Big Idea: All followers of Jesus are called to mission. Yet when the kingdom news of the gospel is presented, there is both authority from God and inevitable opposition to it when people reject the good news, sometimes even costing the lives of those sent to speak for God.
Understanding the Text
This begins the fourth section of the Galilean ministry in Mark (after 1:16–3:6; 3:7–35; 4:1–6:30) and constitutes the third sandwiching episode thus far (after 3:20–35; 5:21–43). The sending of the Twelve (6:7–13) is not completed until 6:30, when the disciples return and report the results of their successful mission. The intervening material begins with Herod’s response to Jesus and the mission of the disciples (6:14–16) and continues with a lengthy flashback to the arrest and death of the Baptist (vv. 17–29). Clearly, mission (that of the Baptist, Jesus, or the disciples) involves opposition.
Interpretive Insights
6:7 he began to send them out two by two and gave them authority over impure spirits. After being rejected by his former neighbors, Jesus goes around Galilee “from village to village” teaching (6:6b), repeating his earlier foray in 1:38–39. He decides to include his disciples in his work and so calls them to come. This is the last of the three-part movement from 1:16–20 (calling) to 3:13–19 (commissioning) to here (sending). They are sent “two by two” as official witnesses (cf. Num. 35:30; Deut. 17:6; 19:15), and this became common practice (John 1:37; Acts 8:14; 9:38; 13:2–3), allowing mutual companionship and protection. The authority over demons is repeated from 3:15 and is a primary Markan theme.
6:8–9 Take nothing for the journey except a staff . . . sandals. Jesus allows only the absolute minimum items needed for travel: a walking stick and sandals. Even the prohibited items—bread, bag, money, extra shirt—would usually be considered basic necessities. The bag is a kind of knapsack for carrying items such as food or extra clothes (which would also serve as pillow/blanket at night). They are to go out depending on God for their needs, allowing those to whom he sends them to provide for them. The thrust is twofold: do not use ministry for profit or self-aggrandizement, and go entirely to serve and glorify God.
6:10 Whenever you enter a house, stay there until you leave that town. The goal of mission is not to find the nicest living arrangements but rather to bring people into the kingdom. They are to depend on the hospitality of each village they visit, and they must be content with whatever living conditions they experience. To leave one home for another would insult their hosts and bring disrepute on the gospel.
6:11 if any place will not welcome or listen to you . . . shake the dust off your feet. Those who reject the gospel are to be treated as unclean (cf. Matt. 7:6: “Do not give dogs what is sacred”). Even the dust of their town is unworthy. Jews returning from pagan lands would shake the dirt from their feet, so this is saying to these Jewish towns that they have become pagan Gentiles to God. To do so “as a testimony against them” implies also that divine judgment awaits.
6:14–16 King Herod heard about this. The disciples are preaching like the Baptist, and Jesus has become quite famous, so Herod becomes inquisitive. This is Herod Antipas, son of Herod the Great (all his sons bore his name) and tetrarch of Galilee and Perea (in the Transjordan) from 4 BC (when his father died) to AD 39 (when he was exiled), which means he ruled throughout Jesus’s life. He had wanted to be king like his father, but the emperor Augustus allowed him only to be tetrarch, a minor ruler of “one-fourth” of a Roman territory.
John the Baptist . . . raised from the dead . . . Elijah . . . a prophet. This sums up the popular understanding of Jesus at that time. These are not well-thought-out opinions but popular legends. Certainly any view that Jesus was John redivivus (revived from the dead) could be held only by those who knew nothing about John’s birth and death vis-à-vis Jesus. Still, that is the view that Antipas embraces. We know from 1:14 (cf. Matt. 4:12) that John was arrested just before Jesus began his Galilean ministry, so undoubtedly John had died some time earlier, and this is a flashback. The basis of the comparison is Jesus’s powerful prophetic message and perhaps also his miracles. John did not perform miracles, but if he were raised from the dead, it seems they expect he would have that power.
6:17 Herod . . . had him bound and put in prison. We now begin the flashback. This expands the brief comment at 1:14, telling how and why Herod had arrested John. He was imprisoned in Antipas’s fortress-palace at Machaerus in Perea. The reason for the arrest was John’s denunciation of Herod’s tryst with and subsequent marriage to Herodias, his niece who at the time was married to his half brother Philip. Herodias divorced Philip on the basis of Roman law, and Herod divorced his wife, who was the daughter of Aretas IV, king of Perea. Aretas was so incensed that he went to war against Herod and defeated him.1
6:18 It is not lawful for you to have your brother’s wife. Leviticus 18:16; 20:21 makes it unlawful for a man to marry his brother’s wife. The one exception was levirate marriage (Deut. 25:5 [see on Mark 12:18–27]), but this could not apply because Philip was still alive. So the new marriage clearly was immoral, and the Baptist’s rebuke bespoke a national scandal. Herod considered this seditious because it further stirred up the nation against him.
6:19–20 Herodias . . . wanted to kill him. . . . Herod . . . protected him. Needless to say, Herodias was incensed that John had turned the people against her. To her, the only answer was his death, but her husband stood in her way. His weakness is seen in his realizing that John was “a holy and righteous man,” yet being unwilling to take a stand on this. Still, he “protected” him for a time, undoubtedly from Herodias’s murderous plots. There are parallels between Herodias and Jezebel in 1 Kings 21 and between Herod and a vacillating Pilate in Mark 15.
When Herod heard John, he was greatly puzzled; yet he liked to listen to him. This brings to mind the governor Felix, who was afraid of Paul but conversed with him often for two years. In Felix’s case, he was also hoping for a bribe (Acts 24:24–26). Herod did not understand the “righteous” truths John told him and was deeply “puzzled” or “perplexed” by them (perhaps “greatly disturbed”). Clearly, he was under some conviction, yet like Herod Agrippa in Acts 26:28–29, he was unwilling to act on it.
6:21 Herod gave a banquet for his high officials and military commanders and the leading men of Galilee. Herodias’s opportunity came at a lavish birthday party for her husband. Like all Roman rulers, Herod enjoyed extravagant parties. It is difficult to see why Galilean leaders are featured in a party far away in Perea, but it is possible that both territories were involved, and Mark centered on the Galilean members because Jesus’s ministry was there.
6:22–23 When the daughter of Herodias came in and danced, she pleased Herod. Undoubtedly a lascivious dance, this added to the scandal, for such dances normally were done by courtesans. Probably a younggirl of twelve to fourteen (named “Salome” in Josephus, Ant.18:136–137), she greatly pleased Herod, who was honored that the princess would dance for him. Herod impetuously (and likely due to a drunken state) went beyond the usual practice of rewarding performers who please and promised with an oath, “Whatever you ask I will give you, up to half my kingdom.” There is a likely allusion to Esther 5:2–3, where Xerxes, the Persian king, promises Esther “up to half the kingdom.” The contrast is stark, however, as Esther saves her people from death, whereas Salome, prompted by Herodias (6:24), will ask for the death of John.
6:25 I want you to give me right now the head of John the Baptist on a platter. Although it is possible that this was a spur-of-the-moment request, the plot of the story, with Herodias all along plotting John’s death, makes it more likely this was the plan from the beginning. Otherwise, one would expect Herodias’s daughter to make her own request rather than ask her mother what to do.
6:27 sent an executioner with orders to bring John’s head. “Executioner” (spekoulat?r) is a special term used for a bodyguard/soldier sent on a “black ops” type of mission, in this case to execute a prophet. Beheading was the normal Roman form of execution, and it was also the one form of death that could be immediately carried out. The one righteous man in the palace was sacrificed at the whim of pagans! To have his head brought in on a “platter” like a delectable delicacy at the feast demonstrates the deplorable depravity of Herod’s court. In his death John wins and Herod loses, as the king becomes forever a symbol of wickedness and excess.
6:29 John’s disciples came and took his body and laid it in a tomb. John did not stop having a definable group of disciples after he died, for Acts 18:25; 19:1–7 show a group of his followers in Ephesus over twenty years later, and there were followers in later centuries claiming that he was the Messiah (Ps.-Clem.1.60). The Mandaeans in Iraq and Iran still identify themselves as his followers.
6:30 The apostles gathered around Jesus and reported to him all they had done and taught. The sandwiching of episodes (6:7–13, 30 intercalated with 6:14–29) is complete. The disciples were designated “apostles” in 3:14 (see on that verse and 6:7), and here they return having completed their first mission as “sent ones” or official agents representing Jesus. Jesus had inaugurated their mission as part of his own in 6:6b–7. As they engaged in their ministry, they replicated his own, with “all that they had done” referring to the miracles that they had performed according to 6:13, and “taught” referring to their kingdom preaching in 6:12.
Theological Insights
Simply put, this section of Mark teaches that mission involves opposition and rejection. Surrounding the sending of the Twelve (6:7–13) is the rejection of Jesus in his hometown of Nazareth (6:1–6) and the death of John the Baptist (6:14–29). All who serve God must expect opposition from the world. At the same time, mission also involves authority from God in the proclamation of the kingdom truths. Since we are officially “sent” (the meaning of “apostle” in 3:14) as official representatives of the Triune Godhead, we go out with their authority. Finally, mission involves sacrifice. We must depend entirely on Christ, not ourselves, and we surrender all to him.
Teaching the Text
1. Discipleship involves being immersed in Jesus’s teaching and ministry. This is one of the major themes of the book of Acts, where Luke emphasizes that the history of the early church involved reliving the life and ministry of Jesus. Most of the miracles in Acts are replicas of the miracles of Jesus. The road to Rome taken by Paul replicates the road to Jerusalem taken by Jesus. The trials of Paul are parallel to the trials of Jesus. In other words, the meaning of discipleship (Mark 3:14: “be with him”) is that we become one with Jesus, and our lives will be built upon him as our model. Ephesians 4:13 speaks of “the measure of the stature of the fullness of Christ.” Here this means that the apostles would reproduce Jesus’s miracles and proclaim his teaching throughout Galilee, and in 6:13 they were successful in doing so. Note that the emphasis here is not on how many responded and became Jesus’s followers but rather on the disciples’ faithfulness to their calling.
2. Mission is conducted with the authority of Christ. Many, maybe most, Christians feel inferior, that they have little to offer the Lord and little to give in his service. And in fact, they are correct. None of us have much to offer, but that is all for the better. In our weakness the power of God is made all the more evident (2 Cor. 12:9–10). The truth is that we do not have power in our own strength and merely with our own gifts. God has made us all individually and given each of us a unique combination of gifts that is perfect for what he wants to accomplish through us. We go out with his authority and under the presence of his Spirit. God is present in a powerful way, and we conduct ourselves under and with his authority.
3. Gospel proclamation often is met with opposition and even death. This is a dominant theme, not only in Jesus’s teaching but also throughout the New Testament. We saw some of Jesus’s teaching on this earlier (see “Teaching the Text” on 6:1–6), so here we consider some of the rest of the New Testament. In Acts hostility and suffering are everywhere. In Acts 4–5 the disciples are arrested twice and beaten with rods the second time, but they respond with joy “because they had been counted worthy of suffering disgrace for the name” (5:41). Both Stephen and James were martyred (Acts 7; 12), and Paul was repeatedly driven out of cities by persecution (Acts 14:5–6, 19–20; 16:39–40; 17:10, 13–14; 20:1). Paul further dealt with animosity for several years in Jerusalem, Caesarea, and Rome as he was on trial for his life in Acts 21–28. Clearly, most churches went through serious suffering for the Lord, and Paul treats this as something almost to be expected. In Hebrews it was the basic problem; these second-generation house churches had become lazy (5:11; 6:12) and in the midst of persecution were tempted to renounce Christ and return to Judaism. The letter of 1 Peter has been labeled “the epistle of suffering” and addresses discouraged Christians who were “surprised” by the hard times (4:12) but needed to realize that such trials are used by God to strengthen one’s faith (1:6–7; cf. James 1:2–4).
Illustrating the Text
Discipleship: carrying on the ministry of Jesus
Hymn: “Living for Jesus,” by Thomas O. Chisholm. In this great twentieth-century hymn of commitment we read in the second verse that in light of what Jesus has done,
Such love constrains me to answer His call,
Follow His leading and give Him my all.
And then the refrain,
O Jesus, Lord and Savior, I give myself to Thee,
for Thou, in Thy atonement, didst give Thyself for me.
I own no other Master, my heart shall be Thy throne.
My life I give, henceforth to live, O Christ, for Thee alone.
God longs that we give ourselves fully and completely to continue the work of Jesus in this world in and through the Holy Spirit.
Depending on God and not on ourselves
Biography: George Mueller. Mueller was a highly effective evangelist and philanthropist in nineteenth-century England. He is credited not only with founding a number of orphanages but also with being an amazing example of trusting in God. He never asked anyone, except God, for anything, and yet the orphans always had what they needed. Mueller once said, “Faith does not operate in the realm of the possible. There is no glory for God in that which is humanly possible. Faith begins where man’s power ends.”2
The stories of God’s provision in Mueller’s life and ministry are amazing. Many times Mueller received unsolicited food donations only hours before they were needed to feed the children, further strengthening his faith in God. For example, on one well-documented occasion, they gave thanks for breakfast when all the children were sitting at the table, even though there was nothing to eat in the house. As they finished praying, the local baker knocked on the door with sufficient fresh bread to feed everyone, and the milkman gave them plenty of fresh milk because his cart had broken down in front of the orphanage. Imagine how these experiences impacted their faith. Choose to depend on God and not on yourself.
The blood of the martyrs is the seed of the church.
Church History: Church history has taught many lessons, not the least of which is the truth that persecution causes the church to grow. This is seen clearly in the book of Acts as the early church grew rapidly in the face of persecution. Why do churches grow in times of persecution? There probably are many answers, but one truth is that persecution separates the true follower of Jesus from the one whose faith is not genuine. Faith and courage in the face of death communicate the authenticity of the faith of those who are martyred. Are you prepared to stand firm for Jesus regardless of the price you might be asked to pay? Consider reading from John Foxe’s Book of Martyrs or from Duane Arnold’s Prayers of the Martyrs.