Mark 7

Category : Bible, Mark

Hey there…well I trust that this finds you well and up for a bit of bible study. I’m posting my somewhat random thoughts on this chapter…so I hope it gets you thinking and hopefully we can chat about it in the forum. It’s always interesting to hear from other people as I find different people offer different perspectives and I always end up seeing things I’ve overlooked!
Clean and Unclean: Mark 7:v1-23

A recurring theme throughout Mark and the other gospels is that people (disciples, pharisees, average Joe/Joesephine) just aren’t getting who Jesus was. It doesn’t matter if He raised he dead, walked on water, got rid of demons etc…it just wasn’t registering that he is the son of God! Have you ever looked at one of those magic eye puzzles? I used to go cross eyed for hours over those things and just didn’t see what was before my very eyes! All I could see was fuzzy dots! Jesus was right before their eyes, performing miracles and relating to them in parables but still nothing. At the beginning of this chapter it is the Pharisees who have hardened their hearts to Jesus and they are all het up about the disciples eating without having washed their hands. Now this bothered them becasue they had strict rules about these sorts of things:

“The Pharisees and all the Jews do not eat unless they give their hands a ceremonial washing, holding to the tradition of the elders. When they come to the market place they do not eat unless they wash. And they observe many other traditions, such as the washing of cups, pitchers and kettles” Mark 7: 3-4.

The Pharisees were obsessed with tradition and this is the key word in this passage, and they expected others to heed these traditions. Jesus acknowledeged that the disciples hadn’t washed their hands, and said:

“Isaiah was right when he prophesied about you hypocrites; as it is written: “These people honour me with their lips, but there hearts are far from me. They worship me in vain; their teachings are merely human rules”. Mark 7:v6-7.

This is a rebuke, and a reminder that Jesus looks at our hearts not at our outward appearance. Jesus impies that ‘traditions’ suck and that really isn’t what is important. He sees beyond the ritual and sees the truth of our motives. I’m wondering if as Christians we are worrying about traditions that God really isn’t interested in? What do you think?

Jesus then stresses that it’s what comes out of us that makes us unclean, not what goes in. Jesus gives a sobering example of what types of things can come out of us:

“From within, out of our hearts , come evil thoughts, sexual immorality, theft, murder, adultery, greed, malice, deceit, lewdness, envy, slander, arrogance and folly, All these evils come from inside and make you unclean”. (Mark 7:v20-23).

Reading those verses, made me think of all the rubbish that comes out of me and so often I don’t take responsibility for my thoughts and actions, but they are coming from inside me and I am desperately in need of God’s grace. Thankfully, because of Jesus, God’s grace is available to us, lets draw near to him and ask him for forgiveness.

Moving on and skipping past the middle section, beacause I don’t think I have any insights to offer (please post yours) about the healing of the Greek woman’s daughter…sorry…we get to Mark 7:v31-37 ‘The healing of a deaf and mute man”.

Jesus comes across a deaf and mute man, who has been brought to Jesus for healing. Jesus takes him aside and places his hands on him, spits and touches his tongue, and:

“He looked up to heaven with a deep sigh said to him be opened!” Mark 7:v34.

I think Jesus looked up to heaven to show the man that the power was coming from prayer . The man is healed and I think although this is a physical healing it shows that Jesus can enable us to hear him. The Pharisees couldn’t hear Jesus but Jesus could open their ears and he can open ours! I remember when I wasn’t a Christian and people would talk to me about Jesus, but I didn’t hear it. But one day Jesus opened my ears and I received him into my heart. I think this is really encouraging and it gives me hope for my family and friends who are deaf to Jesus.

Zechariah 8 – The blessings

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Category : Bible, Bible Study, Zechariah

Zechariah 8 marks a change in the prophesies of Zechariah – and the Lord promises 10 blessings on Jerusalem and its people. There appears to be no time-scale indication here as to when this will happen but the main theme of this chapter is that the Lord is not going to punish the people of Judah any longer.

The imagery portrayed here of what Jerusalem will be like sounds excellent: men of ripe old age sitting in the streets, boys and girls playing, great harvests and joyful festivals. I am sure this came as a welcome prophesy to the people of Judah – even the Lord knows it (verse 6)!

The Remnant

This phrase is used throughout this chapter and relates closely to what Isaiah was speaking about in Isaiah 10:20-22. While the Lord is going to be merciful to the people of Judah and restore their city, it is not everyone who will be around to see it. Just as only two of the original Israelite exiles made it to the promised land, only part of the current people of Judah will live to see the restoration of Jerusalem as God’s Holy city.

It is interesting also to note the language the the Lord uses when the days of ‘doom and gloom’. Check this out in verse 10:

Before that time there were no wages for man or beast. No one could go about his business safely because of his enemy, for I had turned every man against his neighbour.

It is worth reminding ourselves here that it is God who used other peoples (such as the Philistines and the Babylonians) to discipline His people by turning everyone against each other. There are many trains of thought that suggest that God was ‘like that’ in the Old Testament but He is not in that business any more because the ultimate sacrifice has been paid. But don’t we still need disciplining? Don’t we still need reminding that God desires and pursues us through ways that we cannot ignore? I’d be interested to hear anyone’s thoughts on this.

Men from all languages

Verse 23 says:

This is what the LORD Almighty says: “In those days ten men from all languages and nations will take firm hold of one Jew by the hem of his robe and say, ‘Let us go with you, because we have heard that God is with you.’”

I think this is awesome – this is the true effect of God living and breathing with us that other people will come up to us and say “We need to be around you, because being near you is being near to God”. That is a true challenge to each of us today. Are we living the kind of life that makes people turn their heads and say “there is something different about this person that I want”?

Zachariah 7: Will we ever get the message.

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Category : Bible, Bible Study, Zechariah

Reading Zachariah 7 this week something leapt off the page at me. This was the familiarity of the message. I must confess that this is an area of the Bible which I have possibly never read (or at least only briefly and not taken any great time over it). This is part of the reason why I chose it for out study sessions. Even so, something about this was very familiar.

What is it that the word of the Lord says?
Be true to your word, show kindness and mercy, do not oppress the poor or vulnerable, do not devise evil in your hearts towards each other.

It’s not a new message!


This is what the Word of the Lord always says. This was what the Word of the Lord said before through previous prophets. This is what the Word of the Lord says still today. Why does God keep banging on about this? Because, if we manage it, we change the world. I really believe that it is that black and white.

Be true to your word.


If we are true to our word then we can be trusted by others. We have integrity and our words carry weight. If one person does this then they stand out from the crowd. People know who they are and know that they can be trusted. If large groups of people were like this; as Jesus put it, let their yes be their yes and their no be their no, then imagine the impact it would have.

Show kindness and mercy.


If we show kindness and mercy imagine how our world situations are transformed. We are not just talking about being kind to your friends; as Jesus pointed out, even the ââ?¬Ë?sinnersââ?¬â?¢ do that. God wants us to show kindness, full stop! Yes, itââ?¬â?¢s the same old message. Yes, itââ?¬â?¢s hard to do in the face of people who p*ss you off. But imagine the impact it would have.

Meet peoples needs.


If we do not oppress the poor; those in need, then think of the suffering that is lifted. Itââ?¬â?¢s quite fashionable at the moment to ââ?¬Å?Make Poverty Historyââ?¬Â and all that. This is important work and much needed. Us rich westerners will be held to account for what we are doing with our riches. But there are ways, much closer to home, where this Word of the Lord should be making a difference. Are we welcoming to strangers, do we visit the sick, do we comfort the bereaved, do we speak out against injustice at work, or wherever we are, when the need arises? Or even do we cause people to feel oppressed, small, weak, because it makes us feel better? Yes, itââ?¬â?¢s difficult to not want to promote ourselves. It can be a pain to visit the sick, and awkward to comfort bereaved. But imagine the impact it would have.

Love thy neighbour.


If we do not plot against each other then think how the world would be different. This is something, of course, most of us would never do. This really is the work of evil people. But bringing it closer to home, why would people plot? Because the outcome would fulfil a desire that is often selfish. A trivial example is of a clever child who thinks to rearrange the order of sweets in a packet so as to be seen to share them out, but to make sure they still got their favourite one. Trivial yes, but an example of how we are all capable of such plotting. We, quite naturally, want the best for ourselves and our families and I�m not saying that that is wrong. But, if instead of plotting, we played the game life by Gods rules, if we loved our neighbour as ourselves, imagine the impact it would have.

This is not a new message. And yet, for some reason, we just don�t live it. However, even now, as we once again let this Word of the Lord wash over us, there is a stark warning at the end of this chapter.

ââ?¬Å?Just as when I called, they would not hear, so, when they call, I would not hearââ?¬Â.

Is time running out?


We like to think that we have God on demand. That He is always waiting for us to sort ourselves out and that He will welcome us back with open arms after unlimited chances to get it right. We hold on to stories such as the prodigal son very tightly, and base our whole think about God around them. I wonder if this is a dangerous game to play. I wonder if this is only part of the picture. I wonder if time is running out for us to finally get this message.