Visit the homepage for more information. In Mark, we have a clear silhouette of a devout Jewish mother who is concerned about the activity of her son, Jesus. Most of the background for our assertions ...
As the church’s Sunday lectionary cycle takes us deeper into the Gospel of Mark, this week on “Preach” we confront some of this Gospel’s most perplexing questions. Joining us to explore ...
The Gospel of John is a bit different to the other three gospels of Matthew, Mark, and Luke — in that it is full of ...
Gospel of Mark. Zondervan Exegetical Commentary on the New Testament ... "The Jesus Seminar on the Miracles of Jesus. Summary and Assessment." Synoptics Section, ETS annual meeting, Atlanta, Nov. 2003 ...
So, did Jesus stay dead? Of course the story doesn't end on the cross. The story ends, at least in Mark, the earliest gospel, with the mysteriously empty tomb. We get followers of Jesus who rested ...
Sinai in the book of Exodus. Many scholars accept the Two-Source Theory, that Matthew and Luke used the gospel of Mark and a hypothetical collection of Jesus' sayings called Q as sources.
The Sunday lectionary gospel reading for Trinity 18 in this Year B is Mark 9.38–50. It is a rather unusual reading; it ...
The Sunday gospel lectionary reading for Trinity 18 in Year B is Mark 10.2–16. I think it is impossible to preach on this ...
The gospel of John is dramatically different than the synoptic gospels (Matthew, Mark and Luke). Instead of organizing historical events into a chronology, John presents Jesus in all of his ...
The latest talks and announcements from Saturday's sessions of General Conference of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day ...
The Gospel of Luke and Acts give us the essential framework for ... Luke 8:19-21, Jesus' True Relatives; [cf. Matthew 12:46-50; Mark 3:31-35] 19 Then his mother and his brothers came to him, but they ...
He made some lasting contributions to the history of music criticism, while his own compositions (dozens of operas, chamber pieces and other works) failed to make much of a mark. Peter Wortsman ...