesses of the kingdom of God cannot be destroyed; b. after every seeming triumph of the kingdom of darkness, still stronger heroes of God come forward3. Christ is always Himself victorious at last in every scene.Persecution the primitive furtherance of the kingdom of God.The blood of the Church, the seed of the Church.Where the law falls in the letter, it is reestablished in the spirit.The preaching of Christ: 1. It appears as the announcement of salvation in the place of danger and ruin2. What it announces: that the time is fulfilled, and that the kingdom of God is come3. What it requires: repentance (as change of mind, μετάνοια) and faith4. What it signifies: the saving presence of Christ Himself.Christ and John as preachers: the might of their preaching itself1. John preaches in his whole life and manifestation; 2. Christ preaches out of the depth of His own divine life.The seal of evangelical preaching the full harmony of the person and the word.
On the whole section ( Mark 1:14-45).The first victorious appearance of Christ the prelude of His whole path of victory: 1. In the announcement of His Gospel; 2. in His dominion over the hearts of the chosen; 3. in His victory of the kingdom of Satan; 4. in His miraculous removal of human misery; 5. in His salutary shaking of the world.The glory of the Lord in its first actual exhibition: 1. A glory of grace ( Mark 1:16-20), 2. of sacred judicial and redeeming power ( Mark 1:21-28), 3. of healing mercy ( Mark 1:29-39), 4. of purifying purity ( Mark 1:40-44).Christ proceeds from the wilderness of the earth into the wilderness of human life for the restoration of paradise.Christ confirms His victory over Satan in the solitude of the desert by His victories over satanic powers among all the people.
Starke:Satan seeks to bind and to oppress Christ and His Gospel; but Gods wisdom and power set at naught all his aggression.
Gerlach:With the public appearance of Jesus, the end of Johns work had come.Gossner:He who understands repentance to mean that he must first become pious and good, and then come to Jesus, and believe His Gospel, goes out at the door of grace instead of entering in. Repenting and believing the Gospel, or believing in Christ, must go together and be one.
Footnotes
SECOND SECTION
CONQUEST OF THE FIRST DISCIPLES AT CAPERNAUM, VICTORY OVER THE DEMONS IN THAT CITY, AND WITHDRAWAL INTO THE WILDERNESS
Mark 1:16-35
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1. The Authoritative word of Jesus, which calls the four first and greatest Disciples. Mark 1:16-20
(Parallels: Matthew 4:18-22; Luke 5:1-11; comp. John 1:35-42)
16Now, as he walked7by the sea of Galilee, he saw Simon, and Andrew his brother, casting a net into the sea: for they were fishers 17 And Jesus said unto them, Come ye after me, and I will make you to become fishers of men 18 And straightway they forsook their8 nets, and followed him 19 And when he had gone a little farther thence,9 he saw James the son of Zebedee, and John his brother, who also were in the ship mending their nets 20 And straightway he called them: and they left their father Zebedee in the ship with the hired servants, and went after him.
EXEGETICAL AND CRITICAL
See on Mat 4:18 seq.
Mark 1:16. As He walked by.The Evangelist would make prominent the apparently fortuitous character of this first vocation.
Mark 1:19. Who also were in the ship.Both pairs of brothers were called while in the earnest prosecution of their craft. The first two were throwing their nets into new positions in the water; the two others were mending them for new draughts.
Mark 1:20. With the hired servants.Why this addition? Paulus: It was to be made clear, how they could without impiety forsake their father. Meyer (after Grotius): It was only a proof that Zebedee did not follow his craft in a petty way, and that he probably was not without means. In any case, it also shows that Zebedee was not left helpless. That they forsook so thriving a business (Ewald), is indeed of less significance.
DOCTRINAL AND ETHICAL
1. Christ Himself is the great Fisher of men. He catches the four elect ones as it were at one draught. These are the three ( Mark 9:2) and the four ( Mark 13:3) confidential Apostles of after-times. Therefore there were first four fishermen called.
2. The power of Christs word over these souls here appears direct and immediate. We learn the mediating circumstances of this vocation from John 1. At the same time, this calling was something entirely new (see on Matthew 4:19), and their following so wonderful, that they at once forsook their calling, in the very act of pursuing it. The fishing life of these men was a preparation for their higher calling, as being fidelity in that which was least.
HOMILETICAL AND PRACTICAL
The Lord knoweth His own.The Lord and His elect quickly know each other.The great increase of grace swiftly enters into our daily life.Christs waiting by the sea apparently for relaxation, but at the same time the most noble work.Christs mark in this world the heart of man.The great Fisher of men, and His art of making human fishers.The calling of Jesus a call to become something new.The mighty calling of the Lord: 1. Gentler than any human request; 2. mightier than any human command; 3. unique as the victorious wooing of heavenly love.The calling of Jesus a calling at once to one thing and to many: 1. To one thing: into His discipleship and the fellowship of His Spirit, or to the Father; 2. to many: to discipleship and mastership, to coöperation, to fellowship in suffering, and community in triumph.The greatness of the following of the four disciples was the effect of the great grace of their calling. They broke off suddenly in the midst of a new career of their labor, as a sign of the decision of their following.The spiritual and the worldly vocation of Christians: 1. Opposition; 2. kindredness; 3. union.The twofold earthly companionship of the disciples a foundation for the higher: 1. Companions in fishing,companions in fishing for men; 2. brethren after the flesh,spiritual brethren.Leaving all for Christs sake.The Christian and ecclesiastical vocations in harmony with the sacred natural obligations of life.
Starke:Never be idle.Pious handicraft acceptable to God.The calling into Christianity binds us to faith and the following of Christ; how much more the vocation to spiritual office!A true follower of Christ forgets everything earthly.He who follows Christ loses nothing, though he may forsake all; for he finds in Him a full sufficiency, Matthew 19:29.
Lisco:The forsaking all must be experienced inwardly by every believer; and must be fulfilled outwardly also, in particular circumstances and occasions, Matthew 19:27.Schleiermacher:The two tendencies in the life of the Redeemer: preaching to the multitude, and the separation of individuals to Himself.Gossner:The Lords fishermen actually catch the fish; the worlds fishermen swim with the fish.Bauer:One glance of the Lord, and He knows the heart under its rough garment.
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