“Lesson 11: Mark 1–4,” New Testament Teacher Manual (2018)
“Lesson 11,” New Testament Teacher Manual
11
Mark 1–4
Introduction and Timeline
Mark 1–4 begins and ends by calling special attention to the identity of Jesus Christ. Mark 1:1 reads almost like a title to the Gospel of Mark: “The beginning of the gospel of Jesus Christ, the Son of God.” Mark 4:41 records the awestruck disciples’ exclamation after the Savior had calmed a storm at sea: “What manner of man is this?” Remembering these verses as you study Mark 1–4 can help you focus on Mark’s testimony concerning what manner of man Jesus Christ was. These chapters will, as Mark 1:1 suggests, begin to present the gospel (literally, the “good news”) of Jesus Christ, repeatedly testifying that He is the all-powerful Son of God (see Mark 1:11, 22, 24, 27, 34; 2:10, 28; 3:11, 22–27; 4:35–41).
These chapters also show that people responded to the Savior’s work in a variety of ways. Both Jesus Christ and John the Baptist preached repentance and forgiveness (see Mark 1:4, 14–15; 2:17). Many people were “astonished” and “amazed” by the Savior’s teachings and miracles, and they gathered around Him (see Mark 1:22, 27, 33, 45). Others, however, failed to understand who He was and increasingly opposed Him (see Mark 2:1–3:7). Even the Savior’s disciples had to grow in their faith and understanding of who He was (see Mark 4:40–41).
Suggestions for Teaching
Introduction to the Gospel According to St. Mark
Ask students:
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In testimony meetings, what is valuable about hearing testimonies from several individuals rather than just one person?
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What do you think might be valuable about studying the Gospel of Mark, now that you have studied the Gospel of Matthew?
Ask students to read “Why study Mark?” and “What are some distinctive features of Mark?” under “Introduction to the Gospel According to St. Mark” in chapter 11 of the student manual. Ask them to look for why studying the Gospel of Mark can be valuable and relevant to them. After students have read, ask them to share why they think studying the Gospel of Mark will be valuable and relevant to them.
To help your students understand more about Mark’s purposes in writing, read “To whom was Mark written and why?” also in chapter 11 of the student manual.
Ask several students to respond to this question:
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If you had lived at the time Mark wrote, how do you think his Gospel might have helped you?
Explain that the Joseph Smith Translation changed the title of this Gospel to “The Testimony of St. Mark.” Mark’s most important purpose in writing was to bear testimony that Jesus was the Messiah and that the gospel being taught was His gospel. Explain that as we better understand Mark’s purposes in writing and the circumstances in which he lived, we can better understand how his Gospel blesses us in our day. To help students understand more about how Mark’s Gospel can bless them as it may have blessed the Saints in Mark’s day, display a picture of the Savior calming the storm. You could use the picture in the student manual commentary for Mark 4:35–41 or Jesus Calms the Storm (Gospel Art Book [2009], no. 40; see also LDS.org). Ask students to summarize what they know about the story of the Savior calming a storm on the Sea of Galilee. Have students read Mark 4:36–41, looking for details they might not have remembered. You might also want to have students read parts of the student manual commentary for Mark 4:35–41.
The following questions will help your students study and discuss Mark 4:35–41:
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What do verses 37–38 suggest about how the disciples were feeling about their situation? According to these verses, how did they feel about the Savior?
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What difficult or “stormy” circumstances were followers of Jesus Christ facing in Mark’s time? What kinds of “storms” do we face in our own day?
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How might this miracle have given hope to members of the Church in Mark’s day?
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When have you seen evidence of the Savior’s power to calm the storms in our lives?
To bring the discussion to a close, consider sharing the following statement from President M. Russell Ballard of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles:
“In turbulent and sometimes frightening times, the Savior’s promise of infinite and eternal peace resonates with special power to us, just as His ability to calm the crashing waves must have profoundly affected those who were with Him on the Sea of Galilee that stormy night so long ago” (“The Peaceable Things of the Kingdom,” Ensign, May 2002, 87).
Summarize this part of the lesson by explaining this principle: Studying the Gospel of Mark can strengthen our faith in Jesus Christ and our courage to follow Him. Invite students to be prayerful as they study and to be attentive to truths they can learn from Mark’s Gospel that add to what they learned by studying the Gospel of Matthew.
Mark 1:1–11, 21–31; 2:1–12; 3:15, 22–30; 4:35–41
The Authority and Power of Jesus Christ
Ask students to look at Mark 1:22, 27; 2:10; 3:15, and mark in each verse the word authority or power.
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What can you learn about the Savior by paying attention to the words authority and power in these verses?
Explain that one of the major themes in the Gospel of Mark is: As the Son of God, Jesus Christ came with power and authority. The first chapters of Mark help us recognize that the authority of Jesus Christ was evident from the beginning of His ministry.
To help students identify an early sign of Jesus’s authority, ask them to scan Mark 1:1–11. Ask for answers to the following questions:
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The Gospels of Matthew and Luke begin with accounts of Jesus’s birth, while the Gospel of John begins with a description of Jesus’s premortal existence. What event in the Savior’s life is found at the beginning of the Gospel of Mark? (The Savior’s baptism.)
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How do the events recorded in Mark 1:10–11 help us understand that Jesus Christ had power and authority? (See the student manual commentary for Mark 1:2–11.)
Explain that as Jesus Christ began His ministry, He demonstrated in many ways that He had come to earth with the authority of the Son of God. To help students deepen their understanding of the Savior’s power and authority, display the following chart on the board or on a poster:
Scripture |
What We Learn about Jesus Christ’s Power and Authority |
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Jesus Christ demonstrated His authority when He . | |
Jesus Christ demonstrated His authority when He . | |
Jesus Christ demonstrated His authority when He . | |
Jesus Christ has power to . | |
Jesus Christ is more powerful than . | |
Jesus Christ has power over . |
Assign students, individually or in pairs, to read one of the scripture passages, looking for information that would allow them to complete the statement next to their assigned scripture. After allowing students time to search, call on them to report what they found, and write their answers on the chart. As students give their answers, ask them to explain how specific words, phrases, or events illustrate the Savior’s power and authority. The finished chart might look like this:
Scripture |
What We Learn about Jesus Christ’s Power and Authority |
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Jesus Christ demonstrated His authority when He taught His doctrine. | |
Jesus Christ demonstrated His authority when He commanded an evil spirit to come out of a man. | |
Jesus Christ demonstrated His authority when He healed Simon’s mother-in-law. | |
Jesus Christ has power to forgive sins and to heal the sick. | |
Jesus Christ is more powerful than Satan. | |
Jesus Christ has power over the wind and the sea (the forces of nature). |
Ask students:
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How would you summarize the information in the chart?
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Think about some of the Savior’s teachings and miracles. Which ones have brought you a greater understanding of His divine power and authority?
Mark 1:4–5, 14–15, 40–45
Repentance and the Healing of a Leper
Ask students to compare Mark 1:4 with Mark 1:14–15, looking for what the verses have in common. (Both mention repentance. The invitation to repent was a key part of John the Baptist’s teachings, and this invitation is included in the Savior’s first teachings quoted in the Gospel of Mark.) Ask students:
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How would you define the meaning of the word repentance, using only one sentence?
After some students have responded, read the following quotation:
“Repentance is one of the first principles of the gospel (see Articles of Faith 1:4). It is essential to your happiness in this life and throughout eternity. Repentance is much more than just acknowledging wrongdoings. It is a change of mind and heart that gives you a fresh view about God, about yourself, and about the world. It includes turning away from sin and turning to God for forgiveness” (True to the Faith: A Gospel Reference [2004], 132; italics added).
Ask students:
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Why would repentance be incomplete if someone tried to turn away from sin without turning to God?
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Why would repentance be incomplete if someone tried to turn to God without turning away from sin?
Explain that sometimes when repentance is taught, people emphasize turning away from sin without emphasizing turning to the Lord. Explain that in Mark 1–2 (and throughout the Gospels), there are repeated opportunities to read about people who turned to the Lord. Ask a student to read Mark 1:40, looking for words and phrases that describe how the leper turned to the Lord. List student responses on the board (answers could include the following):
Help students understand the content of these verses by asking them to explain what the phrases on the board mean. You could ask questions like the following: What is implied by the word beseeching, compared to the word asking? (Beseeching means “begging” or “imploring,” while the word asking can mean “requesting help.”) What is suggested by the fact that the man was “kneeling down” to Jesus? (The man was humble and felt reverence for the Savior; perhaps he also felt desperation.) Write your students’ explanations next to the phrases on the board.
Ask students to silently read Mark 1:41–42 and the first paragraph of the student manual commentary for Mark 1:40–45. As they read, ask them to imagine how they would feel if they were the leper.
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Based on what you have learned about leprosy, how do you imagine the man’s life changed after this experience?
Ask a student to read Mark 1:40–42 aloud, this time substituting “sinner” for “leper,” and “sin” for “leprosy.” Ask students:
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As you read the verses this way, what words in the verses suggest the idea of being forgiven? (“Clean” and “cleansed.”)
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How can each of the phrases on the board apply to repenting and seeking forgiveness from God?
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What do these verses teach about how the Savior regards those who turn to Him to be cleansed?
Bear testimony of this principle: When we turn to the Savior to be made clean, He has compassion on us and makes us clean.
When discussing the comparison between the healing of the leper and obtaining forgiveness, you might need to clarify that while the leper was healed “immediately” (Mark 1:42), repenting and obtaining forgiveness of sins usually requires more time. However, turning to the Lord in faith does begin to make an immediate difference (see Alma 34:31). If time permits, you might have students read the poem by President Boyd K. Packer in the student manual commentary for Mark 1:40–45. This poem likens the Savior’s healing of lepers to the forgiveness that we can receive through repentance and the Atonement of Jesus Christ.
Mark 2:1–17
The Healing of a Paralytic and the Calling of Levi
The miracle recorded in Mark 2:1–12 can help students learn more about the role of acting with faith to obtain forgiveness. Ask students to silently read Mark 2:1–4, looking for what efforts the paralyzed man’s friends made to come to Jesus Christ for help. (You might also ask them to read the first paragraph of the student manual commentary for Mark 2:2–5.)
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What impresses you about what this group of five people did to reach the Savior?
Ask students to read Mark 2:5–12, looking for the two miracles the Savior performed for the man.
Rather than having students read Mark 2:5–12, consider showing the video “Jesus Forgives Sins and Heals a Man Stricken with Palsy” (2:57) from The Life of Jesus Christ Bible Videos, available at LDS.org. This video covers Mark 2:1–12. Ask students to watch for the two miracles that the Savior performed for the man.
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What two miracles did the Savior perform for the man? (Forgave his sins and healed his paralysis.)
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What do you think this man might have said to a person who needed to turn to the Savior for forgiveness but felt overwhelmed or frightened by the difficulties that might be involved? (If time permits, you might have students read Hebrews 4:15–16 to further teach that we can turn to the Lord with confidence when we need forgiveness of our sins.)
Write this principle on the board: If we exercise our faith and come unto the Savior, we can be forgiven of our sins.
Explain that the next account in Mark teaches more about repentance and forgiveness.
Ask students if they remember what publicans were. (They were tax collectors. They were typically wealthy and hated in Jewish society.)
Ask students to look in Mark 2:14 and find the name of the publican whom Jesus called. (Levi, the son of Alphaeus. The “Levi” spoken of in these verses is the same person as Matthew, referred to in Matthew 9:9, who authored the Gospel of Matthew.)
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What was Levi’s response to Jesus’s invitation, “Follow me”? (“He arose and followed him.”)
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As recorded in Mark 2:15–16, what happened at Levi’s house? (Many publicans and sinners sat and dined together with Jesus and His disciples.)
Explain that in cultures throughout the world, there are important meanings connected to social customs such as dining together, shaking hands, bowing to a person, or greeting someone with an embrace. To illustrate this, ask students to explain the meaning of an action that is a custom of friendship in their culture.
Ask students to learn what the custom of dining together meant in New Testament times by reading the student manual commentary for Mark 2:15–17.
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Why would the dinner with Jesus have been especially meaningful to Levi and the “publicans and sinners” who had decided to follow Him?
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How does this custom help explain why the scribes and Pharisees acted the way they did, as recorded in Mark 2:16?
Ask a student to read the Savior’s response to the scribes and Pharisees, as recorded in Mark 2:17.
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How did the Savior describe people who need repentance? (They are like “sick” people who need a “physician.”) How is repentance like going to a physician?
Explain that the account of the Savior’s meal with Levi and the scribes and Pharisees can help us understand this principle: When we repent and receive forgiveness from the Savior, we enter into His fellowship.
You might use one of the following activities to help students feel the importance of coming to the Savior:
Ask students to share their responses to this question: Think about the account of the leper, the healing of the paralytic, and the Savior’s eating with sinners. How do these accounts help you understand that repentance leads to forgiveness of sins and fellowship with Jesus Christ?
Ask the students to take a few moments to silently ponder the following questions: In your own efforts to repent, how have you both turned to the Lord and turned away from sin? When has repentance brought you forgiveness and the peace and joy that accompany it? (You might want to write these questions on the board.)