6. Jesus’ Response to His Experience of God According to Mark
Often, the kinds of responses to God associated with the idea of “spirituality” include prayer, the indwelling of the Holy Spirit, worship, confession, and fasting. Mark mentions several of these practices in his story of Jesus who attends synagogue (1:21; 3:1; 6:2), prays (1:35; 6:46; 14:32), and confirms his disciples’ fasting (2:18–20). However, Mark emphasizes none of these practices. Instead, in Mark’s presentation, Jesus’ response to God is focused on his first and primary announcement: “The Kingdom of God has drawn near”.
Jesus’ statement in the aftermath of his baptism and testing in the wilderness is
not that God’s Kingdom “will draw near”, but that it
has done so (the Greek verb is perfect tense). In addition, Mark describes Jesus as “Teacher” of the arrival of God’s Kingdom. Curiously, however, there is less of Jesus’ actual teaching presented in Mark compared to the other gospels, though what is presented is significant, as we will see. What Mark narrates instead is that Jesus’ spirituality entails living as if God’s Kingdom has indeed arrived.
9Before pushing ahead, we should note the significant concerns raised by feminist and post-colonial scholars, among others, regarding the Greek word
basileia, which is nearly always translated into English as “kingdom”. These scholars have raised this important question: If Jesus in Mark announced that God is replacing one “kingdom” with another, then where is any renewal?
10 I was persuaded long ago by Schussler Fiorenza that Jesus’ use of the term
basileia does not ascribe “imperial power” to God and that the internal dynamics and ethos of God’s
basileia are decidedly not like Rome’s (as we will see).
11 Such an understanding does not, however, alleviate the problems created for us in our time by Jesus’ use of
basileia, the way imperial terms (like “kingdom”) have impacted Christians’ theological imaginations, or the challenge of translating
basileia so as not to convey that God was only replacing one imperial kingdom with another. Since in this article I am working with what Mark has given us, and since no contemporary alternatives to “kingdom” have “caught on” widely, I will reluctantly stay with the usual English translation of “kingdom” but use the idea of “community” whenever I can. I also hope readers will note carefully that Mark understands God’s “kingdom” to do far more than “replace” Rome’s.
Jesus’ first act in Mark after announcing that God’s Kingdom has drawn near was to call fishermen to join him in God’s work (1:16–20). Fishermen, though manual laborers in an occupation that the higher classes in the first century likely despised, were welcome to share life in God’s Kingdom, as was the mother-in-law of one of those fishermen (1:29–31), though women were undervalued in that culture. Soon, Jesus was “eating with tax collectors and sinners” (2:13–17), a charge which became the most common one leveled against him by his opponents in the Synoptic Gospels. As scholars of the first-century Mediterranean world have shown, Rome’s practice of “divide and conquer” among its subject peoples worked with traditional cultural and religious divisions to create an order in the Empire in which people were separated from one another along race, class, gender, and sometimes occupation lines. First-century table practices illustrated these divisions clearly. People only ate with others like themselves (
Malina and Rohrbaugh 1992, pp. 191–92). Mark’s Jesus, however, ate with fishermen, tax collectors, sinners, women, and apparently anyone else who wanted a place at the table.
12A multitude of stories further demonstrate Jesus’ inclusive spirituality, many of which occur during the “Galilean ministry” phase of Mark’s story (1:16–8:26), as Jesus lived into God’s Kingdom. For example, “family” for Jesus was less about bloodlines, which were important in his world, and instead about doing the will of God (3:34–35), which was possible for anyone, regardless of his or her family ties. As mentioned earlier, he fed multitudes on both the Jewish (6:31–44) and Gentile (8:1–10) sides of the sea of Galilee. He healed Jews (1:40–45, 3:1–6, etc.), Gentiles (5:1–20, 7:24–30), women and daughters (5:21–43, 7:24–30) as well as sons (9:14–27), and beggars (10:46–52). One of his teaching sections (7:1–23) is devoted to undoing purity requirements which separated Jews and Gentiles, but also divided Jews from each other. In much of his work of Mark, Brian Blount aptly describes this aspect of Jesus’ mission as “boundary-breaking”, meaning Jesus is undoing the divisions human beings establish between themselves and others.
13 As Mark tells the story, the God of the Exodus has again heard the cries of Israel’s subject people and sent Jesus to fulfill God’s promises recorded in Isaiah: to gather all nations and all people to feast on God’s Holy Mountain. Far more than simply announcing such fulfillment, Jesus in Mark responded to God’s work by living as if that announcement was true.
In addition to being divided, people in the first-century Roman world were also “ranked”. That is, Roman order was arranged hierarchically and patriarchally, so that only a few men (estimates are 2–5% of the population)
14 ruled the world for everyone else. Caesar, of course, sat atop this pyramid-like hierarchy in the Empire, within which local rulers then allied themselves with Caesar and sat atop local hierarchies. Everyone else was assigned their “place” in the order and expected to act accordingly. Doing so, Roman propaganda declared, brought peace to everyone (
Carter 2001, p. 25). When their propaganda failed to persuade people to stay in their place, Rome used violence to enforce conformity. Here, are the necessary “tools” for such an order. Since only a few men ruled the world for everyone else, those rulers needed both a strong propaganda effort, bolstered by the threat of violence, to convince the majority of subjects that their best interests lay in cooperating with the order these powerful men had put in place.
However, Jesus, according to Mark was among those who refused to cooperate. Welcoming and including everyone as he did directly challenged Rome’s hierarchical order. His practices, like welcoming everyone to the table and teaching that membership in Jesus’ family was determined by doing the will of God, conveyed that none is more chosen, blessed, or worthy than others. Bloodlines are irrelevant. Ranking of groups should not happen in his family. As Mark’s story unfolds, we find Jesus’ spirituality involves explicitly teaching and living these convictions in response to the God of the Exodus and of Isaiah. Many of these stories happen during the “Journey to Jerusalem” phase of the Gospel, as he is traveling to the Holy City to confront the powers directly (8:27–10:52).
Most explicit in this regard is Jesus’ response following James’ and John’s request to sit on his right and left hands in his “glory” (10:35–37). Calling the other ten to join them, Jesus declared: “You know that among the Gentiles those whom they recognize as their rulers lord it over them, and their great ones are tyrants over them. But it is not so among you…” (10:42–43). Instead, disciples choose to serve one another, even as he came to serve rather than be served (10:42–45). Significantly, Jesus did not contrast the exercise of good authority with the exercise of bad authority. He contrasted authority and service and called his followers to choose service as participants in God’s Kingdom, as his own spirituality led him to do (10:45).
The above description means that I disagree with those scholars who claim that Mark’s Jesus, as God’s only Son and heir, “is at the pinnacle of the hierarchy of his household, just as the Gentile or Roman rulers are at the pinnacle of their hierarchy of power”.
15 Since responding in detail to such provocative arguments (provocative in a good way) is beyond the scope of this article, I will limit my comments here to three. First, new communities as described above may still need leadership, which does not automatically mean the return of a hierarchical order. Instead, the kind of leadership exercised is crucial if the communities will be “transformative pockets of renewal” (borrowing the great language of
Brian Blount 1998, pp. 9–12). Mark records Jesus saying that tyranny and domination are not what his followers do (10:42). Instead, Jesus models a different leadership when he says that he himself came to serve rather than “lord over” others and to “give” his life rather than gain things for himself (10:45). Second, disciples choose to be part of this community, where all are welcome and members serve one another (rather than those in power). They are not forced to join and serve, which would necessarily indicate that some are “above them” and have power to force their service. Thus, we see that when the rich ruler walked away from Jesus’ call, Jesus loved him and let him go (10:21–22). Such choice is an essential element of justice and mercy. Third, Mark’s Jesus eschews violence (see 14:47–49) which, as noted, is a necessary tool for enforcing a hierarchical order. For these reasons, among others, I am persuaded that Mark presents Jesus as envisioning a nonhierarchical community of inclusion and service which can bring renewal.
16Since the story of James’ and John’s request is one of the last ones “on the way” to Jerusalem, we can work backward from here to see that these words of Jesus reflect the spirituality he has been living all along
the Way. In the previous story of the man who asked Jesus about inheriting eternal life, Mark tells us that the man was rich (10:22). While in our world wealth makes a person powerful, in the first-century world, power made one wealthy, mostly by making it possible to take advantage of others, i.e., by defrauding them (see 10:19).
17 Therefore, when Jesus calls the man to give up his wealth (10:21), he is calling him also to give up his position of authority, which enabled his wealth in the first place. Then, the man can follow Jesus and live into God’s Kingdom, as Jesus was doing. As noted above, the man chose not to respond to Jesus’ call.
Just prior to the story of the rich man, the disciples had rebuked those who were bringing children to Jesus to touch (10:13). In the adult-oriented culture of the first century, wherein children were viewed as vulnerable, powerless, and honor-less (
Malina and Rohrbaugh 1992, p. 238), the actions of the disciples would have been understandable to most people. However, Jesus was “indignant” with his followers and told them to let the children come to him, “for it is to such as these that the kingdom of God belongs” (10:14). He then added, “Whoever does not receive the kingdom of God as a little child will never enter it” (10:15). Contemporary readers tend to interpret Jesus’ words according to our views of children (as guileless, trusting, etc.), but in his context, Jesus taught that God’s Kingdom belongs to the powerless ones, i.e., to those who were not part of the power structure of the day, as children were not,
18 and therefore, who were able to receive it like those with nothing to lose (
Minor 1996, pp. 61–62).
While many first-century folks might have been sympathetic with the disciples’ initial response to those bringing children, Jesus likely was not one of them, since Mark tells us he’d already had a teaching moment with them about children. Earlier on the journey, after the disciples argued over who was the greatest among themselves (9:34), Jesus had placed a child in their midst, called them to service, and illustrated what he meant by service in telling them to receive the child (9:35–37). Since children in that culture were viewed as insignificant and powerless, nothing was gained socially, economically, or politically by “receiving” (i.e., welcoming and including) them. What, then, is the motivation for doing so? Just this: Receiving a child means they “receive” Jesus, and, in receiving Jesus, they “receive” the One who sent Jesus (9:37). Jesus indicates that the God who heard the cries of the slaves down in Egypt is once again in the midst of and attending to the powerless ones. So Jesus does as well.
Thus, the Markan Jesus is clear, particularly throughout the “journey to Jerusalem” section of the Gospel, that God’s Kingdom as he experienced it has no tyrants, no one who rules over others, and no one in a position to take advantage of others. It is composed of those who welcome all people and all nations to share in God’s feast, and who choose service to God and one another over self-advancement. A rejection of hierarchy, patriarchy, and exclusion has further implications for Jesus and his followers. Since hierarchy means only a few at the top ruling over everyone else, it forms relationships among people that are necessarily competitive, comparative, and adversarial. Rejecting hierarchy, therefore, creates opportunities for different relationships based on welcome, grace, mercy, compassion, and generosity. No wonder, then, that we see Jesus eating with tax collectors and sinners; healing Jews, Gentiles, a blind beggar, and the daughters of both a synagogue ruler and a Syrophoenician woman; and feeding multitudes on both shores of the sea. No wonder that he took note of a suffering widow in the Temple (12:41–44), received and blessed the prophetic sign action of a woman prophet (14:3–9), and welcomed women among his followers from the beginning of his work in Galilee (15:40–41). Jesus’ spirituality reflects his experience of God who heard the cries of the slaves in Egypt and acted on their behalf, who welcomes all people and nations onto God’s holy mountain.
Mark indicates, however, that Jesus’ teaching and living into God’s Kingdom made painfully little headway among his disciples. Though a number of them followed him from Galilee to Jerusalem, they struggled to understand him, as their arguments over who was the greatest among them show. They seem to assume that hierarchy is “just the way things are”. Consequently, change from their perspective requires replacing the people at the top with other rulers, which means competing—even among one another—for those coveted places. Roman propaganda appears to have worked on them. The coming of God’s Kingdom for them apparently meant replacing one kingdom with another. As we are seeing, however, Jesus’ practice of spirituality in response to God meant an entirely different kind of “kingdom”.
Not surprisingly, then, Mark’s first presentation of the content of Jesus’ teaching (4:1–34) gives major attention to Jesus’ emphasis on “Seeing”. Since appearances can be deceiving (note the Parable of the Sower, which looks like a disaster, until it is not, 4:1–9; or the Mustard Seed Parable of growth that seems impossible, until it is not, 4:30–32), Jesus tells disciples they must “see” what they hear (4:24). Since seeing what they hear is not literally possible, Jesus is not speaking of literal sight (with our physical eyes) but of perception, or better yet, insightfulness.
19 That is, Jesus wants them to “see” God at work in creation, as he himself does. Those who are willing to see thusly will grasp more and more of what God is doing, while those unwilling to see will become unable to see (4:24–25).
The call to “see!” persists throughout Mark’s Gospel (note, e.g., 8:14–21; 13:5, 9, 23, 33), including in 9:1, where Jesus declares, “Truly I tell you, there are some standing here who will not taste death until they see that the kingdom of God has come with power”. When we appreciate Jesus’ call to disciples to “see” in Mark, and when we note that the Greek verb translated “has come” in 9:1 is perfect tense, we can understand Jesus to mean that some disciples are going to “get it” (as we might say).
20 They will
see that the arrival of God’s Kingdom, as Jesus in Mark lived and taught it, offers all God’s children an alternative to Roman imperialism and oppression, even as Rome still dominated their world. By following Jesus on
the Way of the Lord and living as he did, they create “transformative pockets of resistance” to Roman rule and order. They can be set free (as were the slaves in Egypt) to live out God’s justice and mercy, as Jesus did. They can form different relationships which focus on welcoming one another to God’s feast and sharing God’s peace together (as Isaiah envisioned). They can spend their energy in welcome, service, and compassion rather than competing over who is the greatest. They can join Jesus in sharing God’s renewal (as Daniel and the apocalyptic prophets had promised). Thus, they “see” the renewal brought about by living into the reality of God’s Kingdom, as Jesus did according to Mark. Their own spirituality will be transformed to reflect that of Jesus.
Indeed, the manifestation of God’s Kingdom, as Jesus in Mark lived and taught it, was too transformative for Rome to ignore. Since Roman propaganda had not persuaded Jesus to cooperate with Roman rule, Rome used its other tool to force conformity: Violence. In Mark’s story, Rome’s allies first plotted against Jesus as early as 3:6. Rome’s primary allies, the Temple leadership in Jerusalem, decided to destroy him by the second day he was in the city (11:18, according to Mark’s timetable). Jesus could certainly “see” their opposition (see 8:31, 9:31, 10:32–34). In the face of this threat, he continued on the Way of the Lord. According to Mark’s presentation, he did so because he trusted in the God of the living ones (12:27).
Three times on the journey to Jerusalem, Mark records Jesus announcing his death at the hands of the powers and his resurrection at the hands of God (understanding the passive verb, “will be raised”, as a divine passive in 8:31, 9:31, 10:34). Following the first announcement, Jesus elaborates on the power of God’s life, telling disciples that those who lose their lives for the sake of Jesus and the gospel “will save it” (8:35). On the way down the mountain after the Transfiguration, Jesus told disciples not to tell what they’d seen until after he “was raised from the dead” (9:9). Later in Jerusalem, even as the threat of death hung heavily over him, Jesus declares that “God is not God of the dead but of the living ones” (12:27) while debating with the Sadducees in the Temple. In Mark’s third teaching section, the “apocalyptic discourse” in Mark 13, Jesus pronounces judgment on the Temple (13:2) for having become a “den of robbers”, when it should have been a “house of prayer for all nations” (11:17). He also tells disciples that the destruction of the Temple is not the sign that “all things are about to be fulfilled” (13:4; my translation). Therefore, disciples should “see” and not be deceived by those who say such things (13:5–8). Instead, Jesus declares that God has promised ultimate fulfillment and that the faithful ones will share in it when it comes at a time only God knows (13:24–27). Though resurrection is not mentioned explicitly in this discourse, it is surely implied.
While repeatedly affirming the power of God’s life, Jesus continued on the Way of the Lord even as it terrified him (14:33–36) and led him straight to a grisly death at Rome’s hands (15:33–37). Mark does nothing to soften the horror of Jesus’ journey to this moment. Given that Mark’s audience knew all too well what Rome was capable of doing, we should not be surprised. Following Jesus and living into God’s Kingdom (not Caesar’s) as Jesus had done could lead his followers to a similar fate. How, then, are they able to follow? The young man at the tomb provides Mark’s answer: “You seek Jesus of Nazareth who was crucified. He has been raised. He is not here. See the place where they laid him” (16:6). Resurrection, not crucifixion, gets the last spoken word in Marks’ story of Jesus. Jesus’ faithfulness to the Way of the Lord demonstrates to followers that the promise of God’s life and resurrecting power overcomes Rome’s death.
We can say, then, that God’s life and resurrecting power surround and enliven Jesus’ announcement that God’s Kingdom has drawn near. He “saw” God’s power for life and responded by trusting it all the way to Golgotha. Additionally, according to Mark, its relevance extends beyond Golgotha. Jesus’ lived faith—not just what he said, but how he practiced his spirituality in response to the God of the living ones—thus ransoms his followers from “slavery” to death (see 10:45). Having experienced the power of the life-giving God via Jesus’ resurrection, which nullified Rome’s greatest weapon, they are now free from fear of that weapon and can live into renewing communities of transformative resistance as he had done. The God of the Exodus is at work again!
However, will they? As Mark presents it, living into God’s Kingdom as Jesus had done is both hopeful and daunting. It is life-giving, but can also lead to death.
21 Will followers choose hope or fear? Will their spirituality reflect Jesus’? Mark’s “open-ended” ending (16:8) leaves that question for readers to ponder.
22 7. Conclusions
As demonstrated, Mark shows Jesus’ spirituality as beginning with the sense or experience of the God of the Exodus, of Isaiah, and of Daniel. The God who heard the cries of the slaves down in Egypt; who promised a Messiah, a true son of David who would gather all nations and all people to feast together on God’s holy mountain; who would resurrect the dead; and who promised to renew all of creation sent Jesus to announce, “The time is fulfilled. The Kingdom of God has drawn near”. Then, Mark presents Jesus responding to God by living as if this announcement is true. According to Mark, Jesus did more than proclaim the arrival of God’s Kingdom; he lived it. He practiced his spirituality.
While Mark shows Jesus doing the kinds of personal practices that we often associate with spirituality, like praying and attending synagogue, Mark gives greatest attention to the communal and relational aspects of Jesus’ living into God’s Kingdom. Jesus called, healed, fed, and ate with anyone whom he encountered regardless of race, gender, class, or age, thus including “all nations” and “all people” in God’s Kingdom, as the prophets promised. Mark further emphasizes this inclusion when he notes that Jesus’ “family” is comprised of those who do the will of God, so that anyone can be family since bloodlines are irrelevant. Such inclusivity means no one and no group is more worthy or more chosen, so hierarchies are undone. Since hierarchies are necessarily competitive, comparative, and adversarial, their demise creates opportunities for new relationships among God’s people and new communities of faithful ones who follow Jesus on this “Way of the Lord”, and practice welcome, grace, mercy, compassion, generosity, and justice, as Jesus did. These new relationships and communities have the power to renew disciples’ lives and all the world around them, if only they can “see” this power. They can ignore Roman rule and order and live into the “Way of the Lord”, as Jesus himself had done. They can practice his communal and renewing spirituality.
Oddly, the ones who saw most clearly the power of God’s Kingdom as Jesus lived it are Roman officials and their allies in Israel. That is, they grasped the danger he presented to their hierarchical and patriarchal order. So, they threatened him with death and then carried out that threat when it failed to force his conformity to their order. However, Jesus’ trust in the “God of the living ones” (12:27) bears fruit when God resurrected him (16:6). Jesus’ faith, which led to the demonstration of God’s life-producing power in his resurrection, freed him to live as God intended, despite Roman violence. His faith and resurrection also free disciples to follow him on the Way of the Lord and to find life as he did, even when Rome threatens them with death (8:34).
Christians in our time who are interested in spirituality often give greatest attention to practices which deepen their individual spiritual lives (such as prayer, meditation, and learning
lectio divina), which is not surprising, given our individualistic culture. Furthermore, these practices are clearly meaningful. They nurture and sustain us for our spiritual journeys. However, even in our individualistic cultures, spiritual teachers and mental health professionals tell us that the groups and communities of which we are a part have significant impact on our spiritual, emotional, and physical well-being. Whenever our families, church communities, work places, neighborhoods, etc., are adversarial and competitive, oppressive and exploitive, perhaps even violent, then individual participants will struggle to find meaningful lives and thriving health, either spiritual or physical.
23 Indeed, Krista Tippett, founder and host of the NPR show/podcast
On Being, believes
the question of the twenty-first century is: “Who will we be to each other?” She adds a call for us to offer what is “life-giving” to each other in the midst of the difficulties of our time.
24 Jesus’ spirituality in Mark shows “the way” to offer what is life-giving and resist any toxicity around us: We form new communities or “families” as described above, inspired by the God of the Exodus, Isaiah, and Daniel as Jesus was who frees, gathers, graces, heals, feeds, and renews all of creation, as God’s Kingdom has drawn near. That is, we practice his communal and renewing spirituality.
Centuries after Mark, however, hierarchies, competitiveness, and violence are still with and among us. The rise in the US
25 of divisiveness generally, and of white supremacy particularly, demonstrates clearly this painful reality. In such a time as this, we might consider the spirituality of Jesus in Mark as fantasy, as merely wishful thinking. However, let us remember this: While Jesus in Mark rarely speaks directly about God, when he does, he says four times in varying ways that “All things are possible with God” (9:23, 10:27, 11:22–23, 14:36). All things, apparently even a spirituality that leads to non-hierarchical communities of welcome, service, grace, justice, compassion, generosity, and renewal are possible with the God of Jesus when we follow the Way of Lord as Jesus did, according to Mark.