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NOTES MARK IV. The Servant Rejected V. 11:1-15:47 A. Jesus' Entrance And Teaching In Jerusalem V. 11:1-13:37 Chapter 11 1. The Official Presentation of Jesus As King V. 1-11 V. 1 1. Jesus had traveled with the multitude from Jericho to the mount of Olives, a distance of approximately 17 miles. This was a rough journey as most of the way was rocky terrain filled with caves which sheltered many robbers. 2. He arrived at Bethany which is on the eastern slope of the mount of Olives close by Bethphage which was a larger and more well known village nigh (near) Jerusalem. (John 11:18; furlong = 1/8 mile. See Map below) MAP 1 3. In Bethany Jesus went to Lazarus' house where Mary anointed His feet. (John 12:1-11) 4. "Sendeth forth" = to send on a commission to do something. 5. We do not know which of the two disciples He sent. V. 2 1. "Village over against you" = directly opposite; probably refers to Bethphage which was just west of Bethany and on the way to Jerusalem. 2. "As soon as" = immediately. 3. "Colt" = a young donkey; a foal. 4. "Whereon never man sat" = the foal was unbroken and had never been ridden; animals which had never been used before were used for sacred purposes. (Num. 19:2) 5. Kings and princes commonly rode on mules or asses in times of peace. (I Kings 1:33) 6. Mat. 21:2 makes mention of the colt and its mother. V. 3 1. "Lord" = means "master" as opposed to "servant"; a title of respect given by an inferior to a superior. 2. Jesus manifested proof of His divine omniscience when He told them where to find the colt and what would happen when they found the colt. V. 4 1. The disciples found the colt exactly as the Lord had said. 2. "By the door without" = the outside opening to the street; the better class of houses were built around an open court, from which a passageway led to the street outside. 3. "A place where two ways meet" = a fork in the road; cross roads; a public place, probably near the center of the village. V. 5 1. "Certain of them" = refers to the owners as stated in Luke 19:33. 2. "What do ye" = what authority do you have to loose the colt? They made a natural protest. V. 6 1. The disciples repeated the message of Jesus to them. 2. The owners consented at once, probable due to the fact that Jesus was well known in the neighborhood because He had raised Lazarus from the dead about six months before. They knew that this Prophet could be trusted. Also they may have been proud of the fact that the Lord was going to use their colt. V. 7 1 "Garments" = refers to the outer garment. 2. "He sat upon him" = fulfilling prophecy concerning the Messiah in Zech. 9:9; Mat. 21:4-5 records this. V. 8 1. "The way" = the road. 2. "Branches" = a mass of straw, rushes, or leaves beaten together or strawed loose, so as to form a bed or carpeted way; Mat. 21:8 uses a different word for branches which means a shoot or twig; John 12:13 also uses a different word which refers to the large feather-like branches of palm trees. 3. "Strawed" = spread. 4. This was Jesus' formal presentation of Himself as the Messiah and the crowds realized this and entered into the spirit of the occasion. V. 9 1. Jesus was surrounded by the multitudes, those that came with him from Jericho and those that had come out from Jerusalem to meet him. 2. "Cried" = to call aloud; to croak or scream; speaks of a loud cry, expressing deep emotion; Luke 19:37 says "the multitude began to rejoice and praise God with a loud voice". 3. "Hosanna" = means, "O save"; the people expected the Lord to set up His rule in opposition to Rome and deliver the Jews from the yoke of their oppressors. 4. "Blessed" = to speak well of; to praise; to eulogize. 5. There is no doubt they recognized Him here as the Messiah. V. 10 1. "Kingdom of our father David" = the kingdom of the Messiah; Mat. 21:9 calls Him the son of David; Luke 19:38 and John 12:15 calls Him "King". 2. "Cometh" = now coming and about to be established. 3. "Hosanna in the Highest" = O save in the highest realms of glory and blessedness, where salvation is perfected. 4. Luke 19:39-40 gives the Pharisee's reaction and Jesus' answer to them. V. 11 1. "Temple" = refers to the temple with all its courts, porches, and outbuilding; not the word for the inner part of the structure consisting of the Holy place and the Holy of Holies. 2. "Looked round about" = a comprehensive inspection. He surveys all with a keenly observant eye, not to view the scenery but observing the moral and religious element. He noted the unlawful traffic in the temple but postponed action until the next day, and spent the night back at Bethany with His disciples. 2. Cursing Of The Fig Tree V. 12-14 V. 12 1. "On the morrow" = the next day. 2. "He was hungry" = this showed His humanity. This may indicate that Jesus had spent the night in fasting and prayer. The sights in the temple may have killed His sleep and appetite. 3. Mat. 21:18 says it was morning. The word used here means it was early, in the fourth watch before 6 am. V. 13 1. The fruit of a fig tree begins to appear before its leaves; therefore, it was a natural conclusion that on this tree, with its leaves fully developed, there might be found at least some ripened fruit, even though "the time of the figs was not yet" = it was not the season for ripened figs. 2. This one tree must have been more advanced (leaved out more) than the rest because He saw it "afar off". V. 14 1. Our Lord, when seeing this tree (showing promise of fruit by its leaves) fruitless, forgets His natural hunger and teaches a spiritual truth. 2. This tree represents the awful image of the Jewish nation, having the leaves of a great profession but yielding no fruit. Jesus condemned the tree because of its fruitlessness in the midst of a display which promised fruit. 3. "Forever" = for the age; means until the time of the Gentiles be fulfilled. 4. Mat. 21:19 says, "And presently the fig tree withered away". It dried up, therefore, it could not produce any more fruit or even give the appearance of doing so. 3. Second Cleansing Of The Temple V. 15-19 V. 15 1. "Went into the temple" = went into outer court, not the Holy place or the Holy of Holies, for only the priest were allowed to enter that portion of the temple. 2. "Cast out" = to drive out with force. 3. "Overthrew" = to overturn; throw down. 4. Jesus made no distinction between the buyers and sellers because their hearts were not tuned in to genuine worship. 5. Items such as victims for the sacrifices, (doves were for the poor who couldn't offer a lamb, kid, or bullock) oil, and spices used in the offerings were allowed to be sold. The problem was the sellers were cheating the buyers by selling blemished animals and the buyers didn't mind because the priests turned their heads and pretended not to notice the blemishes, probably getting part of the money from the seller. (Mal. 1:6-8) 6. "Moneychangers" = one who changed the Passover visitor's Greek or Roman money into Jewish half-shekels so that the Jew could pay his temple tax. This was necessary but the problem was that the moneychangers charged an inflated rate of exchange thereby cheating the people who came from the other countries. (Exo. 30:11-16) Every Jewish male over 20 years of age had to pay this temple tax. V. 16 1. "Not suffer" = not permit; not allow. 2. "Vessel" = refers to an implement, household utensil, or domestic gear. 3. People carrying goods or implements used the temple as a shortcut when going between the city and the Mount of Olives. This had been forbidden at one time, but the order was not being enforced. V. 17 1. "Is it not written" = tense is perfect, denoting a past completed act with existing results; the verse quoted stands on record and will always continue to be on record. (Isa. 56:7) 2. "Of all nations" = referring to Gentile nations; this outer court was the court of the Gentiles, where they could come and pray, but it had been turned into a market place. 3. "Den of thieves" = bands of robbers; no bandit's cave along the Jericho road was the scene of such wholesale robbery as this outer court of the temple. 4. "House of prayer" = the place set apart for the worship of God, in which He specially gives ear to the prayers of His people and in which, He specially promises His spiritual presence. 5. No doubt because of the excitement of this occasion, many gathered around and Jesus used the opportunity for teaching them. 6. This is the second time Jesus purged the temple, the first being 3 years before in John 2:13-16. 7. Mat. 21:14-16 gives more of Jesus' actions and sayings on this occasion. V. 18 1. "Sought" = to inquire into; to wish for; to desire; tense indicates a continuous attitude and endeavor; they sought means to destroy Him. 2. "Destroy" = to destroy fully; not only put Him to death but "utterly destroy" Him, stamp out His name and influence. 3. This is the first time that the scribes (Pharisees) and the Chief priests (Sadducees) had combined their efforts together to destroy Jesus. 4. "Feared" = afraid, because the people were mostly from Galilee and the Gentile countries and they looked upon Jesus as a hero, as the Messiah. 5. "Astonished" = to strike out of one's senses; a very strong word. 6. "His doctrine" = His teaching; He taught with power and authority so great that the multitudes were awed, and constrained to obey. This resulted in the scribes and chief priest's authority being diminished; therefore, they were jealous and angry. V. 19 1. "When" = whenever; whenever evening came, He made it a habit to leave the city. 2. Bethany is the place He stayed at night during His last few days before the cross. 4. Teaching On Faith V. 20-26 V. 20 1. "In the morning" = gives the emphasis as suggesting that it was in the clear morning light that they noticed the tree; it was probably dark when they passed by the night before. 2. "Dried up" = to dry up, to wither; tense reveals that the tree was completely withered away; therefore, dead. V. 21 1. "Calling to remembrance" = to remember; to call to one's mind; Peter remembered the Lord cursing the tree on the previous morning. 2. "Cursedst" = to devote to destruction. 3. Peter's statement indicates his amazement that the tree could wither to such a condition in only one day. V. 22 1. Jesus used this example to teach the disciple about faith. 2. "Faith" = Heb. 11:1; faith allows you to believe, which is the opposite of doubt. (Mat. 21:21) V. 23 1. "Doubt" = a divided judgment; a wavering doubt; refers to unbelief. 2. Faith is trust in Divine Omnipotence; the things which are impossible with men are possible with God. 3. Man can only have the faith that God gives; therefore, if it was the Lord's will for the mountain they were standing on to be cast in the Dead Sea, He would give them faith and they could just believe it and claim it as good as done and it would come to pass. 4. This means more than saying the words, "I have faith". It means finding God's will and claiming it. (Heb. 11:2) This is what Elijah did in I Kings 17:1. V. 24 1. "Desire" = to ask for one's self. 2. "Pray" = to offer a prayer addressed to God, to Him as the object of faith and the One who will answer one's prayer. 3. "Receive" = the tense reveals that the receiving is simultaneous with the believing. This is the test of faith, the kind that sees the fulfillment before it happens. 4. Faith is like a title deed. Just as a title deed guarantees to the one whose name appears on it the ownership of the property, even though he may not have it in his actual possession, so faith is the title deed that guarantees to the one exercising it the answer to his prayers, even though that answer may be delayed, and the thing asked for not in his possession. V. 25 1. "When you stand praying" = the standing posture is not commanded here, nor is it the only posture allowed; the word merely calls attention to a practice among the Jews. 2. "Forgive" = dismiss, to let go, to give up a debt by not demanding it. 3. "Have ought against" = have something against someone else; the teaching here is that God looks upon the heart instead of the position of prayer and worship. 4. "Trespasses" = a lapse or deviation from truth and uprightness; a sin, a misdeed; a fall from the right course. V. 26 1. God's willingness to forgive is limited by our willingness to forgive others. 2. The presence of angry and unloving feelings in one's heart is the one great hindrance to faith, and without faith we have no spiritual power. 3. This tells me if we expect God to answer our prayers, we had better keep our hearts right toward others by forgiving them, even if they never get things right with us. 5. Jesus' Authority Questioned V. 27-33 V. 27 1. "Walking in the temple" = Mat. 21:23 reveals Jesus was teaching, probably as He walked. 2. "The chief priests, and the scribes, and the elders" = representative of the three groups who were in the Sanhedrin; the definite article used in each case indicates that those who came represented their own group. V. 28 1. This was a large committee of the Sanhedrin including both Sadducees and Pharisees to confront Jesus in a formal attack upon His authority for cleansing the temple and teaching in it. 2. "Authority" = the power of authority and of right; this was a legitimate question because they were custodians of the temple. 3. "What" = speaks not only of identity but nature or character. 4. They ask Him in public to produce His credentials. First to state the nature of His authority and second, to name the person from whom He had received it. V. 29-30 1. Our Lord meets their question with a question. 2. "Answer me" = a sharp demand for a reply used only by Mark. 3. John the Baptist had testified concerning the divine source of His mission. (John 1:23) 4. This question was not dodging the issue but a question that cleared the air and defined their attitude both to John and Jesus. They rejected John and they now reject Jesus. (John 5:32-35) 5. In modern day language, He put them on the spot. V. 31 1. "Reasoned" = to reckon inward; count up or weigh the reasons; to deliberate; it seems this was within themselves as they possibly did not have a conference at this time. 2. If they accepted the mission of John as being from God (heaven) then they would be charged with having rejected his baptism and this would give our Lord an advantage they did not want to give Him. V. 32 1. If they said John's baptism was of mere human origin, they would place themselves in a dangerous position with regard to the crowds, even to the place of being stoned. (Luke 20:6) 2. "Feared" = to be alarmed, frightened; they did not want the people against them. 3. "Counted" = consider; regard. 4. "Indeed" = really. V. 33 1. "We cannot tell" = we know not; we do not have positive knowledge of the facts. 2. The Jewish leaders saved themselves from this dilemma by professing ignorance. 3. Since they did not answer Jesus' question, neither did He answer their question, because their answer to His was the same as His answer to theirs. Both John and Jesus got their authority from God. Chapter 12 6. Parable Of The Vineyard V. 1-12 V. 1 1. "Began" = shows a change in our Lord's style of teaching. 2. "Parables" = to throw alongside; it is a concrete illustration thrown alongside of a truth to explain it; it is an earthly story with a spiritual meaning. 3. Mat. 21:28-32 give an additional parable. 4. The purpose of the parable in this verse was to expose the true character of the hostility of the Sanhedrin in the presence of the crowd. 5. "A certain man" = God; Mat. 21:33 calls Him "a certain householder". 6. "Vineyard" = symbol of Israel as a covenant people; the members of the Sanhedrin and the better-taught among the crowd understood the symbolism. 7. "Hedge" = speaks of God's protecting care over Israel and His blessings upon the chosen people. 8. "Winefat" = refers to the receptacle into which the wine (grape juice) ran after it had been pressed out of the grapes. 9. "Tower" = also speaks of protection. 10. "Let it out" = to let out for one's advantage; application to leasing one's vineyard expecting a return (fruit) from His investment. 11. "Husbandmen" = land-worker; refers to the spiritual leaders of Israel. 12. "Went into a far country" = left the country and went to another country; Luke 20:9 say for a long time. V. 2 1. "At the season" = the gathering time of the fruit; time of harvest. 2. "Servant" = bondslave; speaks of the OT prophets sent to Israel. 3. The rent of the vineyard was to be paid by a stipulated portion of the wine. V. 3 1. "Caught" = to take by force, seize. 2. "Beat" = to smite; to scourge; to beat severely; to whip so that the skin is taken off in many places. 3. The failure to receive fruit points to the failure of Israel to heed the preaching of the prophets. V. 4 1. "Again" = refers to repeated action; the sending of another prophet. 2. The second bondslave met a worse fate than the first being wounded in the head. 3. "Shamefully handled" = to dishonor, mark with disgrace. V. 5 1. The third messenger they killed outright. 2. He sent many others of which some were beaten and some killed. 3. Isaiah was said to have been sawn asunder. (Heb. 11:36-37; Mat. 5:11-12) V. 6 1. "Having yet one son" = "yet he had one", that is one person to send, after all His bondslaves were either mistreated or killed. 2. "Wellbeloved" = beloved, dear; there is something very touching in this form of expression; many messages had been sent; many means had been tried; but one other resource remained, "His beloved son". 3. "Reverence" = respect; a feeling or attitude of deep respect, love, and awe. V. 7 1. "Heir" = one who succeeds to an estate. 2. "Inheritance" = what the heir receives. 3. The husbandman resolved to keep the property that was rented unto them; therefore, they killed the heir. V. 8 1. "Cast out" = to eject; speaks of the act of Israel's leaders excommunicating our Lord when He was condemned as a blasphemer and handed over to the Romans for punishment. 2. Our Lord's crucifixion outside of the walls of Jerusalem symbolized this ejection from the community of Israel. 3. Luke 20:15 and Mat. 21:39 reverse the order. He was cast out, then killed. (This is the correct order; Heb. 13:12) V. 9 1. Mat. 21:41 reveals that the religious leaders answered Jesus question; Jesus also spoke what is recorded in this verse. 2. "Destroy" = to bring to naught; does not signify cessation of existence. 3. Jesus spoke a distinct prediction of the rejection of the Jews and the call of the Gentiles. 4. "Give unto others" = refers to the Lord's church made up of Gentiles. 5. Luke 20:16 states that the religious leaders said, "God forbid", an expression coming forth from their consciences, which accused them and told them that the parable applied to them. V. 10 1. "Have ye not read the scripture" = this was a real blow to the religious leaders who prided themselves in knowing the scripture but they had missed the truth in the scripture. 2. Jesus quotes Psa. 118:22 in which the psalmist prophesies of Christ. 3. "Rejected" = to disapprove; word implies that the stone was first examined and then deliberately refused. 4. "Head of the corner" = corner-stone in the cornice; capstone; Jesus is also the chief foundation stone. (Eph. 2:20-22) He is all and in all. (Col 3:11) 5. The leaders of Israel who investigated our Lord's claims as the Messiah found them true because of the miracles He performed (John 3:2) and still rejected Him as Messiah because He did not meet their specifications. They were looking for a Messiah who would deliver them from the hand of Rome, not from the dominion of sin. V. 11 1. "This was the Lord's doing" = "this was from the Lord", the lifting up of the despised and rejected stone to be the corner-stone of the cornice was God's work. 2. "Marvellous" = passing human comprehension; a fitting object for wonder and praise. 3. Although rejected, the Messiah became the chief corner-stone in the foundation of the church, and will some day come forth as the King of kings and Lord of lords, the Headstone of the corner. 4. The question mark at the end of this verse applies to the question in verse 10, "Have ye not read?" V. 12 1. The leaders understood that Jesus had spoken this parable against them because He explained the application in Mat. 21:43-45 after they had committed themselves with their statement in Mat. 21:41. 2. "Sought" = desired earnestly; this is the second time their leaders would have arrested Jesus in the precincts of the Temple but the fear of the people prevented it (11:18) 3. They were careful to act so as not to appear to take the parable to themselves; therefore, they withdrew and no doubt returned to their council chamber to decide how they could rid themselves of Jesus. 4. The parable of the marriage feast in Mat. 22:1-14 was spoken to them before they departed. 7. Question Of Tribute V. 13-17 V. 13 1. Mat. 22:15 reveals that the Pharisees had withdrawn in their own group and had a meeting to decide how to entangle (to snare or trap) Jesus. 2. "Certain of the Pharisees" = disciples and not masters; (Mat. 22:16) spies; (Luke 20:20) "feign" = to speak under a false part; they did not appear to be who they were; plain clothed Pharisees. 3. The Pharisees joined with the Herodians who were in direct antagonism with them. The Herodians were a Jewish party in the time of our Lord, who were strong supporters of Herod who had received the kingdom of Judaea by appointment of the Romans. These people had influence with the courts; therefore, they would be of great assistance to the Pharisees in destroying Jesus. 4. "Catch" = to catch wild animals; their purpose was to hunt and catch Him like some wild animal; wanted to entangle Him in His talk and turn him over to the power and authority of the governor. (Luke 20:20) V. 14 1. "Master" = teacher. 2. "Know" = refers to positive knowledge; they were absolutely convinced of the fact. 3. "True" = true in the sense that He could not lie; this is a hypocritical compliment, not believed by them, but artfully said to conceal their true design. 4. "Carest for no man" = refers to the fact that Jesus would speak truth without regard to the fear or favor of man. 5. "Regardest not the person of man" = not be partial but would decide according to truth, and not from any bias toward either party. 6. "Lawful" = the Jews were not discussing the legality of paying poll tax to Caesar, but whether a Jew should do so in view of his theocratic (rule by God) relationship to God. 7. "Tribute" = taxes. 8. They pressed for an answer, yes or no, as if there were no other possible answer. If He answered "no", that would cause the Roman authorities to charge him with treason, and if He answered "yes", it would have caused displeasure among the Jewish crowd. V. 15 1. They repeated the question. They thought they had Jesus on the spot, either way He answered they were going to get rid of Him. 2. "Hypocrisy" = refers to one who pretends to be something he is not. Luke 20:23 says, "he perceived their craftiness", while Mat. 22:18 says, "Jesus perceived their wickedness" and called them "hypocrites". Each of these words reveal the spirit and attitude of these men. 3. "Tempt" = to put to the test; they were trying to trap Him with this difficult question. 4. "Penny" = denarius; the coin of the tribute to the Roman government; it was possible they had to send for one since they were in the temple and only Jewish coins were used there. The word "bring" indicates this. V. 16 1. "Image" = a derived likeness. 2. "Superscription" = a writing upon; a title; an inscription. 3. "Caesar's" = image of Tiberius Caesar, the then reigning Roman emperor. V. 17 1. "Render" = to pay off, discharge; a stronger word than the word "give" which the Jewish leaders had used; speaks of paying something as a debt. 2. Debts to man and debts to God are both to be discharged. Jesus used this opportunity to teach these leaders that they should give their hearts, lives, property, and influence all to God. 3. "Marvelled" = to wonder at, be amazed; the tense speaks of continuous action. 4. At this answer they left and went their way unable to catch Him. (Mat. 22:22) 8. Questioned About The Resurrection V. 18-27 V. 18 1. "Sadducees" = part of the Sanhedrin who did not believe in the resurrection; they also did not believe in angels or spirits. 2. "Resurrection" = a resurrection from death. 3. They came the same day that the Pharisees and Herodians came. V. 19 1. "Master" = teacher; this title is purely formal for they did not come to learn. 2. "Moses wrote" = refers to the first five books of the Bible; the scripture spoken of is Deut. 25:5-6. 3. "If" = a particle introducing a hypothetical case. V. 20-23 1. "Took a wife" = means to be married. 2. The purpose of what Moses wrote was to prevent a family inheritance from being broken up. 3. "The resurrection" = that resurrection of which so much is heard; the purpose of the Sadducees was hostile because they may have wanted to know what position Jesus took on this subject hoping to trap Him or to make a point to the Pharisees. 4. Since the seven men had died, and also the woman, the interest of the case had passed over into the future life, if there was such a thing. According to their thinking there was not such a thing. V. 24 1. "Err" = in error; believe what is not true; wander astray; we get our word planet (wandering star) from this word. 2. Their ignorance was two-fold, both inexcusable in members of the priesthood, of which most of these men probably were: 1) ignorance of the OT, 2) ignorance of the power of God; they assumed that God could not raise the dead. V. 25 1. "Angels" = created beings. 2. "As" = in the same manner as, after the fashion of; speaks of similarity and equality limited to the restrictions of the context which speaks of marriage and the propagation of the race; angels do not reproduce neither will their be propagation of saints in heaven. V. 26-27 1. Our Lord disposed of their question but gives them more than they bargained for. 2. "Touching" = concerning. 3. "Book of Moses" = first five books of the Bible; speaking of Exo. 3:3-6. 4. "Bush" = the burning bush where God revealed Himself to Moses. 5. Our Lord proves there is life after death by using Abraham, Isaac and Jacob as examples. God revealed Himself to Moses as standing in a real relation to men who were long dead; "I am" not "I was". 6. The living God cannot be in relation with any who have ceased to exist; therefore, the patriarchs were still living in His sight at the time of Exodus; dead to the visible world, but alive unto God. 7. Those dead who are really alive and in the presence of God will one day be complete with a bodily resurrection. 8. Now Jesus said "you do greatly error" = error in a great degree; adds the descriptive word "greatly" in this verse while it is left out in verse 24. 9. Mat. 22:33-34 adds that the multitude were astonished at Jesus teaching, while the Sadducees were silenced. 9. Question About The Great Commandment V. 28-34 V. 28 1. "One of the scribes" = a writer; a Pharisee; a lawyer. (Mat. 22:34-35) 2. "Reasoning together" = discuss, dispute, question; refers to the Sadducees just mentioned. 3. "Perceiving " = to know; to have positive knowledge of a fact; the scribe knew beyond doubt that Jesus had answered them well (rightly) because he had a knowledge of the scripture. 4. "Which" = of what sort; the Lord is not asked to select one commandment out of the ten, but to specify a class of commandments, or a particular commandment as representative of a class, to which priority belongs. 5. The reason for this question was to tempt (to test) Jesus. (Mat. 22:35) V. 29-30 1. This was a quotation from Deut. 6:4-5, which was recited daily by every Jew, and written on a miniature roll which every scribe carried in his phylactery, a small case made of parchment bound to the forehead or arm, in which was placed small pieces of parchment inscribed with scripture portions. These words were already of prime importance to the Jews. 2. "Love" = speaks of that Holy Spirit generated love in the heart of a yielded saint, a divine love, which is due God from His creatures. 3. "Heart" = regarded by the ancient Hebrews as the organ of intellect; the faculty and seat of intelligence. 4. "Mind" = regarded as the faculty of desires and affections. 5. "Soul" = being; life. 6. "Strength" = to the extent of ones ability. 7. The use of the words "heart, soul, mind, and strength" with the word "all" used in each case speaks of the devotion of the whole being to God; to the uttermost degree; all that is within an individual. 8. This first commandment as a class covers man's responsibilities to God which covers the first four of the Ten Commandments. V. 31 1. The scribe asked which is the first commandment but Jesus gave him also the second quoting Lev. 19:18. 2. "Neighbor" = anyone with whom we live or whom we happen to meet without respect of race or religion. This is brought out in the parable of the good Samaritan. (Luke 10:29-37) 3. We are to extend to our neighbor that kind of love with which we love ourselves, not a frigid love, but a sincere love. 4. This second commandment as a class covers man's responsibility to man which covers the last six of the Ten Commandments. 5. "There is none other commandment greater than these" = because all the law and the prophets (a phrase representing all the OT scripture) hang on these two commandments. (Mat. 22:40) V. 32 1. "Well" = rightly; an exclamatory particle, used on hearing something which one approves. 2. "Master" = teacher; title of address. 3. The scribe agrees that Jesus spoke the truth and he further states that there is only one God. V. 33 1. "Understanding" = a mental putting together; a different but kindred word to "mind" in verse 30. 2. The scribe basically states that for one to devote his whole being to God is more than carrying out all the rituals of the law. 3. One can perform the rituals without his heart being in what he is doing, but if one's heart is devoted to the Lord he will obey thus performing the commands of the law. 4. This man had some understanding and in his words there is a ring of conviction. V. 34 1. "Discreetly" = wisely, according to truth. 2. "Not far" = nearby; insight into its nature; distance from the new kingdom is not measured by miles, or by ceremonial standards, but by spiritual conditions. 3. This man had some understanding but there was something between him and the kingdom. Just as the rich man in Mark 10:21 lacked one thing (riches), this man may have lacked one thing (may have been pride). What ever it was there is no evidence in the scripture that he ever got saved. 4. "Durst" = dared; venture; Jesus' wisdom in answering the religious leaders questions caused their mouths to be shut at this time so Jesus begins to question them. 10. Jesus Questions The Scribes V. 35-37 V. 35 1. Even though they were silenced, they gathered around Jesus as He questions them, the first two are recorded in Mat. 22:41-42. 2. "Christ" = the Anointed One; Greek equivalent of the Hebrew for the word "Messiah" who will some day reign on the throne of David. 3. "Son" = speaks of a descendant. 4. Jesus' question in this verse asked, "How can you say that the Messiah (deity) can be a descendant (humanity) of David?" How is this doctrine that He descended from David consistent with what David says when he calls Him Lord? V. 36 1. "David said by the Holy Ghost" = proof that Psa. 110:1 was divinely inspired. (II Peter 1:21) 2. "LORD" = word means master, one who has power over another; when all caps, it refers to Jehovah, the title of God in the OT. 3. "Lord" = word means the same as "LORD" but refers to the Son of God, Jesus the Christ. 4. This verse reveals the trinity of God, the Father = LORD, the Son = Lord, and the Spirit = Holy Ghost. 5. "Sit thou on my right hand" = refers to Jesus being at the right hand of the Father in glory. (Acts 2:32-33; Col. 3:1; Heb. 10:12) 6. "Footstool" = something under the feet; implies that all enemies will be placed in subjection, come under control of our Lord. It is as good as already done because Paul spoke of it as being past tense in Eph. 1:22 and in reality it will come to pass. V. 37 1. This question gets to the point. How, since the Messiah is Jehovah, deity, can He also be human, a son of David? 2. One of the charges brought against the Lord Jesus was that He called God His (His private, unique) Father, making Himself equal with God, thus deity. (John 5:18) Therefore, the Jewish leaders rejected the teaching of the incarnation, and Jesus' claim to deity. 3. "Common people" = those who were not of the Pharisees, Sadducees and Herodians; the crowds. 4. "Gladly" = with pleasure. 11. The Scribes Denounced By Jesus V. 38-40 V. 38 1. "Doctrine" = teaching; instruction. 2. "Beware" = to be on guard; be careful; keep an eye on. 3. "Scribes" = they were the professional teachers of the current Judaism and were nearly all Pharisees. 4. "Love" = to be fond of, to like; expresses a desire. 5. "Long clothing" = refers to the dress of dignitaries like kings and priests. 6. "Salutations" = greetings. 7. "Marketplaces" = the town square; a market or thoroughfare; they liked to make a show in public places and demanded to be called Rabbi, a title of respect in the Jewish schools of learning. (Mat. 23:7) V. 39 1. "Chief seats" = benches up in front facing the congregation, and were reserved for officials and persons of distinction. 2. "Uppermost rooms" = the first reclining place; this refers to the place of the most honored guest at a feast; the orientals reclined on couches around the table instead of sitting on chairs as we do. V. 40 1. "Devour" = forcibly appropriate widow's property; terrible picture of civil wrong by robbing the homes of helpless widows. 2. "Pretence" = an outward showing; refers to the scribes coming in to widows and using prayer as a means of securing opportunities for committing a crime by persuading them to will their houses to the temple and then took the proceeds of the sale for themselves. 3. "Damnation" = judgement; a severer sentence would fall upon them in the day of judgement and a heavier condemnation because under the mask of religion they practiced iniquity. 4. Mat. 23:1-36 gives a more lengthy wording of the denouncement of the scribes. 5. Mat. 23:37-39 gives the words of Jesus as He laments over Jerusalem because of the condition of the Jews and their leaders. 12. The Widow's Mite V. 41-44 V. 41 1. "Over against" = opposite to, in full sight of. 2. "The treasury" = the receptacle into which the offerings of the people were cast, for the care of the temple and for the benefit of the priests and of the poor. 3. "Beheld" = to be a spectator of; look at; to observe; tense reveals a continuous action. 4. "How" = in what manner; with what motives; Christ is a heart searcher. 5. "Rich" = possessed abundance. 6. "Much" = many pieces. V. 42 1. "Certain" = one; one specially singled out for notice. 2. "Poor" = word used to designate the pauper rather than the mere peasant; implies utter destitution, usually beggarly. The Greek construction speaks of the fact that she was poverty-stricken, shown by her dress and wasted look. 3. "Mite" = smallest coin in circulation among the Jews; make of copper or brass; value was about an eighth part of a denarius or 1/8 of a cent. 4. "Farthing" = 1/4 of a denarius or 1/4 of a cent. V. 43 1. "Called" = summoned the disciples around Him to teach them an important lesson; the disciples had slipped away from Him while the scribes and Pharisees were being denounced. 2. "Verily" = truly. 3. "More than all they have cast into" = means she gave more than all the rich put together had given; this is in the estimation of Him who sees not as men sees. V. 44 1. "Abundance" = to superabound; to be in excess; they had much left over for themselves after giving into the treasury. 2. "Want" = poverty; destitution. 3. "All her living" = her livelihood; the whole of her life's necessities. 4. She gave all that she had beforehand for that day, trusting that the Lord would give her bread for that day. 5. It is not how much we give to God, but how much we withhold for ourselves, that He is concerned about. 6. This widow's gift was offered with humility and devotion; that is what the Lord is looking for. Chapter 13 13. The Destruction Of The Temple Foretold V. 1-2 V. 1 1. Jesus had just pronounced judgment upon the Temple in Mat. 23:38. 2. Now the spokesman for the disciples began talking of its magnificence, no doubt desiring Jesus to turn and look at the glory of the buildings. 3. "Buildings" = refers to the mass of separate edifices, enclosures, columns, halls, and sanctuaries composing the Temple enclosure. 4. "What manner" = of what quality. 5. This temple was the one that Herod had built for the Jews about 10 BC. The historian Josephus speaks of the great size of these stones, some of which can be seen today at the "western" or "wailing" wall. Josephus says that some of these stones measure fifty feet long, twenty-four feet high, and sixteen feet thick and weigh as much as a hundred tons. Jesus had, of course, often observed them. V. 2 1. Jesus acknowledges the fact of the greatness and magnificence of the Temple. 2. "Thrown down" = to destroy, demolish. 3. A double negative appears twice in our Lord's answer, making an emphatic statement. Our Lord's prediction was fulfilled in exact detail in A.D. 70 when the Romans under Titus' leadership captured Jerusalem and destroyed the Temple. Only the foundation stones remain of all that magnificence. 14. Jesus Gives The Course Of This Age V. 3-27 V. 3 1. Jesus had crossed the brook Kidron, ascended the steep road up the Mount of Olives which led to Bethany, and was already seated and resting when He was approached by four disciples. 2. "Over against" = directly opposite in full view of the Temple about which they are speaking. 3. "Privately" = separate from the multitudes and from the rest of the disciples. 4. It was a dangerous thing to speak of the destruction of the temple or even to inquire about such an event for fear of the Scribes and Pharisees. V. 4 1. The disciple asked basically two questions, "When?" and "What sign?". 2. It is evident from Mat. 24:3 that the disciples closely associated together the destruction of the temple and His final coming at the end of the world. 3. "Sign" = a mark, token; a sign by which anything future is pre-announced; it refers to that by which a thing is distinguished from others and known; it is a pointer to what lies ahead. Example = a road sign. 4. "Fulfilled" = accomplished; to complete entirely. V. 5 1. "Take heed" = to turn the thoughts or direct the mind to a thing, to consider, contemplate, look at. 2. "Deceive" = to lead astray; to lead aside from the right way into error. V. 6 1. "In my name" = "upon the basis of my name", thus, "basing their claims on the use of my name". The word "name" is used here to designate all that the Messiah is in His person and His work. 2. "I am Christ" = the Greek simply says, "I AM". 3. Impostors come upon the basis of the name, holding out a false Messianic hope, claiming powers which belong only to the true Christ, even if they do not assume the title, and therefore deceive (led astray) many. 4. Our Lord warns the disciples, not only against the deceptions of those who claim to be the Messiah, but against following them and thus being led astray. This warning runs through the whole discussion. V. 7 1. "Rumours" = reports; the act of hearing. 2. "Troubled" = to be disturbed, disquieted, terrified; the tense forbids the continuance of an action already going on; many were already troubled by wars going on in Jesus' day. There has never been a time in history without wars going on somewhere in this world from Jesus' day until this present time. 3. "Such things must needs be" = necessary in the nature of the case for such things to be; the total depravity of the human race is the root of all war, and that is the nature of the case that makes war inevitable, but the end shall not be yet. V. 8 1. There are two kingdoms on this earth moving along side by side, the world system of evil headed up by Satan and in which all nations are constantly ready to fight, and the kingdom of God. 2. "Earthquakes" = commotion; a shaking. 3. "Divers places" = different locations. 4. "Famines" = a scarcity of food. 5. "Troubles" = disturbance; commotion; tumult; sedition. 6. "Sorrows" = pangs; desperate or agonizing struggle; the Greek construction refers to "intolerable anguish"; all these things of verses 7-8 have been present from Jesus day to the present but they are only the beginning of what this world will experience = sorrows and intolerable anguish. V. 9 1. "Take heed to yourselves" = "But as for you, do not think only of what is coming on the Jewish nation and on the world, but also on yourselves." 2. "Councils" = a joint session; these were local councils of the Jews, modeled after the one in Jerusalem; local courts of discipline with the sentences being carried out in synagogues. 3. Believers would not only be brought before Jewish councils but before Gentile authorities (rulers and kings) as well. 4. "Beaten" = to flay; scourge. 5. "For my sake" = on account of Jesus. 6. "Testimony" = to give evidence of. 7. Believers will be called before councils, rulers, and kings to give evidence of their being a Christian (for my sake). This testimony according to modern day thinking will not be "against" them but "to" them so they can hear the gospel. V. 10 1. "Gospel" = good news of the basic facts of the death, burial, and the resurrection of Christ, and of the interpretation of these facts. 2. "Published" = proclaim; preach; to proclaim after the manner of a herald with a suggestion of formality, gravity, and an authority which must be listened to and obeyed. 3. This was done at Pentecost, (Acts 2:5) and will be done again before the Lord comes back for His saints. V. 11 1. "When" = whenever; wording implies it will happen, not might happen. This has happened to believers since Jesus' day and it will intensify before the Lord comes for His saints. 2. "They shall lead you" = refers to the authorities leading the believer in custody to the judgment seat. 3. "Deliver you up" = to yield you up to the judgment seat. 4. "Take no thought beforehand what ye shall speak" = means not to worry about your defence, testimony, because you are promised assistance of the Holy Ghost. 5. "Premeditate" = to revolve in the mind before hand. 6. Luke 21:15 says "I will give you a mouth (words) and wisdom (to speak those words), which all your adversaries (opponents, ruler, and kings; those in authority) shall not be able to gainsay (refute or deny) nor resist (oppose or withstand)." V. 12 1. "Betray" = to be turned in to the authorities stating that you are a follower of Christ. 2. This may be done by your physical brother, father, or child or anyone who is not saved no matter how close a relation they may be. 3. This has happened in various parts of the world at different times but will happen in a greater degree before the Lord's return. V. 13 1. "Hated = detest; despised; to pursue with hatred. 2. This refers to believers not to Israel, because Jesus is talking to His disciples. While it is true Israel has been and is hated, the true believers are also hated for His name sake. Israel is not hated for His name sake, because they rejected Jesus Christ. (John 15:18-21) 3. "Endure" = to persevere under misfortunes and trials; to hold fast to one's faith in Christ. (Acts 14:22) 4. This verse is not teaching works for salvation. The only way anyone can endure to the end (till death comes or to the end of the tribulation period) is by being saved by grace through faith and allowing that grace to enable you to stay true to the Lord Jesus Christ. V. 14 1. "Abomination of desolation" = refers to the antichrist desecrating the temple in the midst of the 70th week of Daniel by setting himself up as God (standing where he ought not). This was spoken of by Daniel the prophet in Dan. 9:27. When this happens the antichrist will show himself to be, not the friend and protector of Israel, but her bitter enemy. 2. Notice who the Lord was speaking to, "ye" = His disciples, and He said "ye shall see" = meaning the saints shall see the antichrist; Paul made this very clear in II Thess. 2:1-3. 3. "Understand" = to think upon, heed, ponder, consider; let him attend to the events that occur, which will show the time to flee. (Luke 21:20) 4. "Flee" = to run away and hide in the mountains (may be Petra, a city hewed out of solid rock); Israel will realize at this point that they have received a false Messiah. V. 15 1. The words in this verse mean that he must flee suddenly if he would save his life, even though he might lose his goods. 2. The houses were built with flat roofs with the stairway outside. The roofs of the house were used for sitting and sleeping in the summer. V. 16 1. The farmer was accustomed to leaving his outer garment in his house while he worked in the field. 2. The language of this verse revealed that there would be no time to gather up anything to carry with them, if they were to save their lives they must flee at once. V. 17-18 1. "Woe" = exclamation of grief because judgment would overtake them; refers to the impossibility of a hasty flight on the part of mothers who have young children. 2. The severity of winter weather would tend to lesson the chance of escape from the antichrist. 3. Mat. 24:20 adds, "neither on the sabbath day" = refers to the devout Jews refusing to break the law of travel even if it meant death. (Act 1:12; sabbath day's journey = about 4854 ft.) This would not be enough distance to escape the antichrist. V. 19 1. "Affliction" = pressure; oppression; distress; anguish; straits; tribulation; translated tribulation in verse 24, John 16:33, Acts 14:22, Rom. 5:3, Rev 1:9, and Mat. 24:21. 2. This is describing the period known as the great tribulation which is after the antichrist sets himself up as god in the temple and before the trumpets, thunders, and vials, which are God's wrath and not tribulation. 3. Tribulation always refers to the persecution of God's elect by wicked men, never to the wrath of God being directed toward mankind; therefore, it is the devil's wrath (Rev. 12:12) against man, not God's wrath against man. V. 20 1. "Shortened" = to reduce the period of time, the number of days of the great tribulation period. Had the Lord not done this, all flesh would die and no saint would be left alive. 2. "Elect" = those who have obtained salvation through Christ; this refers to the saints of God and not Israel. 3. "Chosen" = chose out from a number; base word for word "elect"; refers to the act of God, who in sovereign grace, chooses certain from among mankind for Himself. (I Peter 1:2) V. 21 1. "Lo" = behold; see. 2. "Christ" = the anointed one; the Messiah. 3. "Believe him not" = don't put your trust in false Christs. V. 22 1. "False Christs" = those who falsely lay claim to the name and office of the Messiah. 2. "False prophets" = pretended foretellers; one who, acting the part of a divinely inspired prophet, utters falsehoods under the name of divine prophecies. 3. "Signs" = a miracle whose purpose is that of attesting the claims of the one performing the miracle to be true. 4. "Wonders" = a miracle whose purpose is to awaken amazement in the beholder. 5. "Seduce" = to lead away from the truth into error. 6. Our Lord warns against accepting the claims of one who performs miracles solely upon the basis of the fact that he performs miracles. 7. "If it were possible" = the language indicates that the elect will not be deceived or led astray by these false prophets and false Christs. V. 23 1. "Take heed" = to turn the thoughts or direct the mind to a thing, to consider, contemplate, look at. 2. This repeated admonition was given to the disciples but is meant for Christians everywhere, even to the end of the age. 3. "Foretold" = to say already. V. 24-25 1. Mat. 24:29 uses the words "immediately after" = straightway, forthwith; means in fulfillment of the predictions they would be next in order, and would occur before long. 2. These are the signs that the disciples asked about. (Luke 21:25-28) "Men's hearts failing them for fear" = their fear will be so great that it will take away their courage and strength. 3. These signs correspond to Rev. 6:12-17 and are before the wrath of God. This was also prophesied by Joel 2:30-31. (Note: before wrath) 4. "Heaven" = refers to that part man can see. 5. Notice when this occurs = "after that tribulation", but before God's wrath. V. 26 1. "Clouds" = found at the Lord's coming in I Thess. 4:16-17. 2. This verse corresponds with Rev. 1:7 and Rev. 6:16. 3. "Power" = exhibition of divine power, resurrection power. 4. "Glory" = the manifestation of that which brings forth praise. V. 27 1. "Gather together" = dead in Christ raised and the living saints changed and both are gathered together. 2. Mat. 24:31 speaks of a trumpet which corresponds to I Thess. 4:16-17. 3. "Elect" = does not refer to Israel but to those who have obtained salvation through Christ. This is the harvest, with Christ being the first fruit, thus fulfilling O.T. type. (I Cor. 15:23) 4. "Four winds" = represent every corner of the world. 5. "Uttermost" = extremity; means from the tip of earth to the tip of heaven; no saint will be left behind. 15. The Parable Of The Fig Tree V.28-33 V. 28 1. "Parable" = to throw alongside; comparison of one thing to another. 2. Our Lord makes a statement in this verse of a truth that all the disciples who were familiar with fig trees, understood. 3. When the branch became tender under the influences of the spring and put forth leaves one could observe and know (by experience) that summer is near (at hand). V. 29 1. "These things" = refers to the signs in the sun, moon, and stars. (Luke 21:25,28) 2. "So in like manner" = mean simply to observe the fig tree lets you know when summer is near, in like manner observe the signs and you will know the Lord's coming is near. 3. Luke 21:29 adds "and all the trees". V. 30 1. "Verily" = truly. 2. "Generation" = refers to the multitude of men living at the same time. 3. "Shall not pass" = shall not cease to exist. 4. For years men have tried to apply this to Israel and their return as a nation May 14, 1948, but now over forty-two years (what is generally considered as a generation) have gone by and all these things have not been fulfilled; therefore, we will have to junk that teaching and let the Bible say what it says. 5. When these end time signs begin to unfold some of the generation of people living at that time will see the kingdom of God in a fleshly body as nations will repopulate the earth during that period of time. (Luke 21:31) V. 31 1. "Heaven and earth shall pass away" = this universe as we know it will be changed. It will perish, as far as its present state and condition are concerned, only to be refashioned in a more beautiful form during the Kingdom Age. 2. "Words" = all the revelation of God, all the words of Him who is truth shall not pass away but will come to pass exactly as He said. V. 32 1. "Knoweth" = to have absolute, positive knowledge of the facts; notice no man knows the day or hour but when the signs spoken of in Luke 21:25 begin to come to pass the elect will know that His coming is near and their eyes will be set on the eastern sky. 2. "Neither the Son" = the Son as a man, and as the messenger from God to men, did not know so as to be able to reveal it to men; the Son as God has all knowledge. V. 33 1. "Take heed" = to turn the thoughts or direct the mind to a thing, to consider, contemplate, look at. 2. "Watch" = to be sleepless, spiritually speaking; to be attentive and ready. 3. "Pray" = prayer of confession to maintain fellowship with the Father and pray for enabling grace to be operative in your life so that you might endure the persecution that comes your way because you don't know when the time is (the day or hour). (Heb. 4:16, Rom. 5:2) 4. There is a saying, "Keep your bags packed but your tool chest open." 16. Watchfulness In View Of The Lord's Return V. 34-37 V. 34 1. "For the Son of Man is" = in italics; therefore, not in the original but supplied by the translators to show that Jesus is referring to Himself as the man taking a far journey, leaving this earth to go back to the Father. 2. "House" = household, refers to His leaving the church behind with authority to transact business between heaven and earth. (Mat. 16:18-19) 3. "Porter" = doorkeeper; refers to the apostles and could stand today for the full-time active Christian worker, such as a pastor, Bible teacher, evangelist, or missionary. (Heb. 13:17) 4. "Watch" = to keep awake; carries the idea of alertness. 5. Each servant (bondslave) has his appropriate task; the porter's is to watch. V. 35 1. Here Jesus applies the command to watch to the apostles He was speaking to. 2. "Know" = to have positive knowledge of the facts; ignorance of the time of the Master's return is an argument for alertness and eager readiness for His coming. 3. "Master of the house" = denotes the Lord Jesus. 4. Four watches of the night, according to Roman division, are given here: even = beginning at six and ending at nine; midnight = ending at twelve; cock-crowing = ending at three; and morning = ending at six. V. 36 1. "Suddenly" = unexpectedly. 2. This verse is in keeping with the figure used because in the Temple, during the night, the captain of the temple made his rounds, and the guards had to rise at his approach and salute him in a particular manner. Any guard found asleep on duty was beaten, or his garment set on fire. (Rev. 16:15) V. 37 1. Now what He had said to the apostles He now says to all, "Watch" = be diligent, faithful, and waiting for the return of the Lord. 2. Failure to do so would be because you're not saved and would result in your being left behind as Jesus outlined in the parable of the ten virgins given at this point of time and recorded in Mat. 25:1-13. 3. The parable of the talents in Mat. 25:14-30 and His discourse on the final judgment scene in Mat. 25:31-46 was spoken by our Lord at this time. Chapter 14 B. Jesus' Preparation For The Cross V.14:1-42 1. Plot to Put Jesus To Death V. 1-2 V. 1 1. There seems to be a day missing from the six days of John 12:1 to the two days here which would account for a sabbath day rest which was not spoken of nor recorded (something to think about). 2. "Feast of the passover" = feast that Israel was supposed to observe since the day of their deliverance from Egypt; this feast was connected with the feast of unleavened bread as outlined in Exo. 12:14-18 and Lev. 23:5-8. 3. "Sought how" = enquired in what way or manner they might take (to use strength) Jesus and put Him to death; they had met in the palace of Caiaphas, the high priest (Mat. 26:3) who had for some time been advocating the policy of sacrificing Jesus for the nation. (John 11:49-53) 4. "Craft" = deceit, guile, a lure, snare, bait. V. 2 1. "Feast day" = April 15th, the first day of the feast of unleavened bread. 2. The point under consideration was the strategic, opportune, safe time to give Jesus over to the Roman authorities. He was too popular with the people for the Jewish leaders to hand Him over on the feast day. 3. "Uproar" = a disturbance. 2. Jesus Was Anointed For His Burial In Bethany V. 3-9 V. 3 1. Many take this anointing to be the same one recorded in John 12:1-9 where Mary anointed Jesus feet, and even the divisions in some Bibles (placed there by man) recorded this to be done by Mary of Bethany. This cannot be the case for two reasons even though Jesus was in Bethany in both instances; A. This instance occurs in Simon the leper's house while the anointing in John 12 was in Lazarus, Martha and Mary's house. Simon was called a leper, probably because he had been a leper and had been healed by the Lord and he still retained the name leper to distinguish him from others named Simon, a common name among the Jews. B. This instance occurs two days before the feast of the passover while the one in John 12 occurs six day before the passover. 2. "Sat at meat" = reclined at the table. 3. "Alabaster box" = a box made of alabaster, which is a translucent, whitish, fine-grained variety of gypsum, which is a substance occurring naturally in sedimentary rocks; something similar to a frosted glass vase. 4. "Ointment" = this English word does not quite convey the proper meaning; the substance was a liquid and a perfume used only to give a pleasant odor described as: A. "Spikenard" = this word is a translation of two Greek words, one which means genuine, pure, and unadulterated while the other refers to a perfume which came from India, well known to the Greek and Romans. B. "Very Precious" = extremely expensive, requiring great outlay. 5. "Broke the box" = to brake the sealed orifice of the vase or the narrow neck of the vase holding the ointment. 6. The woman who did this is not named. V. 4 1. "Had indignation" = moved with a feeling of anger or scorn; this was moving on the inside of some. Mat. 26:8 identifies them as the disciples who asked the question in this verse. 2. "Waste" = loss; the disciples thought that this action was a complete waste of a very costly perfume. V. 5 1. "Pence" = denarius which is a laborer's daily wage. 2. Here was a year's worth of wages poured on Jesus head in useless extravagance, according to the disciples thinking. 3. The Passover season was a time when alms were given to the poor (John 13:29). 4. "Murmured against" = one word in the Greek; means to be moved with anger; a striking word used of the snorting of horses. 5. No doubt a similar incident four days earlier, when Mary of Bethany anointed the feet of Jesus and wiped them with her hair, was fresh on the disciples minds (John 12:3-6). V. 6 1. "Trouble" = disturb, bother. 2. "Wrought a good work" = a work worthy of all praise and honor. V. 7 1. It is as though our Lord said, "The world always abounds with the poor; therefore you will always have it in your power to help them; but in a short time I will be gone from you, after which you will be unable to perform any service like this for me." V. 8 1. "She hath done what she could" = she seized the opportunity, which might not occur again, that of doing honor to her Lord by anointing Him with her very best. 2. "Come aforehand" = come in advance to anoint His body for burial; the woman may or may not have understood what was about to happen, but she was moved by the Spirit of God to do this, at this particular time, as though in anticipation of His death and burial. V. 9 1. When our Lord said these words, none of the Gospels had been written; nor had the gospel been preached at that time throughout the known world. But now it has been published for more than nineteen centuries and wherever it is proclaimed, this deed is proclaimed with it, in continual memory of her, and to her lasting honor. 2. "Memorial" = a reminder; that by which the memory of any person is preserved; many build memorials to be remembered by and they are soon tarnished, destroyed, and forgotten, but deeds done for our Lord will never be forgotten. 3. What a hint there is here for those who wish to leave permanent memorials. They ought not be worldly but something to lift up our Lord. 3. Judas Covenants To Betray Jesus V. 10-11 V. 10 1. "Betray" = to hand over alongside; a modern term would be to, "sell him down the river." 2. The rebuke Jesus gave the disciples in verses 6-8 may have hardened Judas whose position as one of the twelve gave him an advantage which the chief priests did not have. 3. Luke 22:3 gives the real reason Judas did this. "Satan entered" does not mean that Satan personally entered into the body of Judas but his attitude of heart allowed demons, who are under the command of Satan, to take control of his thoughts and actions. (Eph. 2:2) V. 11 1. "Glad" = word expresses the inward feeling of joy; the proposal of Judas was received by the chief priests with more delight than they cared to show. 2. "Promised him money" = Mat. 26:15 says, "they covenanted with him for thirty pieces of silver." This is a fulfillment of prophecy in Zech. 11:12. A shekel is usually the money referred to when an exact sum is not mentioned. If that be the case, the amount Judas betrayed our Lord for was $19.50 (shekel = .65), the price of a slave. (Exo. 21:32) 3. "Sought" = to seek for; to desire; to wish for. 4. "Conveniently" = when the opportunity occurs; Judas claimed that he knew enough of the habits of Jesus to enable them to catch Him "in the absence of the multitude" (Luke 22:6) without waiting for the passover to be over, when the crowds would leave. 5. While Judas was gone to the chief priests, the Gentiles seek Christ (John 12:20-36) and the Jews reject Christ. (John 12:37-50) 4. Preparation Of The Passover Feast V. 12-16 V. 12 1. The "first day of unleavened bread" is stated clearly to be on the day they were to kill the passover "Lamb". 2. The occasion for this season goes back to Exo. 12 when the children of Israel were in bondage in Egypt and were told by God through Moses to kill a lamb and apply the blood on the door posts and lintel which would result in the Lord passing over that house without killing the firstborn inside, therefore the name "passover" came into being. 3. "Unleavened bread" = unfermented, uncorrupted; refers to bread made without yeast, a fermenting agent; leaven is a type of sin, therefore for eight days during this period of time no leaven could be in their houses and all males had to attend these feasts. 4. "First day" = day passover lamb was to be killed; the 14th day of April which began at 6:00 p.m. 5. Scriptures to verify this are Exo. 12:5-6, 13-18; Lev. 23:4-8; Deut. 16:16. 6. "Killed" = to sacrifice, tense refers to a customary practice, one that had been in effect since Moses' day. 7. "Where wilt thou that we go and prepare" = the time of this question was Tuesday night our time at 6:00 p.m. but was the beginning of Wednesday, (Jewish calendar) April 14th, the day preparation for sacrificing the passover lamb and eating the passover feast which normally occurs about 6:00 p.m. the ending of April 14th and beginning of April 15th. The disciples did not ask what city but what house in the city of Jerusalem since the passover could only be sacrificed at Jerusalem. 8. It seems that Jesus and His disciples ate the feast earlier than normal due to things already prepared before hand. John 18:28 verifies this. V. 13 1. "Two of his disciples" = Luke 22:8 records their names; Peter and John. 2. "There shall meet you a man bearing a pitcher of water" = the carrying of water was usually a woman's work, therefore a man (probably a slave) would be more noticeable carrying a pitcher (an earthenware vessel) of water. 3. "Follow him" = accompany him to his destination. V. 14 1. "Goodman of the house" = master of the house; the head of a family. 2. "Master" = teacher; the name Jesus may have been known by among the disciples and one He may have directed them to call Him by. 3. "Guest-chamber" = an eating room, dining room. 4. The name of the man is not mentioned possibly to keep Judas from knowing the location and inviting the chief priests to arrest Jesus before it was time. V. 15 1. "Upper room" = above the ground; second floor; a large room big enough to accommodate twelve men and the Son of God. 2. "Furnished and prepared" = refers to a state of readiness; spread with couches to recline on as they ate; also refers to all leaven being removed and the passover lamb ready for the sacrifice. 3. "Make ready" = may have consisted of their carrying the lamb to the temple to be sacrificed by the priests and all things necessary according to Jewish custom. (I'm inclined to believe that most of this was done by the master of the house and these disciples just made sure every thing was in its place.) V. 16 1. "Found" = to find by searching or making an effort, not by chance or just happened (same word in John 1:41, 45). 2. These disciples obeyed the Lord to the letter and returned to Him. 5. The Last Supper V. 17-21 V. 17 1. "Evening" = "evening being come" = sometime between six and nine p.m.; the disciples could have begun their mission before 6:00 p.m.; the Greek construction of Luke 22:7 could allow this. V. 18 1. Luke 22:15 shows the desire in Jesus' heart. 2. "As they sat and did eat" = reclined at the table and ate the passover supper; sometime during the meal, maybe close to the conclusion, there was a strife (discussion with a quarrelsome tone) among the disciples as to who should be the greatest. (Luke 22:24-30) 3. John 13:2-20 records Jesus washing the disciples' feet which had occurred after the main course of the feast had ended as they reclined around the table but before Jesus identified Judas as the traitor. This may have been done to humble the disciples after the strife had occurred. Jesus was the greatest but He took the position of the lowly servant. 4. "Verily" = truly. 5. John 13:21 reveals the troubled spirit of our Lord as He made the statement that one of the disciples would betray Him. V. 19 1. "Began" = to commence; the passover feast was a joyous occasion but the words our Lord had spoken cast a shadow over the entire group. 2. "Sorrowful" = to affect with sadness; cause grief; Mat. 26:22 describes them as being "exceeding sorrowful", meaning having great sorrow. 3. "Lord, is it I?" = the Greek construction reveals that they expected a negative answer to their question; really saying, "It is not I, is it?" 4. John 13:22 says, they were "doubting of whom he spake"; "doubting" = to be at a loss with one's self, be in doubt, not to know how to decide or what to do, to be perplexed. 5. Each disciple, including Judas asked this question. 6. John 13:23-25 gives more of the disciples discussion concerning who would betray Jesus. V. 20 1. "Dippeth" = to cover with a fluid; the dish probably contained a sauce made of dates, raisins, and vinegar in which they dipped their piece of bread (sop) before eating. 2. John 13:26 records Jesus giving the sop to Judas. 3. The sign that Jesus gave, "the one that dippeth with me in the dish," escaped the notice of all; but when Jesus gave the sop to Judas, he understood that Jesus knew his purpose. V. 21 1. "The Son of man goeth" = the Christ will die as it is written in OT scripture (Psalm 41:9); Luke 22:22 says as it was determined (marked out by a boundary = that is, in the divine purpose of God). 2. "Indeed" = truly. 3. "Woe to that man" = the crime is great and awful, and he will be punished accordingly. 4. The greatness of the "woe" is stated in the phrase, "good were it for that man if he had never been born" = means it would have been better for that man had he never been born than to have lived and died with such judgment upon him. 5. Mat. 26:25 records that Judas asked the second time, "Is it I?" and Jesus answered in a voice no doubt where the others did not hear, "Thou hast said." 6. John 13:27-30 states the action of Judas and the thoughts of the disciples at his action. 7. Because Judas asked the question, "Is it I?" two times, reveals the possibility that he was blinded and did not fully perceive what he was doing but Satan took control (entered in) of him and he went about to carry out the will of God. 8. John 13:31-35 states what Jesus said to the eleven after Judas had left. 6. Jesus Institutes The Lord's Supper V. 22-25 V. 22 1. "As they did eat" = the custom of that day was to eat slowly and in courses; the main course had ended but they were still reclining around the table dipping the bread in the sauce and talking. 2. "Bread" = unleavened bread; that used in the passover feast, made into thin cakes and easily broken. 3. "Blessed" = sought a blessing on it or gave thanks to God for it; Luke 22:19 says He "gave thanks." 4. "Brake" = represents the sufferings of Jesus about to take place, that of His body broken or wounded, pierced, and bruised for our sin. 5. "This is my body" = "this represents my body"; this broken bread serves to recall His suffering to our remembrance. (Luke 22:19) 6. To eat the broken bread symbolizes Him as the spiritual nourishment upon which a sinner may eat and have eternal life. (John 6:53) V. 23 1. "Cup" = refers to the drink used at the passover feast which was unleavened fruit of the vine. (V. 25) 2. "Had given thanks" = gave thanks to God for it. 3. "They all drank of it" = all the apostles present were to partake; not saying "drink all the fruit of the vine." 4. Only eleven partook of the Lord's supper. Judas was not there. Jesus would never have served Judas the Lord's supper. (I Cor. 5:11) V. 24 1. "This is my blood" = represents Christ's blood as the bread did His body. This was not literal blood because the drinking of blood was forbidden. (Lev. 17:14) 2. "New Testament" = new covenant; refers to the new covenant that God was about to make with men through a Redeemer. The old covenant was that which was made with the Jews by the sprinkling of the blood of sacrifice. 3. The cup is the new covenant in His blood = that which is ratified, sealed, or sanctioned by His blood. 4. "New" = new as to quality not time; refers to a fulfillment of an OT type. 5. "Is shed" = to pour out; indicates a deliberate action not accidental spilling; tense says "is being shed" = referring to our Lord looking upon His sacrifice on the Cross as imminent and regarded as already present. 6. "Many" = refers to all who would exercise faith in His blood for the remission (forgiveness) of their sins. (Mat. 26:28; Rom. 3:25) All others will have to pay for their own sins. (Rom 6:23a) 7. Jesus died for "whosoever" (John 3:16; Rom. 10:13) V. 25 1. "Verily" = truly. 2. "The kingdom of God" = refers to the time when the heavenly kingdom shall appear in the fullness of its glory. 3. This verse refers to the marriage supper of the Lamb which occurs in heaven right after the judgment seat of Christ and just before our Lord sets foot on earth to begin His thousand year reign. (Rev. 19:7) 7. The Disciples' Denial Foretold V. 26-31 V. 26 1. John 14:31 shows that the words of comfort of John 14 were spoken while they were in the room where the Passover feast was observed and the Lord's Supper instituted. 2. "Had sung a hymn" = one word in the Greek; means to sing the praise of, sing hymns to; the tradition of the Jews at the Passover feast was to sing Psalms, 113th and 114th during the observance and 115th, 116th, 117th, and 118th at the close of the Passover; these were no doubt committed to memory and a great possibility what was sung that night by our Lord and the eleven. 3. "They went out into" = implies motion towards the Mount of Olives; the nightly departure for the Mount had become habitual and the eleven felt no surprise when they were summoned to leave the guest chamber; no provision had been made for spending the night in Jerusalem. 4. On the way to the Mount of Olives, Jesus gave words of instruction and encouragement in John 15:1-16:33, as well as words of warning concerning the disciples' denial of the Lord. V. 27 1. "All ye shall be offended" = we sometimes think only Peter denied our Lord because most of the conversation written deals with Peter because impetuous (acting with sudden energy and little thought; impulsive) Peter spoke up without considering the circumstances they were about to face. 2. "Shall be offended" = to cause a person to begin to distrust and desert one whom he ought to trust and obey; to cause to fall away; to see in another what I disapprove of and what hinders me from acknowledging his authority. 3. "Because of me" = because of the fact that our Lord's arrest and treatment by the Jews and Rome might involve them in the same kind of treatment; our Lord knew what they would face that very night; means the disciples would be ashamed to own Jesus as their teacher and to acknowledge themselves to be His disciples. 4. "It is written" = tense reveals an OT prophecy that still stands on record; Jesus is quoting Zech. 13:7. 5. "Smite" = to smite down, cut down, to kill, slay. 6. When a shepherd was killed, the sheep had no direction therefore they were scattered. 7. "I will smite" = the language of God the Father; God gave Jesus up to the Jews and Romans, to be smitten for the sins of the world. (Rom. 8:32) Abraham prophesied of this in Gen. 22:8 as he said, "God will provide himself a lamb," not "for himself" but "himself." V. 28 1. Our Lord stated this to reassure the disciples. 2. They were going to be scattered like frightened sheep in Jerusalem where they had no settled home or friends. 3. Galilee was more like home to them than Jerusalem, and there they would be less afraid of the unbelieving Jews. V. 29 1. "Although" = the Greek construction reveals that Peter thinks it is probable that all the rest will be offended but not him. 2. "Yet" = yet certainly; contrariwise; a strong word opposing what follows to what goes before. 3. "Not I" = Peter boasts of loyalty even if all the rest deny the Lord. 4. John 13:36-37 gives more of Peter's conversation with the Lord. V. 30 1. Peter's boast is turned into a prophecy of a greater downfall. 2. Luke records more specific words that Jesus spoke to Peter in Luke 22:31-32 as He calls him, "Simon," Peter's name before he met Jesus. (John 1:42) 3. "This day, even in this night" = the day had begun at 6:00 p.m.; the time this was spoken may have been around 9:00 p.m.; Jesus is saying that before 3:00 a.m. Peter would deny Him thrice (three times). 4. The cock-crowing marks the third watch of the night. (Mark 13:35) One crowing is always the signal for more. 5. "Cock" = male fowl; rooster. 6. "Deny" = to affirm that one has no acquaintance or connection with another. V. 31 1. "Vehemently" = abundantly in matter and manner; showing intense feeling. 2. "More" = in a great degree; exceedingly. 3. The tense of the verb "spoke" reveals that, "He kept on speaking." 4. "Should" = to be necessary; Peter was saying if it be necessary to die with the Lord, he still would not deny Him. 5. "Likewise" = in like manner; all the eleven said the same thing. The tense again reveals a repetition of this statement. 6. We like Peter often think that we are strong in faith, purity, and patience, thus we make rash statements without thinking them through. But when temptation arises, we falter and fall. The true remedy against temptation is the consciousness of our own weakness and reliance on Divine strength. (I Cor. 10:12; Heb. 4:16) 7. In Luke 22:35-38 Jesus instructs of changes that were to occur after His death. 8. The scripture indicates that Jesus prayed the high-priestly prayer of John 17 just before crossing the brook Cedron (spelled Kidron in the OT) and entering the garden of Gethsemane (an orchard in our thinking). (John 18:1; see Map 1, page 1) Some think this was prayed in the garden. 8. Jesus' Agony In Gethsemane V. 32-42 V. 32 1. "Gethsemane" = an enclosed piece of ground; word means the place of the olive-press, where the olives which abounded on the slopes of the mountain were brought in order that the oil contained in them might be pressed out. 2. How fitting a place for Jesus to be at this time as He faces our sins and is pressed out of measure. 3. Jesus placed His disciples at a position just inside the garden and charged them to pray. (Luke 22:40) 4. Mat. 26:36 adds, "While I go and pray yonder" (yonder = there; probably pointing to a specific place). 5. Luke 22:39 reveals it was Jesus habit (wont) to retire from Jerusalem to that place for prayer. Jesus therefore put Himself in the way of Judas, who would naturally seek Him there. V. 33 1. Jesus takes the inner circle of Peter, James, and John with Him as He had done before. They had witnessed His power when He raised Jarius' daughter from the dead (Luke 8:51), and His glory on the Mount of Transfiguration. (Mark 9:2) Now they were allowed to be witnesses of His bitter agony, so that they might learn themselves and be able to teach others, that the way to glory is by suffering. 2. "Began" = to commence. 3. "Sore amazed" = to throw into amazement or terror, to alarm thoroughly, to terrify, to be struck with terror. 4. "To be very heavy" = to be troubled, to be in distress; from a word in the Greek which means to be uncomfortable, as one not at home; it speaks of an experience of which one is not familiar, in which one does not feel at home or at rest, and which distresses him. V. 34 1. "Exceeding sorrowful" = encompassed with grief; very sad; grief enveloped Him, surrounded and saturated His inner being. 2. "Unto death" = even to death; so that I almost die; every word carries the emphasis of an overwhelming grief. 3. "Tarry" = to stay in a given place. 4. "Watch" = to abstain from sleep and be vigilant or guard against danger; be alert to approaching dangers. 5. Our Lord was overwhelmed with sorrow. He had long foreseen the Cross but when it came clearly into view, its terrors exceeded his anticipations. His human soul received new experience. He learned upon the basis of the things He suffered (Heb 5:8), and the last lesson of obedience began with a sensation of inconceivable awe. V. 35 1. "He went forward a little" = Mat. 26:39 says, "a little farther" = while Luke 22:41 says, "about a stone's cast." 2. "Fell on the ground" = the Greek construction reveals two things: A. The fact that the disciples (the inner circle) saw Him falling upon the ground. B. The fact that He did it repeatedly, showing the desperateness of the struggle in which our Lord was engaged at the time; Luke 22:41 does not contradict when he said, "He kneeled down." When in such desperation it is hard for one to remain in one position very long. 3. "Prayed" = prayer to God; the tense reveals the praying was continuous = "kept on praying." 4. "If it were possible" = means if it be consistent with justice, and with maintaining the government of the universe, that men should be saved without this extremity of sorrow, let it be done. The fact that these sufferings were not removed, and that the Saviour went forward and bore them without reducing the suffering, shows that it was not consistent with the justice of God and with the welfare of the universe that men should be saved without the awful sufferings of such an atonement. 5. "The hour" = referred to His Cross; our Lord had looked ahead to His hour (John 2:4; 7:30; 8:20; 12:23, 27; 13:1); but now as the time drew near, He dreaded it, a human trait that all can understand. V. 36 1. "Abba" = an Aramaic word for father; a word denoting a son's affection and tenderness; papa. 2. "Father" = a translation of the Greek word for father. 3. "All things are possible unto thee" = with God nothing is impossible, but He is bound by His own laws, therefore this was impossible due to His purposes of mercy for the redemption of the world. 4. "Cup" = signifies that lot or portion that is appointed to us by God. (Rom. 6:23a) 5. "Will" = "wilt" = desire; purpose. 6. Immediately after our Lord offered His conditional prayer He submits to the will of the Father. 7. There are two things in the cup that caused our Lord to naturally draw back: A. One was that He was to be charged by the High Court of Heaven with guilt of all human sin, while He had known no sin. B. The other was the agony of being deprived of the fellowship of the Father, which had never been broken before during all eternity past. 8. Shrinking away from these two things, dreading them with all His heart, yet counting the awful cost, our Lord said, "not what I will, but what thou wilt." 9. Residing in Christ were two distinct wills, one human and the other Divine; and it was by the subjecting of His human will to the Divine will that He wrought out our redemption. 10. It is not possible to take the language of Jesus as fear that He might die before He came to the Cross. He was heard and helped to submit to the Father's will as He does instantly. (Heb. 5:7-8) V. 37 1. Luke 22:45 explains their sleep as resulting from the exhaustion produced by their deepening realization of the suffering Jesus was to face. 2. Jesus calls Peter by the name "Simon", which was his name before he met Jesus. Peter who was ready to die with Jesus (verse 31) shows the characteristic of the old man "Simon" who was not able to resist sleep during this stressful night. His boasted loyalty was failing in this hour of crisis. 3. "Watch" = to keep awake. V. 38 1. Jesus adds the admonition "pray" to "watch" already given in verse 34. 2. "Lest" = that. 3. "Temptation" = solicitation to evil; an enticement to sin; the great temptation of the disciple at that moment was to deny Christ under the influence of fear, therefore our Lord gives the true remedy against temptation of every kind: A. Watchfulness, against the craft and subtlety of the devil or man. B. Prayer, for Divine help to overcome. 4. "Spirit" = refers to that part of a saved man who has been quickened (Eph. 2:1) and is directly dependent on the spirit of God; the part of man that is God-conscious, thus able to communicate with God and the spiritual world. 5. "Ready" = willing. 6. "Flesh" = the part of man that has world- consciousness. 7. "Weak" = without strength; unable to resist temptation within itself. 8. Jesus is telling the disciples to pray that the weakness of the flesh may not overcome the strength of the spirit. V. 39-40 1. As Jesus prayed the second time, His repetition of the same words shows His fixed determination to submit to the will of His heavenly Father. 2. "Heavy" = weighed down; they had not deliberately yielded themselves to sleep, but by an involuntary action they slumbered. 3. "Wist" = knew. 4. "Neither wist they what to answer him" = they had no excuse, except that which the Lord had given = "the flesh is weak." 5. Luke 22:44 records the agony of Jesus so great that He sweat as it were great drops of blood. Some believe this to be literal drops of blood, but the language suggests that the sweat was a clammy mass instead of ordinary sweat. Modern Medicine claims that under extreme anxiety one's capillaries can burst causing one's sweat to become reddish in color and clammy. It is interesting to note that Luke, a physician, is the only one who mentions this aspect of Jesus' agony in the garden. 6. Luke 22:43 mentions that an angel strengthened Jesus as He was in the garden praying. V. 41 1. Mat. 26:44 reveals that Jesus prayed the same words the third time, and when He returns to the disciples He perhaps using irony said, "Sleep on now and take your rest." 2. "It is enough" = "it is sufficient"; probably meaning that there was no need of further reproof of the disciples for their failure to watch with Him. 3. "The hour is come" = the time has arrived for the Son of man to be betrayed by Judas into the hands of the scribes, Pharisees and the Romans (sinners). V. 42 1. "Rise up" = wake up and stand up; they were lying on the ground and half asleep due to just being woke up. 2. "Let us |