The Bible Recap - Day 288 (Mark 4-5) - Year 5
Episode Date: October 15, 2023SHOW NOTES: - Head to our Start Page for all you need to begin! - Join the RECAPtains - Check out the TBR Store - Show credits - FINAL WEEK to enter to win a trip to the Museum of the Bible, click ...here! (Winner is chosen Oct 16!) FROM TODAY’S PODCAST: - Mark 8:33 - TBR Store SOCIALS: The Bible Recap: Instagram | Facebook | Twitter D-Group: Instagram | Facebook | Twitter TLC: Instagram | Facebook | Twitter D-GROUP: The Bible Recap is brought to you by D-Group - an international network of discipleship and accountability groups that meet weekly in homes and churches: Find or start one near you today! DISCLAIMER: The Bible Recap, Tara-Leigh Cobble, and affiliates are not a church, pastor, spiritual authority, or counseling service. Listeners and viewers consume this content on a voluntary basis and assume all responsibility for the resulting consequences and impact.
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Hey Bible readers, I'm Tara Lee Cobble, and I'm your host for the Bible recap.
Today we open with Mark's account of the parable of the four soils.
Then he immediately follows it with a question about the purpose of a lamp.
You don't hide lamps, you display them.
The fact that these two illustrations are given back to back
seems to indicate that Jesus wants the light to go everywhere,
the seed to go everywhere.
Some people might hide their eyes from the light,
some people might not use the light to see the truth at all,
but the light shines in the darkness nonetheless.
And the seed must fall even on the three bad soils,
not just on the good soil.
Jesus may be measured about the timing of his revealing, but he's clear on the fact that
everyone who has eyes to see, everyone who has soil to receive will see and will receive,
and they will respond accordingly.
Then Jesus spends several parables explaining the kingdom of God, not describing what the
experience is like, but describing its unstoppable
power despite its small beginnings.
By the way, the terms kingdom of God and kingdom of heaven seem to be used interchangeably in
Scripture.
Jesus says the kingdom is like a seed that grows to full harvest, but no one knows how it
actually happens.
That it's like a mustard seed slowly taking over everything.
Mustard seeds are tiny, but they grow to be huge and are practically impossible to kill.
Jesus seems to be illustrating that his kingdom will have a slow and steady growth, but that
no one will be able to stop it.
That night, he says, let's get in the boat and go across to the other side.
We've read this story before, but we focused mainly on the healing that happened on the
other side of the water, not what happened while they were on the water.
Since Mark spends a little more time on that story, we'll drop in on that part today.
In general, agents used it not like water.
It's where all the bad stuff happened.
Plus, the Sea of Galilee is an area where big storms can hit at a moment's notice.
And now it's nighttime.
So they've got at least three good reasons not to want to get in the boat.
But they follow Jesus anyway. And wouldn't you know it? A big storm hits the sea of
Galilee, and the boat starts to fill with water. Meanwhile, Jesus is snoozing in the back.
He's probably really spent from his big day of teaching, but this also demonstrates how
peaceful a person can be when they trust the one in control. They wake him up and accuse
him of not caring about what's happening to them. Maybe you felt that way. But this storm was happening to him,
too. He was in the storm with them. And whether you know it or not, that's your story, too.
He bosses the weather around and tells it to calm down. Then he turns to the disciples
and tells them to calm down, too, except he probably says it in a much nicer tone than
that. In fact, I ended up on a deep dive into the original language while studying this text
and discovered something interesting.
I've heard lots of people say Jesus rebukes his disciples here for their lack of faith,
and maybe he does.
He certainly addresses their lack of faith, but the text itself only says he rebukes the
storm.
The word rebuk carries a certain tone and connotation.
It's more than just addressing
and correcting something. It carries the idea of righteous anger, of a sharp response.
But with his disciples, he seems to have compassion on them in the midst of their fears,
and even in the midst of their false accusations that he doesn't care about what's happening to them.
He reminds them to lean into their faith in him when scary things happen, to remember
what they've learned about him already. Here's something else I discovered on my deep dive into the
word rebuke. It's used almost 30 times in the New Testament, but never once is it something Jesus
does directly to his disciples. He rebukes the storm, he rebukes those who reject him as savior,
he rebukes an illness, and mostly he rebukes demons.
In fact, the one time it could be considered
that he's rebuking one of his disciples
is when he's talking to Peter in Mark 8.33
and he says, get behind me, Satan.
So I'm inclined to think Jesus actually was talking to Satan,
not just calling Peter Satan.
Let me be clear, rebuking someone isn't wrong.
In fact, later we'll read where Jesus gives his followers instructions on how and when
it's fitting to rebuke each other.
He certainly had reasons to rebuke the disciples himself, and he probably did, but it's just
not anywhere in these pages.
And in today's text, it seems that he leans into compassion, that he chooses not to
rebuke them because of their fear, but to rebuke the cause of their fear instead.
Lots of you battle with your own fears,
and maybe you even feel shame over the fact
that you can't seem to quiet them sometimes.
I believe this text shows us that he has great compassion
on you when you're in that space, that he doesn't shame you,
that he's in the storm with you,
he's not inattentive or unaware.
Do you know what I love most about this story?
The part that comforts me most isn't just that Jesus is sovereign over storms. It's the reminder
that the whole reason they got into the storm to begin with was because they were obeying God.
When things go sideways in our life and our boat starts to fill with water, it's pretty common
to wonder exactly what we've done to deserve this. We want to find the offensive action so we can avoid it in the future.
But this trial was the result of obedience, not sin or error.
Why would God do that?
Why would He say, let's get in the boat
and go to the other side
so you can get caught up in a storm I'm about to send?
That's where my God shot showed up today.
Our relationship with God
is the most important thing in our lives
and it impacts
every other area of our lives. That means everything we learn about him and experience with him
is invaluable and builds on a relationship we'll have, not just for the rest of our lives, but forever.
I believe God wanted the apostles to experience the storm so that they'd learn something about him
they wouldn't know otherwise, which is that he's sovereign over whatever comes their way. This is just one of many times that
he demonstrates his power to them. He knows they need to see it repeatedly displayed, because
they're going to go through much bigger storms over the course of their lives, from watching
their leader die on a cross, to facing their own horrible deaths. They need to personally
know and deeply trust that God they're following.
How generous of him to let them see more and more of who he is to strengthen their faith.
He slowly, but surely growing their hearts of faith from tiny little mustard seeds into
something that takes over and can't be killed.
His kingdom goes on forever.
And I'm so glad because he's where the joy is.
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