Observations
• Who: Jesus, Judas, armed crowd sent by the chief priests, lawyers and elders, one with a sword, young man;
• When: late at night after Jesus’ prayer and the disciples slumber;
• Where: Gethsemane
• What: Judas brings an armed crowd to arrest Jesus; one disciple resists the arrest; Jesus comments; a young man follows Jesus and escapes naked.
• Repeated words: seize; swords and clubs;
• Contrasts: defenseless Jesus/armed mob; kiss/betray; promises of fidelity/all fled;
• Connections: religious leaders’ murder conspiracy (3.6; death predictions in 8.31 and 10.33; 11.18); last supper predictions of betrayal and abandonment (14.18, 27); scripture fulfillment.
• Responses to Jesus: mocking betrayal by kiss; seized him; left him and fled;
Interpretation
• The plot started in 3.6 by the Pharisees and Herodians is finally fulfilled. Under orders of all three parts of the Sanhedrin – chief priests, scribes, and elders – Jesus is arrested.
• What is going through Judas’ mind as he betrays Jesus? The textual clues are the kiss and the greeting. Perhaps in this false affection and respect we see Judas mocking Jesus, a mocking that will continue in the sham trail and the guards’ immanent humiliation of a helpless victim. This is Judas’ last appearance in Mark’s narrative.
• The sign: mentioned in 13.4: what is the sign of the end of the temple? Here is a partial answer: when Jesus is fully rejected by Israel’s leadership, the end is near.
• What a contrast between Jesus at prayer, the disciples asleep, and the armed mob. Here we see the contrast between the kingdom of men and the kingdom of God, the one founded on conspiracy and violence, the other on faith and obedience to the Father’s will.
• The crowd: Mark develops this theme throughout the narrative. The initial interest of the crowds in the earlier sections of Mark turns, here in acting out their leaders’ conspiracy, and in 15.13 serving as the mouthpiece of the conspirators. Two thoughts come to mind:
o Leaders have significant responsibility for how they shape the consciousness and behavior of the crowds. We can easily see this failing in our media, both news and entertainment. But we as leaders of the church bear similar responsibility, and should watch ourselves.
o How often do we leaders of the church play to the crowds and measure success by their number and opinion? Jesus was not fooled by the fickle faith of the crowds, and neither should we be. A full house, ABF, small group is the context from which we invite response. Let us not be fooled into thinking that the crowds are necessarily following Jesus.
• Who wielded the sword? Mark’s text says it was ‘one of those who stood by’. Edwards (The Gospel According to Mark: 438) traces the historic development of the idea that Peter was the swordsman as Matthew writing later describes ‘one of Jesus’ companions’ (26.51), Luke writing later still identifies ‘the right ear’ (22.50); and John writing at the end of the first century names Peter as the swordsman, and Malchus as the victim. An interesting illustration of how the Spirit shaped scripture in interaction with the church. Scripture is alive, today as then.
• Jesus as always lives his life from a biblical perspective and is able to see scripture fulfilled even in his own betrayal and arrest.
• Just hours before all drank from the cup, all pledged to stick with Jesus even to death. Here all flee, just as Jesus promised.
• Except one young man who at least tries to follow. Tradition says this was Mark himself; but there is no textual evidence of this. Rather this emphasizes the terror of Jesus’ followers: they’d rather be caught naked that be found with Jesus. And perhaps this sets the stage for Peter’s failed rescue attempt in the next section.
Application
• How mysterious the ways of God which prevail for his purposes even when distorted by human violence and conspiracy!
• Hallelujah, what a Savior, to yield in obedience to the will of his Father even when that will is lived out in violence and injustice!
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