Four Gospels, One Christ: The Public Ministry of Jesus
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Michael John Hooton
Michael Hooton studied Modern Languages at Oxford and Theology at Spurgeon's College, London. He is the pastor of a Baptist church in the East Midlands in England.
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Four Gospels, One Christ - Michael John Hooton
Table of Contents
Preface
Chapter 1: Four Gospels
Chapter 2: The baptism
Chapter 3: The temptation
Chapter 4: Going public
Chapter 5: Announcing the Kingdom
Chapter 6: Teaching the Kingdom
Chapter 7: Demonstrating the Kingdom
Chapter 8: Controversy
Chapter 9: Training the Twelve
Chapter 10:The Kingdom and the Gentiles
Chapter 11: The Kingdom and the cross
Chapter 12: The Kingdom and the poor
Bibliography
9781498281126.kindle.jpgFour Gospels, One Christ
The Public Ministry of Jesus
Michael Hooton
27043.pngFour Gospels, One Christ
The Public Ministry of Jesus
Copyright © 2016 Michael Hooton. All rights reserved. Except for brief quotations in critical publications or reviews, no part of this book may be reproduced in any manner without prior written permission from the publisher. Write: Permissions, Wipf and Stock Publishers, 199 W. 8th Ave., Suite 3, Eugene, OR 97401.
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Scripture quotations are taken from the HOLY BIBLE, NEW INTERNATIONAL VERSION ®, Copyright © 1973, 1978, 1984 by International Bible Society. Used by permission of Zondervan. All rights reserved.
Preface
It seemed good also to me to write . . .
(Luke 1:3)
A much respected preacher, within a few years of his retirement, was asked, if you could start your time in ministry all over again, what would you do differently? After a moment’s reflection, he replied, I would preach less from the letters, and more from the Gospels.
That comment would not have been intended as a relegation of the New Testament letters to second-class status. But it does perhaps reflect the fact that the doctrinal study of the letters has often seemed to appeal more to the western delight in analysis and argument than the personal story of the Gospels. There are those who would prefer the old children’s hymn Tell me the stories of Jesus
to be re-worded as Expound to me the doctrines of Jesus
; it might not fit the tune as well, but it would suit the somewhat cerebral approach to faith that traditionally has tended to characterize parts of the western Protestant church since the enlightenment, and to some extent continues into our own day.
But it is fundamental to our Christian faith that doctrine comes wrapped in flesh and blood: the Word became a human being and lived among us. Truth is not propositional, but personal: Jesus said, "I am the truth." If Jesus is the very heart and soul of all that it means to be Christian—and he is—then it is in the Gospels that that heart is revealed. We urgently need the exposition of Christian truth in the letters; but we need at least as urgently to be confronted regularly and often with the one who is that truth, as we find him in the Gospels.
I should perhaps start by saying what this book is not. First, it is not a commentary. It does expound and comment on a number of passages, but it makes no attempt to cover the whole text of the Gospels systematically.
Second, it is not a harmonization of the Gospels. Whilst the general shape of Jesus’ life and ministry is clear, and a great deal of the specific detail within that overall shape is equally clear, it is not always possible or, I suggest, necessary to know in precisely which order all the narrated events happened. The Gospels, especially Matthew and John, sometimes seem to arrange their material thematically rather than purely chronologically. That in no way undermines their reliability as history—it is a perfectly valid way of writing a historical account—but it does mean that when, for example, Luke seems to place an incident in Jesus’ life earlier or later than Matthew, the time we might spend wondering which of them is chronologically more accurate
could be more usefully spent reflecting on the themes that Matthew and Luke are inviting us to draw out of the incident.
Third, it is not an introduction
to the Gospels; that is, it does not aim to discuss at length such matters as the authorship, date of writing, and intended readership of the Gospels. For example, I accept the traditional view that the authors of the Gospels are Matthew, the disciple and former tax collector; John Mark, the young missionary who went with Paul and Barnabas from Jerusalem back to Antioch (Acts 12:25) then accompanied Paul on his first missionary journey as far as Pamphilia (Acts 13:5,13), and who is mentioned in Colossians 4:10 as the cousin of Barnabas; Luke, who also accompanied Paul on some of his missionary journeys and to whom Paul refers in Colossians 4:14 as our dear friend Luke, the doctor
; and John, the disciple and brother of James—and I accept it not simply because it is traditional, but because I have never found the reasons put forward for doubting it to be either necessary or convincing. But those who want to explore the arguments for and against the traditional view of authorship will need to look elsewhere. Whether they will be spiritually enriched by so doing is, at best, a moot point. So my general comments in chapter 1 are not intended to give a full background introduction to the Gospels, but to suggest the particular character and flavor
of each one. The four Gospels are not bland and featureless repetitions of the same story; each highlights different facets of the person of Christ, and chapter 1 is a simple attempt to characterize the four complementary accounts of Jesus.
We can divide the story of Jesus in the Gospels very roughly into three sections. The composer Robert Schumann wrote an orchestral work, which is often regarded as a three-movement symphony in all but name, which he called Overture, scherzo and finale; and we might in an analogous way regard the story in the Gospels as a three-movement symphony: the overture,
comprising the introductory material (for example, the prologue in John 1:1–18, and the story of the birth of John the Baptist in Luke 1) and the birth story (which is narrated only in Matthew 2 and Luke 2); then the central scherzo,
the public ministry of Jesus, starting with his baptism by John, and concluding just before his triumphal entry into Jerusalem riding on a donkey—though bearing in mind that the literal meaning of the word scherzo
is joke,
that is perhaps not quite the best term: the public ministry of Jesus was certainly no joke!; and then the grand finale,
the last week—which is in the liturgical tradition of the church called Holy Week
—leading up to the cross and resurrection.
This book focuses on the central movement, the three years of Jesus’ public ministry.¹ Of course, everything in the Gospels is important for our faith; but there is at least one thing that is characteristic about Jesus’ ministry, which distinguishes it from the birth story and the account of his death and resurrection. Both Jesus’ birth and his death were unique: his entry into this world was by a one-off miracle, the virgin conception; and his death was a unique and unrepeatable sacrifice to atone for sin. That does not mean that the accounts of Jesus’ birth and death do not have any lessons for our own life and faith: but they are first and foremost about Christ himself, who he is, and why salvation in found in no one else, for there is no other name under heaven given to men by which we must be saved
(Acts 4:12). But the ministry of Jesus, whilst it is a significant part of the biblical portrayal of who Jesus is, is also a model of how we are to live as his disciples. Jesus himself said that those who believe in him are called to do the same works that he did (John 14:12), and John says that whoever claims to live in him must walk as Jesus did
(1 John 2:6). His life is the pattern for our lives, and his ministry is the prototype of our ministry.
In John 12:21 we are told that some Greeks once approached Philip with the request, Sir, we would like to see Jesus.
This book is for ordinary Christian believers, rather than theological specialists, who share the same desire; but who, as well as seeing him, would like to think through the implications of what they see. Of course it is the Gospels themselves that introduce us to Jesus; this book, or any other, can at best be a help towards discovering more of what the Gospels themselves have to say to us. It is an attempt to explore the themes that arise from the story of Jesus as it is told in the four Gospels, a series of reflections on Jesus’ life and ministry, and on the various threads and themes that run through the four-fold Gospel. It aims to outline some of the lessons that we can learn from the life and ministry of Jesus, which can then shape our own thinking and our own lives and service.
There are for obvious reasons a great many references to texts in the Gospels; where it seemed appropriate I have often quoted the actual words of the Bible, but I have normally also added the reference in brackets. These references are not simply my attempt to show that everything I have written is rooted in the Bible, but are intended to encourage the reader continually to go back to the Bible itself, just as the people of Berea examined the Scriptures every day to see if what Paul said was true
(Acts 17:11). Where parallel verses or passages in different Gospels are listed, I have used the common convention of separating them by slanting parallel lines: so Matthew 12:50//Mark 3:35
means that those two verses are Matthew’s and Mark’s record of the same saying, even if the actual wording may occasionally differ slightly.
There are also a substantial number of footnotes. Whilst I do not feel compelled exactly to apologize for these, I should perhaps say why they are there. Some are identifying sources of quotations or references; some are defining terms that may not be widely understood. But many are simply additional comments—the literary equivalent of a conversational Oh, and by the way . . .
—which I felt would have interrupted the flow of the main text. No one is obliged to read them; but if any of them prove of interest, I will feel that their presence is justified.
Unless otherwise stated, Scripture quotations are taken from the New International Version (International Bible Society, 1973, 1978, 1984); I have used the 1996 edition (Zondervan, Grand Rapids, Michigan).
1. The conventional assumption that Jesus’ ministry lasted three years is admittedly based not on any explicit statement in the Gospels, which do not contain a clear time-table of Jesus’ life, beyond the fact that he began his public ministry when he was about thirty years old
(Luke
3
:
23
), but on the fact that John mentions Jesus being present at three annual Passovers (John
2
:
13
,
6
:
4
,
11
:
55
; it is to be assumed that the Passover mentioned in
11
:
55
is the same as that in
12
:
1
and
13
:
1
, when Jesus shared the Last Supper with his disciples). That tells us that Jesus’ ministry lasted at least three years; whether it was longer is not easy to tell, in the light of John’s comment that Jesus did many other things which are not recorded in this book
(
20
:
30
). But three years is a reasonable estimate in view of the facts recorded in the Gospels.
1
Four Gospels
Many have undertaken to draw up an account . . .
(Luke 1:1)
Paul tells us in 1 Corinthians 12 that the various members of the church together make up the Body of Christ. No single person can adequately represent Jesus to the world. You are to be Christ to the world
is a perfectly proper challenge to discipleship and service, provided that we remember that the you
is plural; it is you , the church together, not just you , the individual believer, that are the hands, the feet, the lips of Jesus. The ministry of Jesus is so multi-faceted that no individual can truly fulfill it.
In a similar way, the person of Jesus is so multi-faceted that no single account of him can possibly do him justice. God could have ensured that we had in the Bible a record of Jesus’ life, works and words. But in his generosity he has left us four. In fact, as John reminds us, even with these four we have still only scratched the surface, because if everything about Jesus were to be written down I suppose that even the whole world would not have room for the books that would be written
(John 21:25). However, four is four times better than one.
All four Gospels are selective; they show us complementary aspects of the person of Jesus. They have a certain amount in common; but each has its distinctive emphasis. They are like the four large pieces of a jig-saw; and even if they still do not tell us absolutely everything that could possibly be said about Jesus, they do show us everything that God in his wisdom has decided that we need to know. True, we see at present but a poor reflection
(1 Corinthians 13:12); but the four Gospels together do at least give us a better and fuller reflection than any one of them could have done on its own. And we have the assurance that, when Jesus returns in person, we shall see face to face.
Until then, we have Matthew, Mark, Luke and John to give us the authoritative account of Jesus’ life and ministry, as well, of course, as his death and resurrection, which are not specifically discussed in this book. Each has its own characteristic features; so before we come to the story of Jesus’ ministry as it is reflected in the four Gospels, it is worth summarizing the qualities that are most likely to strike the reader as distinctive about each, and what they say about who Jesus is and how we are to think of him.
Mark
The story
We start with Mark, because, although in our English Bibles it comes after Matthew, it is generally agreed that Mark’s was probably the first Gospel of the four to be written, and the one on which Matthew in particular was to draw for his own work. It is by far the shortest and simplest Gospel. It seems to be based primarily on the recollections of Peter. In 1 Peter 5:13 Peter mentions Mark and calls him my son,
meaning my disciple
; Jewish Rabbis often called their disciples son.
This suggests that Mark was an assistant to Peter in the latter years of Peter’s life. As one Bible commentator has put it, even if the hand be Mark’s, the voice is Peter’s.
¹ This connection with Peter not only gives the book its authority as an apostolic Gospel, but also accounts for its distinctive quality. More than any other Gospel, except, in a different way, John’s, it has the character of an eye-witness account. But the interesting thing is that the events in which Peter was involved are told with vivid detail, often using very colorful language, just as Mark might have heard Peter telling the story using graphic illustrations to paint a word-picture of the scene. So for example in 6:39 he even mentions that the people sat down on the green grass
; and in 9:3 he uses the striking phrase of Jesus’ appearance in the transfiguration that his clothes were whiter than anyone in the world could bleach them.
On the other hand, the events in which Peter was not involved personally, such as the temptation (1:13), are merely mentioned in passing. Peter would know that it had happened, from the things Jesus had said, but because he was not at the scene, he does not describe it. So Mark’s Gospel has nothing of the birth and childhood narratives. It starts with the baptism of Jesus, at which Peter was probably present; or, even if Peter himself was not there, his brother Andrew, who was a disciple of John the Baptist (John 1:35,40), almost certainly would have been. It then speaks of the calling of the first disciples, of whom Peter was one. It focuses on the Galilean ministry of Jesus around Capernaum, Peter’s home. It is noteworthy, and a tribute to Peter’s humility, that the incidents which would present Peter in a more positive light, such as the blessing pronounced on him at Caesarea Philippi (Matthew 16:17–19) or his walking on the water (Matthew 14:28–29), are omitted from Mark; but those which show his human frailty, especially the denials, are highlighted (14:29–31, 14:66–72).
Of all the Gospels, Mark’s is the most descriptive; it is the Gospel, not simply of recorded history, but rather, in the full sense of the word, of story-telling, of vividly describing what happened so that the reader can picture the scene. Mark uses more adjectives, adverbs and descriptive phrases than the other Gospel-writers, in order to describe scenes that clearly made a powerful impression on Peter. These are part of what the other writers cut out of their Gospels: they record the essential facts, but without the same vivid sense of painting a picture. It is generally true that, whilst Mark does not include nearly so much material as Matthew and Luke, his language is more expansive. He includes a lot of secondary descriptive detail, which Matthew and Luke leave out; they trim down Mark’s accounts to the essentials in order to make room for the extra material that they are going to add, whereas Mark describes events and scenes at greater length. To cite one typical example: in the account of Jesus’ healing of the woman who was subject to bleeding (Matthew 9:20–22//Mark 5:25–34//Luke 8:43–48) Matthew tells the story, in the original Greek of the New Testament, in forty-eight words; Luke, who like Mark includes the dialogue about who touched me?,
which Matthew omits entirely, uses 105; and Mark’s version takes 154. Mark, more than the other Gospels, will often typically describe Jesus’ looks (for example, 3:34, he looked at those seated in a circle around him
; 5:32, Jesus kept looking round to see who had done it
), his acts and gestures (9:35–36, Sitting down, Jesus called the Twelve . . . He took a little child and had him stand among them. Taking him in his arms, he said . . .
), and his emotions and feelings (3:5, . . . in anger and deeply distressed
; 7:34, He looked up to heaven and with a deep sigh said . . .
). Reading this, one can imagine Mark having heard Peter re-telling the stories, probably using lots of body language, maybe re-enacting Jesus’ gestures and actions, and saying to his hearers, And this is what it was like!
There are many other examples of small details which contribute to the vivid picture being painted: the description of the breaking up of the roof of a house to let down a paralyzed man (2:4); or of Jesus asleep in the boat, with his head on a pillow (4:37–38), and in a later scene on the lake, the description of the disciples straining at the oars
because of the storm (6:48); the actions of Jesus in healing a deaf and dumb man, by putting his fingers in his ears and touching his tongue (7:33); the picture of Peter in the high priest’s palace as he sat with the guards and warmed himself at the fire
(14:54); and many others.
Mark’s is the shortest Gospel, largely because he leaves out most of the teaching material in the other three Gospels: 41.4 percent of the verses in Matthew contain the teaching of Jesus; 34.7 percent of Luke; but only 16.9 percent of Mark. Mark’s is the Gospel of actions rather than words, of story rather than doctrine; he concentrates on painting a picture of the events of Jesus’ ministry. And his style is simple and fairly unpolished; it reflects the popular language of preaching, rather than the cultured language of the literary classes, and makes his book sound more like that of a story-teller than a literary historian. Mark writes in the style of the man in the street.
C. E. B. Cranfield, in his commentary on Mark, says: Often, when the language of Matthew and/or Luke differs from that of Mark, it will be seen that it represents a grammatical or stylistic improvement.
²
And his Gospel is dramatic. One of Mark’s favorite words is the Greek term euthùs, which he uses forty-one times—eleven times in chapter 1 alone—and which is sometimes translated as immediately,
or similar words; at other times, it is left untranslated. This frequent use of immediately
stresses the dramatic quality of Mark’s narrative; we go straight from one vivid scene or event to another, with scarcely a pause for breath—at least in the first half of the Gospel.
The Son
The key phrase which Mark uses to summarize his message is that Jesus is the Son of God.
He is affirmed as God’s Son in the opening verse of the Gospel, which is a kind of heading for the whole book. At his baptism, the voice of the Father from heaven declares him to be the Son of God (1:11). Demons recognize him as the Son of God (3:11, 5:7). At his transfiguration, the Father again declares him to be the Son (9:7). At his trial, Jesus says that he is the Son of God (14:61–62). At his death, the centurion declares that Jesus is the Son of God (15:39).
For Mark, the Sonship of Jesus is seen in two ways. First, it is demonstrated in mighty works of power. Jesus is the man of action,
the Son of God who comes to perform the works of God in the world. But second, and very importantly for Mark, it is understood in the light of the cross. It is significant that the only affirmation of Jesus as the Son of God from human lips comes right at the end, when, at the cross, the centurion declares that this was the Son of God. Mark can use Son of God
as part of his overall title; the Father, in the baptism and transfiguration, calls Jesus his Son; the demonic powers recognize from the outset that Jesus is the Son; but men can see Jesus as the Son of God only when they stand at the cross, as the centurion, quite literally, did. The wording of 15:39 is very important; it was when the centurion stood there in front of Jesus
(on the cross), and saw how he died
that he made his confession of Christ as the Son of God.
The other main title of Jesus, and Jesus’ own preferred way of referring to himself, is Son of Man.
Though it occurs more often in Matthew (thirty times) and Luke (twenty-five times), it is also noticeable in Mark, who uses it fourteen times. Sometimes Son of Man
refers to the ordinary human life of Jesus, though not particularly in Mark: it is Matthew and Luke who give us most of the Son of Man
sayings about the common humanity of Jesus: for example, the Son of Man came eating and drinking,
Matthew 11:19//Luke 7:34; the Son of Man has no place to lay his head,
Matthew 8:20//Luke 9:58. At its simplest Son of Man
just means man, human being; it stresses Jesus’ humanity. It may also carry the sense, not just that Jesus was a man,
but that he was the archetypal man, Man par excellence. In the closing lines of Shakespeare’s Julius Caesar, Antony sums up Brutus’ character in the words, . . . Nature might stand up and say to all the world ‘This was a man!’
If that could be said of Brutus, the Gospel writers, including Mark, want us to know how infinitely more it can be said of Jesus, who is truly Man as God always intended.
But most of the Son of Man
sayings of Jesus, and almost all of the ones found in Mark, refer to two paradoxically different aspects of his work. Some speak of the future glory of Jesus as the King of heaven; Matthew and Luke in fact include far more such sayings than Mark, who has only three: If anyone is ashamed of me and my words in this adulterous and sinful generation, the Son of Man will be ashamed of him when he comes in his Father’s glory with the holy angels
(8:38); At that time men will see the Son of Man coming in clouds with great power and glory
(13:26); and You will see the Son of Man sitting at the right hand of the Mighty One and coming on the clouds of heaven
(14:62). The background to the phrase Son of Man
in this sense is in Daniel 7:13–14, where, at the end of the ages, one like a son of man
comes in the clouds of heaven, and is given an eternal kingdom over which he shall reign for ever and ever.³ By calling himself Son of Man,
Jesus is saying that he is the one Daniel saw, the one who will reign over God’s eternal Kingdom.
But many other Son of Man
sayings, and most of those in Mark, speak of Jesus’ betrayal, suffering and death: e.g. [Jesus] then began to teach them that the Son of Man must suffer many things and be rejected by the elders, chief priests and teachers of the law, and that he must be killed . . .
(8:31). For Mark, the most important thing about the Son of Man was that he would suffer and die; we will return to that vital truth shortly, as we summarize the specific benefits of reading the Gospel of Mark.
Reading Mark
So how can reading Mark’s Gospel in particular be of help to us? Primarily in two ways.
The dramatic story
Mark’s is the most striking Gospel. It is an ideal introduction to the person who wants to find out about Jesus. It tells the story of Jesus in a way that can appeal to the imagination; it presents a Jesus who is both a remarkable man and the Son of God.
For this reason, Mark is probably the best Gospel to give to the person who is interested in, but largely uninformed about, Jesus. Of course, any Gospel—indeed, any part of Scripture—can be the means by which God speaks to people, and no part of the Bible is any less the inspired Word of God than any other. But the various books of the Bible were all written for some specific purpose; and part of the purpose of Mark is clearly to present the story of Jesus in the most straightforward way. It is therefore ideally suited to the needs of a generation that is often more receptive to story-telling and to the visual than to the doctrinal, and in which many are unaware of, or have quite misleading and misinformed ideas about, who Jesus really was and what he actually did. Of course there is doctrine in Mark, as the above comments about the presentation of Jesus as Son of God and Son of Man demonstrate. But in Mark, even more than in the other Gospels, doctrine comes dressed in story; it is doctrine incarnate, doctrine that is enacted in the life of a person who went about doing things that demonstrate who he is. In Mark, people can encounter in a vivid and memorable way the essential personality of Jesus.⁴
The passion story
Mark in particular stresses the absolute centrality of the cross; and, as we saw above, that is the focus of most of Mark’s sayings about Jesus as the Son Man,
the one who will suffer at the hands of men and die on the cross. The first half of Mark is, as we have said, a brisk jog-trot through the three years of Jesus’ public ministry; Mark’s favorite word immediately
occurs regularly, as we move at top speed from one dramatic story to another. But as soon as we come to the start of the last week of Jesus’ ministry, the triumphal entry into Jerusalem on Palm Sunday (11:1–11), the pace suddenly slows down. We get far more detail, as we move towards the cross. Of the whole of the text of Mark, a higher proportion is given to the passion story than in any of the other Gospels: 37.3 percent of all the verses in Mark are the account of the last week, leading up to the cross and resurrection. Of course the cross and resurrection are vital in all the Gospels, and indeed in the whole New Testament; but Mark more than any other arranges his Gospel so that we cannot fail to see that the really essential thing about Jesus is that he came into this world to die on the cross. That is the significance of the confession of the centurion, who, when [he] . . . stood there in front of Jesus . . . and saw how he died, he said, ‘Surely this man was the Son of God!’
We cannot really know who Jesus is until we spiritually stand before the cross, and see him, not just as the doer of mighty works, but as the crucified one. Leon Morris quotes the perhaps somewhat fanciful analogy that Dennis Nineham used to use with his students:
[Mark] is rather like a tadpole—a large head with a comparatively short tail. The head of the Gospel is what theologians call the Passion Narrative—the account of the last few days in Jerusalem when Jesus suffered and died . . . Not only has Mark given to the passion the position of pre-eminence and climax in the Gospel—he has so selected and arranged the rest of his material that, for all its importance, it is seen to be subordinate to what happened in Jerusalem. If you read the earlier part of the Gospel attentively, you will see that practically everything in it is in some way introductory to the passion of Jesus; the aim throughout is quite single-minded—to help the reader to see Jesus on the cross.
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That is why the contemporary church needs Mark. It is dangerously easy to allow all sorts of things to replace the cross at the heart of our faith in Christ, things that are perfectly true and valid, but which are the concomitants of salvation rather than the crux of salvation: Jesus as the healer of sickness, the giver of peace of mind, the befriender of the lonely, the overcomer of demonic powers. Jesus is all those things, and much more. But he is above all else the Son of God crucified for our sins; and unless we know him first and foremost as the crucified and risen Savior, we have not truly grasped the essence of the Gospel. Mark confronts us with what P. T. Forsyth neatly termed the cruciality of the cross
;⁶ he reminds us, just as much as