Mark tells no Christmas story, gives no birth narratives, offers no genealogical details. He begins with John, the wilderness prophet. John announces that while he baptizes with water, Jesus, who is greater than him, will baptize with the Holy Spirit. John then baptizes Jesus. As Jesus comes up from the water, the Spirit of God comes down from heaven upon him as predicted in Isaiah 61:1ff and the divine voice proclaims Jesus to be God's beloved and well-pleasing Son -- conjuring memories of Psalm 2:7 and Isaiah 42:1 (Mark 1:4-11). Mark literally says the heavens were ripped open (1:10, fulfilling Isaiah 64:1). Near the end of this story, Mark will report the Temple curtain also being ripped open from top to bottom (15:38). God is at work in Jesus' story from start to finish.
Like us, first-century Jews had their own ideas about what God's Son and messianic Servant should do, but Mark's story will form a definition of its own. Immediately after his baptism the Spirit expels Jesus into the Judean wilderness where he faces 40 days of satanic temptation. Not a word about the content of the temptations, just the bleak and foreboding scenes of wilderness, Satan and wild beasts, and angelic ministry (1:12-13). For Jesus, commission means conflict -- a sign of things to come. Through the first half of Mark's Gospel, we follow Jesus around Galilee where his family doubts him, his disciples misunderstand him and Jesus predicts his impending suffering and death (8:33-38). The second half of this Gospel focuses on Jesus' final week in and around Jerusalem, a dramatic imbalance that causes some to refer to Mark as "a passion story with an introduction."
Early in the story, Jesus begins
to recruit apprentices. Not with an offer but a command. He sees Levi
in the tax office and says "Follow me." Levi gets up and follows
Jesus (1:14). The next verse has Jesus socializing at table with "many
tax-gatherers and sinners . . . for there were many of them and they were
following him" (1:15). The Pharisaic scribes see this and are offended (1:16),
just as Jesus intended. "I did not come to call the righteous but sinners," he
says (1:17). The first half of this Gospel ends with Jesus telling the
crowds: "If anyone wishes to come after me, let him deny himself, and take up
his cross, and follow me" (8:34).
Some observers say that more Christians died as martyrs during the 20th century than during all previous centuries combined. Today, in at least 40 countries around the world, believers in Jesus are actively persecuted for their faith. Most of us who live in the West have never experienced physical or financial hardship for following Jesus. It is too easy for us to forget or to remain ignorant about our sisters and brothers who do (Heb. 13:3). We cannot know what the future holds as the chilling glacier of post-Christian thinking continues to cover Europe, the U.K., North America and Australia/New Zealand. Already the center of Christianity has shifted to Africa and the Southern Hemisphere. Already the Koreans and Nigerians and Ugandans are sending missioners to the United States and England.
Whether we face physical persecution or not, the call of Jesus remains the same and it is unmistakably clear: "Follow me." Jesus does not say, "analyze me" or "explain me" but "follow me." He does not call us to build buildings or plan programs or attract audiences, but to follow him. This best happens with the support and comradeship of communities of faith but it ultimately happens individually, personally, one person at a time. Each morning we awaken we hear his call: "Follow me." Each hour we live we respond to his challenge: "Follow me."
Before Jesus calls his first apprentice, Levi, in Mark's Gospel,
he has already been announcing the kingdom of God and calling his
hearers to repent. He already has been healing and expelling
demons. Already Jesus has been teaching with uncommon authority. He is not
an ordinary man but the Son of God of Psalm 2:7, the apocalyptic Son of Man
of Daniel 7 who will finally judge the world. His deeds match his
words. He is what he says. His words therefore command our attention. His person
compels our respect. Every minute we breathe, his call hangs in the air:
"Follow me." How will we respond?
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