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Mark – Who do you say I am?
Read more: Mark – Who do you say I am?Mark – Who do you say I am? Read Mark 8:27-9:17 The lesson Jesus taught the disciples (as we saw in our last study) was to trust Him fully. Their ears at first failed to hear, and their eyes failed to see (Mark 8:18). The healing of the blind man at Bethsiada was a real…
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Mark – How many loaves to you have?
Read more: Mark – How many loaves to you have?Mark – How many loaves to you have? (We are not trying to answer all the questions in Mark. But before we move on to the next study it is important to remark something on two more questions: 1. Mark 4:38: The disciples asked Jesus: “Teacher, don’t You care if we drown?” This question follows…
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Mark – What parable shall describe the Kingdom of God?
Read more: Mark – What parable shall describe the Kingdom of God?Mark – What parable shall describe the Kingdom of God? Read Mark 4:1-34 It is not before Mark 3:23 that Mark introduced a parable of Jesus Christ. The purpose of the parables in Mark 4:1-34 is to teach us about the purpose of Gospel and how it brings about growth. (See text box below.) Mark…
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Mark – Who are my brothers?
Read more: Mark – Who are my brothers?Mark – Who are my brothers? Read Mark 3:13-35 The paragraph of verses 13-19 tells of the people our Lord called to be his apostles. This happened on a mountainside (where the Sermon on the Mount was preached?) – it was done publicly, not in secret. Not all of the original manuscripts of the Greek…
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Mark – Why are they doing what is unlawful on the Sabbath?
Read more: Mark – Why are they doing what is unlawful on the Sabbath?Mark – Why are they doing what is unlawful on the Sabbath? Read Mark 2:18-3-6 It is clear that the Scribes and the Pharisees found much of Jesus’ ministry upsetting. Much of what Mark recorded happened on a Sabbath – a day to which the Pharisees added extra laws to make sure it was kept…
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Mark – Who can forgive sins but God alone?
Read more: Mark – Who can forgive sins but God alone?Mark – Who can forgive sins but God alone? Read Mark 2:1-17 Background Many houses in old Israel had two storeys. Upper rooms were reached by stairs or ladders. These rooms provided the main living and sleeping accommodation and guests could also be looked after there. Roofs were constructed from beams covered with branches and…
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Mark – Have You come to destroy us?
Read more: Mark – Have You come to destroy us?Mark – Have You come to destroy us? The scene in this part of the Gospel of Mark is Capernaum, in the district of Galilee. Read Isaiah 9:1-2 and Matthew 4:15-16. What do these verse tell us about those living in Galilee? Capernaum means “the house (or, town) of Nahum”; however, the identity of…
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Mark – the silent years between the Old and New Testament
Read more: Mark – the silent years between the Old and New TestamentSilent years For about 400 years between the Old Testament and New Testaments God did not speak to the Jewish people through prophets, other than the prophecies given to Daniel, Zachariah, Malachi and others who still needed fulfilment. The Babylonians came to power in 626B.C., and in 605B.C. at the battle of Carchimesh defeated Egypt.…