Gospel of Mark in Smiths Bible Dictionary
1. By whom written. --The author of this Gospel has been
universally believed to be Mark or Marcus, designated in Ac
12:12,25; 15:37 as John Mark, and in ch. 5,13 as John.
2. When is was written. --Upon this point nothing
absolutely certain can be affirmed, and the Gospel itself
affords us no information. The most direct testimony is that
of Irenaeus, who says it was after the death of the apostles
Peter and Paul. We may conclude, therefore, that this Gospel
was not written before A.D. 63. Again we may as certainly
conclude that it was not written after the destruction of
Jerusalem, for it is not likely that he would have omitted
to record so remarkable a fulfillment of our Lord's
predictions. Hence A.D. 63-70 becomes our limit, but nearer
than this we cannot go. --Farrar.
3. Where it was written. --As to the place, the
weight of testimony is uniformly in favor of the belief that
the Gospel was written and published at Rome. In this
Clement, Eusebius, Jerome, Epiphanius, all agree.
Chrysostom, indeed, asserts that it was published at
Alexandria; but his statement receives no confirmation, as
otherwise it could not fail to have done, from any
Alexandrine writer. --Farrar.
4. In what language. --As to the language in which
it was written, there never has been any reasonable doubt
that it was written in Greek.
5. Sources of information. --Mark was not one of the
twelve; and there is no reason to believe that he was an eye
and ear witness of the events which he has recorded but an
almost unanimous testimony of the early fathers indicates
Peter as the source of his information. The most important
of these testimonies is that of Papias, who says, "He, the
Presbyter (John), said, Mark, being the Interpreter of
Peter, wrote exactly whatever he remembered but he did not
write in order the things which were spoken or done by
Christ. For he was neither a hearer nor a follower of the
Lord, but, as I said, afterward followed Peter, who made his
discourses to suit what was required, without the view of
giving a connected digest of the discourses of our Lord.
Mark, therefore, made no mistakes when he wrote down
circumstances as he recollected them; for he was very
careful of one thing, to omit nothing of what he heard, and
to say nothing false in what he related." Thus Papias writes
of Mark. This testimony is confirmed by other witnesses. --
Abbott.
6. For whom it was written. --The traditional
statement is that it was intended primarily for Gentiles,
and especially for those at Rome. A review of the Gospel
itself confirms this view.
7. Characteristics. -- (1) Mark's Gospel is occupied
almost entirely with the ministry in Galilee and the events
of the passion week. It is the shortest of the four Gospels,
and contains almost no incident or teaching which is not
contained in one of the other two synoptists; but (2) it is
by far the most vivid and dramatic in its narratives, and
their pictorial character indicates not only that they were
derived from an eye and ear witness, but also from one who
possessed the observation and the graphic artistic power of
a natural orator such as Peter emphatically was. (3) One
peculiarity strikes us the moment we open it, --the absence
of any genealogy of our Lord. This is the key to much that
follows. It is not the design of the evangelist to present
our Lord to us, like St. Matthew as the Messiah, "the son of
David and Abraham," ch. 1:1, or, like St. Luke, as the
universal Redeemer, "the son of Adam, which was the son of
God." ch. 3:38. (4) His design is to present him to us as
the incarnate and wonder-working Son of God, living and
acting among men; to portray him in the fullness of his
living energy. --Cambridge Bible for Schools.
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