Mark 1:29-34 · Jesus Heals Many
Beware of Crowds
Mark 1:29-39
Sermon
by Mark Trotter
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You read the Gospel of Mark, you get the impression that Jesus didn't like crowds. Which is strange considering that he's a Messiah who has come to save the whole world. But I'll tell you something even stranger, he hides the fact that he is Messiah. When the demons recognize him, he says, "Don't tell anyone. Keep it quiet." Which makes it even more curious, because in this phase of his ministry, it's at the beginning, he's in Galilee with his friends, he is preaching to those who are enthusiastic about him. Mark describes it in these words. "At once his fame spread throughout all the surrounding territory of Galilee."

This is our text for this morning. It's in the first chapter of Mark, the chapter that introduces Jesus' ministry. The description includes three anecdotes, which allow us to see why he was so popular. First he goes to the house of Simon and Andrew. Simon and Andrew are brothers called to be disciples. Also at the house were James and John, two other brother disciples. Simon, you will remember, will later be named Peter.

So it is Peter's house. His mother-in-law is in the house. She is ill. Jesus enters the house, takes her by the hand, lifts her up, and heals her. Just like that. It is a dazzling feat, and astounds everybody there. It's a miracle.

That's what is happening in Galilee, miracles of healing. The word has spread and the crowds have gotten bigger and bigger. Who could ask for anything more? Especially a Messiah who has come to save the world. You work a miracle, the whole world will come to your doorstep.

And that's what happens in the second anecdote. In the next scene, the text says it is sundown of that same day. The word about the healing has spread throughout the day. Mark records that the whole town is gathered at the front door of the house. "They brought to him all who were sick or possessed with demons. And he healed the sick, and cast out demons."

And then this verse. "He would not allow the demons to speak, because they knew him." They knew him because supposedly demons have supernatural origin. Jesus is the Son of God, so they recognized who it was. They recognized that their rule on earth is now over, Jesus has come to cast them out.

So why the secrecy? I mean, he had it made. It was all over, really, like the landing at Normandy. Once that was done, it was just a matter of time now in mopping up the enemy. The demons recognized him, yielded to him, were ready to tell everybody who he was. He's the Messiah. He's the only one who can defeat the demons in this world. And he won't let them speak. What kind of a Messiah is it who travels incognito?

Then the third anecdote in this passage. It's in the wee hours of the morning the next day. "A great while before day," Mark says, "Jesus went off to pray by himself." Peter found him. "Chased him down," is the way you can translate the Greek word. That means he abruptly and rudely came upon Jesus as he was by himself, praying. Peter said, "I'm glad I found you, Jesus. Where have you been? The whole countryside is looking for you. They are already up, this hour of the morning, looking for you. You are the biggest thing to hit Galilee. You're bigger even than John the Baptist. So come on. They're all down in the valley waiting for you." Jesus said, "Then it is time for us to go to another town." And he turned his back on the crowd, and he walked away.

When everybody is looking for him, he leaves. When he is recognized, he says, "Keep it quiet." What kind of a Messiah is this, anyway? What's he up to? What are we to make of this?

Well the first and most obvious thing to me is, Jesus didn't like crowds. There are enormous crowds coming to him. In the ten verses in the text, three verses describe the crowds. First, "His fame spread everywhere." Then, "The whole city came out to see him." And finally, "Everybody in Galilee is searching for you." Mark drives this home, Jesus attracted crowds. Then he walked away from it all, turned his back on it. So it is obvious, he doesn't like crowds. Which ought to say something to us who follow Jesus.

Maybe Mark includes this to warn the Church about success. That the standard of success in the world is not necessarily the standard of success for the Church, or for the Christian. You may be assured that in the world, the standard of success is always quantitative: the volume of sales, the size of the buildings or the plant, the number of employees, or the attendance, the crowds. That's the standard of the world. A crowd is always the standard of success.

I can't think of any institution in the world that doesn't love a crowd, including the Church. There isn't a preacher in the world who doesn't love a crowd. Barbara Tuchman, the historian, who died a few years ago, wrote in one of her books, "Any event is magnified by a factor of ten by virtue of being published in the newspaper." And you can say that any attendance at church is magnified by a factor of ten by virtue of being reported by the preacher. Everybody wants a crowd, because in the world, a crowd always means success.

But look at what a crowd means in the Bible. In the Bible, the crowd is what Jesus tries to get away from. In the Bible, the crowd tries to use Jesus. In the Bible, the crowd on one day will sing hosanna, and the next day will shout, crucify him. In the Bible, crowds are not necessarily the sign of success. They are most often the sign of the seduction of the world. Because the crowds don't intend to follow Jesus, they intend to use Jesus. So Jesus warns the Church, and the Christian, "What good does it do you if you gain the whole world, and lose your soul?" So beware of crowds.

Emily Dickinson followed that advice, literally. Too literally, I think, since she holed herself up in her bedroom, on the second floor of her daddy's house, and spent half of her life there, writing poetry. But the poetry she wrote is wonderful. She wrote this poem about the soul.

The soul selects her own Society,
Then shuts the Door;
To the divine Majority
Present no more.

Unmoving, she notes the Chariot, pausing
At her low Gate;
Unmoved, An Emperor be kneeling
Upon her mat.

I've known her from an ample nation
Choose one
Then close the Valves of her attention
Like stone.

Emily Dickinson is talking about what you could call the aristocracy of the soul. "The soul selects her own society, then shuts the door."

I remember that book by David Riesman called, The Lonely Crowd, in which he presented to us the term, "inner directed" person. The inner directed person is the person who is concerned about his or her soul. They have a conscience instructed by values. They have integrity in their life. They are determined to follow what is highest, and not the crowd.

"Jesus, they are all looking for you."

"Then we had better move on."

It is the same thing in the second anecdote, commanding demons to keep quiet. I believe he did that for the same reason. He didn't want to be labeled as a miracle worker, because miracle workers work miracles to attract attention to themselves. That was true in Jesus' day, and I suspect it is even true today.

I read last week in the newspaper that there is a church, of sorts, up in Fresno, that's attracting crowds because it is claiming that lead fillings are being changed to gold. The place is packed now. The pastor is advertising this because, he says, he wants to attract crowds. I don't know what you are going to do with a gold tooth. It's difficult to liquidate that asset. Nevertheless they are claiming that's what is happening. Although the newspaper article said that none of this has been authenticated. So I wouldn't go up there, if I were you. But the crowds are growing.

That is what Jesus is concerned about. Crowds are attracted to miracles, even if they can't be authenticated. Jesus is not interested in that. He didn't come to us to be a miracle worker. He didn't come to win us over with dazzling supernatural powers, so that we would have no alternative but to bow before him and worship him.

In fact, that was the temptation that was offered to him in the desert. You remember, the devil said, "Do something spectacular, and the whole world will be yours. Turn stones into bread. Jump off the tower, land on your feet." We believe he became Messiah, and God used him as Messiah, because he resisted that temptation.

Phil Donahue tells of the time that he was a young television reporter, and was sent out to cover a mine disaster. It was late at night, and there was frost on the ground, the temperature below freezing. The rescue team was down in the mine. The relatives were gathered at the opening of the mine, hoping for some word of hope.

Someone began to sing, "What a friend we have in Jesus." Then other people joined in, "All our sins and grief to bear." Finally everyone, all the relatives and friends joined in, "What a privilege to carry everything to God in prayer."

Then it was quiet. A minister stepped out of the crowd, and said, "Let us pray." He prayed very briefly, but very eloquently, for the people gathered there, and for the safety of the miners. Donahue said that it was such a moving moment, that he got goose bumps. The only problem, he said, was that the camera had frozen because of the below freezing temperature. He rubbed it against his coat with his gloved hands, until it began to work again. He went to the minister, and asked, "Would you please repeat that prayer?" The minister said, "No."

Donahue said, "I'm a TV reporter. I represent 200 stations. Millions of people will see you. Millions of people will hear that prayer." The minister said, "No."

Donahue persisted. "You don't seem to understand. I'm from CBS. The whole nation will see this. The country preacher said, "No," and turned around and walked away.

Donahue was dumbfounded. He had never encountered anything like this before. He couldn't understand it. He wrote in his autobiography that, a year later, it finally hit him. He realized that he was witnessing something called integrity. He said, "The man wouldn't showbiz for Jesus. He wouldn't sell his soul for TV. Not even for national TV. Not even for CBS."

"They are looking for you Jesus. They're all here. You are a hit, a success."

He said, "Then we had better be moving on."

But there is one more insight here. If you want to know who Jesus is, what this tells us is, you won't find him among the crowds in Galilee where he is working miracles. But if you want to know who he is, then you will find him in Jerusalem, on a cross. And furthermore he told the disciples, "If you want to know who I am, then you must take up your cross, and follow me to Jerusalem."

He said that to disciples, not to the crowds. The crowds are in Galilee. The crowds are filled with people who are sick and have great needs. Jesus had pity on them. He did whatever is necessary to heal them, and made no demands upon them. But to the healthy and the strong, to the young and to the able, he extended a commandment of discipleship. "Take up your cross, and follow me."

So the question is put to us, "Whom do we identify with?" Do we identify with the crowds, who simply received his grace, and then went back to their normal lives, or do we identify with disciples who receive his command, and followed him to make a difference in this world?

He taught his disciples parables, parables of the Kingdom. The purpose of the parables is to give us a picture of the way life should be. Some of the parables are of the time when the Kingdom will finally come in glory. But other parables are about the way we can see the Kingdom in our lives today. Notice that he never tells a parable with a crowd in it. All the parables are about individuals who love, and forgive, and give. About a man going down the road to Jericho, seeing another man in the ditch. About a shepherd seeking the lost sheep. About a father welcoming a prodigal child home. Jesus never points to a crowd, and says, "Behold the Kingdom of God." He points to a solitary individual, helping somebody else, and says, "Go thou and do likewise."

Jesus taught in parables because that's the way the Kingdom comes. It will come when one person reaches out to another in love. And in that moment, the Kingdom comes. We believe that someday the Kingdom will come in glory. But until then, it comes in parables, when Christians, or even non-Christians, reach out and touch somebody in compassion.

This morning we had the privilege of highlighting the Befriender Ministry in this church, which is simply people reaching out to other people in need. Each of those encounters is a parable of the Kingdom.

But let me tell you of another. This was told to me by Jan Thomas, who is a member of this church. She has given me permission to tell you about it. Because of the mental illness of a family member some years ago, Jan became acquainted with the mental health system in this county. Years ago she decided that she, as an individual, would do something to make that system more humane. She has been recognized for her work, both here in the county and by the state.

During the time of her family crisis, she prayed, "Why is this happening? Where is any meaning in this?" I don't think she got any direct answer to those questions, but she got a call to tell her story, so that others would be encouraged to know that somebody understands what they are going through.

She resolved also to get personally involved, to be with those who are suffering. Jan has found many ways to do that over the years. But this last December there was a wonderful opportunity that has turned into something quite astounding. A friend called her and said that she was in depression and considering suicide. Jan and another friend told her she must go to the hospital, but that they would stay with her so that no matter what she had to face, she would not face it alone.

And they did that. They stayed with her on eight hour shifts. When Jan stayed with her, they talked and prayed, and Jan shared her story, what she had been through, and how her faith had sustained her.

Her friend got better and was released. Twenty-four hours later, she called and told Jan what her presence with her had meant, and thanked her for once again making it possible to reach out to God. Then she said, "I now intend to do the same for others." Not only that, she plans to recruit former patients to form an organization that will reach out to those in the hospitals, to be with them as they face this anxious moment in their lives.

Jan hung up the phone. Immediately, a representative from one of San Diego's hospitals called to offer to underwrite the cost of this new program. So it is now established. All this happened because one person reached out to another person in need.

Beware of crowds. And look to the individual Christian, reaching out, befriending somebody in need, "for of such is the Kingdom of God."

ChristianGlobe Networks, Inc., Collected Sermons, by Mark Trotter