(A)Mark...
Illustration
(A)
Mark did not want his readers to see Jesus as a miracle worker only, according to Reginald Fuller (who calls verses 42, 43a a redaction). So he asks, "What does Mark intend theologically by these injunctions to secrecy and their constant breach?" Fuller offers the inferences that, 1) Mark wanted for his readers a fuller understanding via the way of the cross, and 2) that because of the nature of the mystery, it could not be suppressed.
A certain person, who calls herself "charismatic," insists that this advice from Jesus not to reveal the power of healing in this and other instances is a little game Jesus was playing. He really wanted the news to get out, she believes, and knowing human nature so well, Jesus knew that they would tell, especially if they had been warned not to. She has no trouble with the implications that, if this were true, Jesus was sanctioning disobedience for his own benefit. Consequently, she has no trouble telling others about all the special messages she receives from the Holy Spirit which are always "confirmed" in unusual ways, and usually for her benefit. Today, the power of the cross still heals all sorts of leprosy.
-- Dean
Mark did not want his readers to see Jesus as a miracle worker only, according to Reginald Fuller (who calls verses 42, 43a a redaction). So he asks, "What does Mark intend theologically by these injunctions to secrecy and their constant breach?" Fuller offers the inferences that, 1) Mark wanted for his readers a fuller understanding via the way of the cross, and 2) that because of the nature of the mystery, it could not be suppressed.
A certain person, who calls herself "charismatic," insists that this advice from Jesus not to reveal the power of healing in this and other instances is a little game Jesus was playing. He really wanted the news to get out, she believes, and knowing human nature so well, Jesus knew that they would tell, especially if they had been warned not to. She has no trouble with the implications that, if this were true, Jesus was sanctioning disobedience for his own benefit. Consequently, she has no trouble telling others about all the special messages she receives from the Holy Spirit which are always "confirmed" in unusual ways, and usually for her benefit. Today, the power of the cross still heals all sorts of leprosy.
-- Dean
