Jamieson Fausset Brown Commentary - Mark 6:30 - 6:30

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Jamieson Fausset Brown Commentary - Mark 6:30 - 6:30


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This Chapter Verse Commentaries:

Mar 6:30-56. The twelve on their return, having reported the success of their mission, Jesus crosses the Sea of Galilee with them, teaches the people, and miraculously feeds them to the number of five thousand - He sends His disciples by ship again to the western side, while He Himself returns afterwards walking on the sea - Incidents on landing. ( = Mat 14:13-36; Luk 9:10-17; Joh 6:1-24).

Here, for the first time, all the four streams of sacred text run parallel. The occasion and all the circumstances of this grand section are thus brought before us with a vividness quite remarkable.

Mar 6:30-44. Five thousand miraculously fed.

And the apostles gathered themselves together - probably at Capernaum, on returning from their mission (Mar 6:7-13).

and told him all things, both what they had done, and what they had taught - Observe the various reasons He had for crossing to the other side. First, Matthew (Mat 14:13) says, that “when Jesus heard” of the murder of His faithful forerunner - from those attached disciples of his who had taken up his body and laid it in a sepulchre (see on Mar 6:29) - “He departed by ship into a desert place apart”; either to avoid some apprehended consequences to Himself, arising from the Baptist’s death (Mat 10:23), or more probably to be able to indulge in those feelings which that affecting event had doubtless awakened, and to which the bustle of the multitude around Him was very unfavorable. Next, since He must have heard the report of the Twelve with the deepest interest, and probably with something of the emotion which He experienced on the return of the Seventy (see on Luk 10:17-22), He sought privacy for undisturbed reflection on this begun preaching and progress of His kingdom. Once more, He was wearied with the multitude of “comers and goers” - depriving Him even of leisure enough to take His food - and wanted rest: “Come ye yourselves apart into a desert place, and rest a while,” etc. Under the combined influence of all these considerations, our Lord sought this change.