Discpleship In the Gospel of Mark
Story
Introduction: Discipleship in the new year, back in Mark
Mark presents Jesus as the suffering Servant of the Lord (10:45). His focus is on the deeds of Jesus more than His teaching, particularly emphasizing service and sacrifice. Mark omits the lengthy discourses found in the other gospels, often relating only brief excerpts to give the gist of Jesus’ teaching. Mark also omits any account of Jesus’ ancestry and birth, beginning where Jesus’ public ministry began, with His baptism by John in the wilderness.
Mark demonstrated the humanity of Christ more clearly than any of the other evangelists, emphasizing Christ’s human emotions (1:41; 3:5; 6:34; 8:12; 9:36;), His human limitations (4:38; 11:12; 13:32), and other small details that highlight the human side of the Son of God (e.g., 7:33, 34; 8:12; 9:36; 10:13–16).
1) Jesus calls the disciples
What is a discples?
The Greek word for disciple (“learner”) occurs some forty times in Mark. It is always in the plural and usually with a possessive that distinguishes Jesus’ disciples from others, the crowd, or the disciples of John the Baptist (2:18; 6:29) or the Pharisees (2:18).
The gospel of Mark tells us not only who Jesus is and what God has done through him but also what it means to respond to the good news in becoming his disciple. Kelber states: “Kingdom theology and discipleship are closely interwoven.”1 Loving God with all of one’s heart, understanding, and strength (12:33)—one’s whole being—also demands obedience to Jesus with all of one’s heart, understanding, and strength as his disciple.
B. Jesus invest totally in the discple
C. You will be changed
2) What you need to do
A. Ready to follow him and forsake everything
“giving up of one’s possessions is not a prerequisite for discipleship. It is the consequence of discipleship.”
B. Readiness to be molded
C. Actually Follow him
Discipleship, then, is not an idle academic exercise, and learning the way of God does not come from walking around in one’s own thoughts. It requires imitating what they see in the model of Jesus’ life so that disciples might continue his practices, exercise his authority, and share his destiny.
