Mark 11:27–33
Unbelief resists divine authority even when revelation is clear.
Scripture Text
11:27 They came again to Jerusalem, and as He was walking in the temple, the chief priests, the scribes, and the elders came to Him,
11:28 And they began saying to Him, “By what authority do You do these things? Or who gave You this authority to do these things?”
11:29 Jesus said to them, “I will ask You one question. Answer me, and I will tell You by what authority I do these things.
11:30 The baptism of John—was it from heaven, or from men? Answer me.”
11:31 They reasoned with themselves, saying, “If we should say, ‘From heaven;’ He will say, ‘Why then did You not believe Him?’
11:32 If we should say, ‘From men’ ”—they feared the people, for all held John to really be a prophet.
11:33 They answered Jesus, “We don’t know.” Jesus said to them, “Neither do I tell You by what authority I do these things.”
Unbelief resists divine authority even when revelation is clear.
Jesus’ authority originates from heaven, though hardened leaders refuse to acknowledge it.
God's people must move beyond religious appearance, institutional comfort, public praise, and authority evasion into fruit-bearing faith, prayer, forgiveness, and submission to Jesus.
- Royal approach Jesus sovereignly arranges the colt, signaling intentional royal entry.
- Messianic acclamation The crowd welcomes Jesus with psalmic cries of salvation and Davidic kingdom hope.
- Temple inspection Jesus enters the temple and looks around, preparing for the next day's prophetic action.
- Fig-tree sign begins Jesus curses a leafy but fruitless tree, creating a symbolic frame for temple judgment.
- Temple sign enacted Jesus cleanses and judges temple corruption, citing Scripture concerning prayer for all nations and the den of robbers.
- Fig-tree sign completed The fig tree is found withered from the roots, confirming the judgment sign.
- Faith and prayer teaching Jesus teaches faith in God, bold prayer, undoubting trust, and forgiveness.
- Authority challenged and exposed Jerusalem's leaders question Jesus' authority, but their refusal to answer about John exposes their unbelief and fear of man.
Mark 11 moves from royal entry to temple inspection, from symbolic fig-tree judgment to prophetic temple judgment, from withered-tree teaching on faith and forgiveness to a direct authority challenge by Jerusalem's leaders.
Mark 11 argues that Jesus has divine and messianic authority over Jerusalem, the temple, worship, prayer, and Israel's leadership. His entry fulfills royal hope, but His first major act is inspection and judgment, not political revolt. The fig tree and temple actions interpret one another: outward religious vitality without covenant fruit comes under judgment. Jesus reclaims the temple's purpose as prayer for all nations and exposes corrupt use of sacred space. His authority is challenged, but the leaders' response to John reveals that their issue is not lack of evidence but refusal to submit to God's authority.
Theological logic
- Jesus enters Jerusalem intentionally as king.
- The crowd's praise recognizes messianic hope but does not yet grasp the cross-shaped mission.
- Jesus' temple authority begins with inspection.
- Leaves without fruit symbolize religious appearance without covenant faithfulness.
- The temple has been corrupted from its God-given purpose.
- Jesus judges worship that blocks prayer and exploits sacred space.
- Religious leadership responds to prophetic judgment with murderous intent.
- The withered fig tree confirms judgment from the roots.
- True disciples must trust God in prayer rather than trust fruitless religious systems.
- Prayer cannot be separated from forgiveness.
- Jesus' authority is heavenly, but unbelieving leaders evade it.
- Fear of man exposes refusal to submit to God.
- Do not portray Jesus as evasive; His answer is judicial.
- Do not reduce authority to political power.
- Do not separate John’s ministry from Christ’s validation.
- Do not overlook accountability to revealed truth.
- Authority must be recognized as divine, not institutional.
- Refusal to answer truthfully reveals hardened hearts.
- Fear of people can silence confession.
- Christ’s wisdom exposes hypocrisy.
- Respond promptly to revelation.
- Confess where praise has exceeded obedience.
- Ask Jesus to expose leaves without fruit.
- Audit worship practices for prayer, reverence, justice, and mission.
- Remove whatever crowds out prayer for all nations.
- Trust God with what seems immovable.
- Pray with believing dependence rather than anxious control.
- Forgive those You hold something against when You stand praying.
- Refuse evasive answers when God's authority is clear.
- Fear God more than crowd opinion.
Kingdom submission, fruitfulness, reverence, prayerfulness, missionary concern for all nations, faith in God, forgiveness, courage before public pressure, and honesty under Jesus' authority.
- The humble king : Jesus' entry on a colt resonates with prophetic promise of the humble king coming to Zion.
- Hosanna and the coming one : The crowd's praise comes from the psalmic cry for salvation and blessing on the one who comes in the Lord's name.
- Davidic kingdom hope : The crowd blesses David's coming kingdom, drawing on covenant promises.
- Lord comes to his temple : Jesus' temple arrival and judgment resonate with prophetic expectation of the Lord purifying His temple.
- House of prayer for all nations : Jesus quotes Isaiah's vision of Gentiles joined to the Lord in worship.
- Den of robbers : Jesus quotes Jeremiah's warning against treating the temple as a refuge for unrepentant injustice.
- Fig tree judgment imagery : Fruitless fig imagery draws on prophetic themes of covenant barrenness and judgment.
- Faith and prayer : Jesus' teaching on faith-filled prayer coheres with biblical calls to trust God.
- Forgiveness and prayer : Jesus links prayer and forgiveness as elsewhere in His teaching.
- John's baptism and prophetic authority : The leaders' refusal to answer about John connects their rejection of Jesus to rejection of prophetic witness.
Though rejected by religious authorities, Jesus’ heavenly authority is vindicated through His death and resurrection, and salvation is granted to all who believe in Him.