Mark is the second book of the Gospels. Mark tells the
stories of Jesus in a different from Matthew, he’s very cut to the chase kind
of writer as this book is one of the shortest of the four books. He jumps
straight into Jesus’s baptism, his ministry and his death and resurrection. I
want to discuss three things that stood out to be as Mark recounted many of the
many stories and lessons that Matthew did. Why does Jesus tell those he healed
“not to tell” others about their healing? What exactly is blasphemy against the
Holy Spirit? What is the meaning behind the Parable of the Wicked Tenants?
First, Jesus gives strict orders for those he healed not to
reveal who had healed them. In Mark 3:12, evil spirits saw him and proclaimed him
the Son of God and he gave “strict orders not to tell who he was.” In Mark
8:30, he warned his disciples not to reveal who he was. These two verses are
just a couple examples of Jesus telling someone to stay quiet about their
healing. Why did Jesus tell them not to say anything? For the instance in Mark
3:12, Jesus did not want a false image of why he was here on earth to travel
around. As many were looking for a military or religious leader to fight
against Rome. This was not Jesus’s mission yet. He was here to offer salvation
not come as a warrior, that role would come later. In Mark 8:30, he says not to
reveal who he was because the disciples did not know the whole picture yet and
still needed instructions about his death and resurrection to come before they
can truly know who he is. What does this mean for us? It is an example of why
we need more instructions, more knowledge of who Christ is before we can
proclaim him to the world.
Second, Jesus speaks of blasphemy against the Holy Spirit in
Mark 3:29 as the eternal sin. Many Christians have come to call this the
unforgivable sin as Jesus says it “will never be forgiven.” What is blasphemy
against the Holy Spirit. Blasphemy is defined as the act or offense of speaking
sacrilegiously about God or sacred things and the Holy Spirit is the aspect of
God which actively interacts with believers. To blasphemy against the Holy
Spirit is reveals a heart-attitude of unbelief and unrepentance. It is the
deliberate, ongoing rejection of the work of the Holy Spirit and rejecting God
himself. It is to deny the active work of God in one’s life or in the world.
While all other sins and blasphemes are forgivable, ones against the Holy
Spirit are not (verses 28-29). When Christ was speaking about this unforgivable
sin, he was not directing it to his disciples or those who believed. He
directed it to the religious leaders, teachers of the law who accused him of
being possessed by Beelzebub (Satan). They had denied the reality of his
miracles. They refused to believe that Jesus’s power came from God. It is
people who will continue to deny Christ and God despite what they see before
them.
Third, the Parable of the Wicked Tenants in Mark 12:1-12 is
a lesson about people. The parable goes that a man plants a vineyard and he rents
the vineyard to some farmers and takes a journey (verse 1). At harvest, he
sends a servant to collect from of the fruit of the vineyard, the tenants beat
the servant and send him away empty handed (verse 2-3). The man sends another
servant and he too is treated shamefully (verses 4). He sends other servants,
some are killed, and others beaten (verse 5). Finally, the man sends his son
thinking he would be respected by the tenants (verse 6). The tenants decide to
kill the son and take his inheritance for themselves (verses 7-8). What does
the man do? He will come to kill the tenants and give the vineyard to others
(verse 9). The man is God and the vineyard is Israel. The tenants are the
religious leaders of Israel who rejected the prophets sent by God and who
rejected Jesus. Jesus is the son who has been sent and he tells this parable to
expose the religious leaders’ plot to kill him. He let them know he knew what
they were plotting and warned them it would not go unpunished.
In conclusion, the book of Mark is a short and concise book
of Jesus’ life, ministry and his death and resurrection. Jesus’s instruction to
“not to tell other about him” is an illustration that we need further
instruction. I know when I read God’s word and I have a moment of inspiration,
I want to go and shout it to everyone: Look what I discovered! But often I
found that I first need to ponder this revelation. What does it mean to me?
What will it mean to others? Blasphemy of the Holy Spirit isn’t usually
something a believer needs to worry about as it is the rejection of God. And
Christians are taught to be weary of false teachers; however, those who are
true believers will (or should I say “should”?) recognize the work of the Holy
Spirit in our lives and in the lives of others. Lastly, the Parable of the
Wicked Tenants is a look into the type of people in the world: those who reject
Christ and those who will inherit the vineyard when he returns.