Mark 12:18–27
God’s covenant faithfulness guarantees resurrection life.
Scripture Text
12:18 Some Sadducees, who say that there is no resurrection, came to Him. They asked Him, saying,
12:19 “Teacher, Moses wrote to us, ‘If a man’s brother dies, and leaves a wife behind Him, and leaves no children, that His brother should take His wife, and raise up offspring for His brother.’
12:20 There were seven brothers. The first took a wife, and dying left no offspring.
12:21 The second took her, and died, leaving no children behind Him. The third likewise;
12:22 And the seven took her and left no children. Last of all the woman also died.
12:23 In the resurrection, when they rise, whose wife will she be of them? For the seven had her as a wife.”
12:24 Jesus answered them, “Isn’t this because You are mistaken, not knowing the Scriptures, nor the power of God?
12:25 For when they will rise from the dead, they neither marry, nor are given in marriage, but are like angels in heaven.
12:26 But about the dead, that they are raised; haven’t You read in the book of Moses, about the Bush, how God spoke to Him, saying, ‘I am the God of Abraham, the God of Isaac, and the God of Jacob’?
12:27 He is not the God of the dead, but of the living. You are therefore badly mistaken.”
God’s covenant faithfulness guarantees resurrection life.
Resurrection life transcends earthly categories because God is the living covenant Lord.
God's people must repent of acting as owners rather than stewards, honoring God with flattery while evading His claim, knowing religious systems without Scripture and power, performing religion for honor, and giving without whole-life surrender.
- Leadership rejection exposed Jesus indicts Israel's leaders as murderous tenants who reject the beloved son and face judgment.
- Political trap exposed Jesus answers the Caesar-tax question by exposing hypocrisy and asserting proper obligation to Caesar under greater obligation to God.
- Theological error exposed Jesus rebukes the Sadducees for ignorance of Scripture and God's power, defending resurrection from the Torah.
- Covenant center clarified Jesus identifies love for the one God and love for neighbor as the greatest commandments.
- Messiahship deepened Jesus shows that the Messiah is more than David's descendant; David calls Him Lord.
- Religious pride condemned Jesus warns against scribes who seek honor, exploit widows, and pray for display.
- Hidden devotion honored Jesus contrasts visible large gifts with the widow's costly whole-life offering.
Mark 12 moves from the parable of the murderous tenants to hostile questions about taxes, resurrection, and the greatest commandment, then to Jesus' question about the Messiah as David's Lord, His warning against scribal hypocrisy, and His commendation of the poor widow's whole-life offering.
Mark 12 argues that Jesus is the rejected yet vindicated Son and cornerstone. The leaders' opposition fulfills the pattern of rejecting God's messengers and culminates in their rejection of the Son. Jesus' wisdom surpasses political traps, theological denial, and scribal debate. He upholds God's ultimate claim over every human authority, defends resurrection from Scripture, centers covenant obedience in love for God and neighbor, reveals the Messiah as David's Lord, and condemns religious pride that exploits the vulnerable.
Theological logic
- God has sought fruit from his vineyard through his servants.
- Israel's leaders stand in continuity with those who reject and mistreat God's messengers.
- The rejection of Jesus is the climactic rejection of God's beloved Son.
- The rejected Son will be vindicated as cornerstone.
- Human political authority has real but limited claims under God's ultimate claim.
- Those who try to trap Jesus reveal hypocrisy, not wisdom.
- Denial of resurrection arises from ignorance of Scripture and God's power.
- God's covenant relationship with his people implies life beyond death.
- The heart of covenant obedience is wholehearted love for the one God.
- Love for neighbor is inseparable from love for God.
- True covenant understanding values love above ritual performance.
- The Messiah is greater than a merely earthly son of David.
- Religious status-seeking and exploitation invite severe judgment.
- God measures devotion by cost and heart, not visible amount.
- Do not spiritualize resurrection into mere metaphor.
- Do not ignore covenant context of Exodus citation.
- Do not confuse transformed life with angelic identity.
- Do not dismiss doctrinal precision as secondary.
- Doctrinal error stems from neglect of Scripture.
- Resurrection hope anchors perseverance.
- God’s covenant promises extend beyond death.
- Eternal life transcends earthly structures.
- Faith rests on divine power.
- Ask where God is seeking fruit from what He entrusted to You.
- Receive Jesus as the Son, not merely as another messenger.
- Build life and ministry on the rejected cornerstone.
- Give earthly authorities their limited due while giving God Your whole self.
- Correct theological assumptions by Scripture and God's power.
- Let resurrection hope reshape present priorities.
- Practice love for God with heart, soul, mind, and strength.
- Make neighbor-love concrete, especially toward the vulnerable.
- Reject religious performance and honor-seeking.
- Examine whether Your prayers are sincere or performative.
- Protect widows and those vulnerable to spiritual exploitation.
- Give in a way that expresses trust, not merely surplus.
Fruitful stewardship, allegiance to God's Son, wise civic obedience under God's ultimate claim, resurrection confidence, whole-person love for God, neighbor-love, humble Christology, protection of the vulnerable, sincere prayer, and costly devotion.
- Vineyard of Israel : Jesus' parable draws on Israel as God's vineyard and the demand for covenant fruit.
- Rejected prophets and messengers : The mistreated servants reflect Israel's history of rejecting God's messengers.
- Beloved Son : The son in the parable resonates with divine Sonship revealed earlier in Mark.
- Rejected stone and cornerstone : Jesus' rejection and vindication fulfill Psalm 118's stone imagery.
- Image and allegiance : Caesar's image on the coin points toward the greater truth that humans bear God's image.
- Resurrection from Torah : Jesus defends resurrection from God's covenant self-identification at the burning bush.
- The Shema : Jesus grounds the greatest commandment in Israel's confession of the one Lord.
- Neighbor-love : Jesus joins love of neighbor to love of God as the second commandment.
- Love over sacrifice : The teacher's answer resonates with prophetic teaching that covenant love and obedience exceed ritual performance.
- David's Lord : Psalm 110 reveals the Messiah's exalted lordship at God's right hand.
- Widows and justice : Jesus' warning about devouring widows' houses stands against God's concern for widows.
- Costly devotion : The widow's offering resonates with biblical patterns of costly trust and whole-life dependence.
The living God raises His people through the death and resurrection of Christ, securing eternal life for all who believe.