Mark 14:3–9
True worship values Christ above material cost and honors His redemptive mission.
Scripture Text
14:3 While He was at Bethany, in the house of Simon the leper, as He sat at the table, a woman came having an alabaster jar of ointment of pure nard—very costly. She broke the jar, and poured it over His head.
14:4 But there were some who were indignant among themselves, saying, “Why has this ointment been wasted?
14:5 For this might have been sold for more than three hundred denarii, and given to the poor.” So they grumbled against her.
14:6 But Jesus said, “Leave her alone. Why do You trouble her? She has done a good work for me.
14:7 For You always have the poor with You, and whenever You want to, You can do them good; but You will not always have me.
14:8 She has done what she could. She has anointed my body beforehand for the burying.
14:9 Most certainly I tell You, wherever this Good News may be preached throughout the whole world, that which this woman has done will also be spoken of for a memorial of her.”
True worship values Christ above material cost and honors His redemptive mission.
Extravagant devotion to Christ rightly recognizes His worth and anticipates His sacrificial death.
God's people must abandon self-confidence, cheap devotion, sleepy discipleship, hidden betrayal, performative loyalty, and fear-driven denial.
- Conspiracy against Jesus Religious leaders plot secretly to kill Jesus while fearing the crowd.
- Costly devotion before burial The woman anoints Jesus for burial and becomes a gospel-linked model of beautiful devotion.
- Betrayal from within the Twelve Judas agrees to hand Jesus over for money.
- Passover prepared under Jesus' direction Jesus sovereignly arranges the place where the Passover meal will be eaten.
- Betrayer identified and warned At table, Jesus announces that one of the Twelve eating with Him will betray Him.
- New covenant meaning given to bread and cup Jesus interprets His coming death as body given and blood of the covenant poured out for many.
- Scattering foretold Jesus predicts the disciples' fall, the shepherd's striking, resurrection, Galilee reunion, and Peter's triple denial.
- Agony and submission in Gethsemane Jesus prays in deep anguish and submits to the Father's will while the disciples sleep.
- Betrayal, arrest, and abandonment Judas betrays Jesus with a kiss, Jesus is seized, Scripture is fulfilled, and all flee.
- Trial and confession False testimony fails, Jesus confesses His identity as Messiah and Son of Man, and the council condemns Him.
- Peter's denial Peter denies Jesus three times and weeps when Jesus' word is fulfilled.
Mark 14 moves from conspiracy to devotion, from betrayal to covenant meal, from confident disciples to sleeping and scattered disciples, from anguished prayer to willing surrender, from false testimony to true confession before the council, and from Peter's bold promise to bitter denial.
Mark 14 argues that the passion of Jesus is not a tragic accident but the fulfillment of Scripture and the voluntary obedience of the Son. The leaders plot, Judas betrays, the disciples scatter, Peter denies, and false witnesses accuse, yet Jesus is never out of control. He interprets His own death at the Passover table as covenant blood poured out for many. In Gethsemane He embraces the Father's will. Before the council He confesses His messianic and Danielic identity. The chapter exposes the collapse of human loyalty and the steadfast obedience of Christ.
Theological logic
- The death of Jesus is plotted by hostile leaders but governed by divine timing.
- True devotion recognizes the worth of Jesus even when others call it waste.
- Jesus' death is burial-bound before the cross occurs.
- The gospel will proclaim not only the death of Jesus but also fitting responses to him.
- Betrayal comes from within the circle of privilege.
- Jesus interprets Passover around his own sacrificial death.
- Jesus' blood is covenantal and substitutionary in scope.
- Disciple failure fulfills Scripture rather than surprising Jesus.
- Resurrection hope is announced before abandonment and death.
- Human confidence is not the same as spiritual strength.
- Jesus' obedience is agonized, not mechanical.
- The Son submits perfectly to the Father's will.
- Prayerful watchfulness is necessary because human flesh is weak.
- Jesus' arrest fulfills Scripture.
- False testimony cannot establish truth against Jesus.
- Jesus' own true confession becomes the basis for condemnation.
- The condemned Jesus is the exalted Son of Man.
- Peter's denial proves Jesus' word true and exposes disciple weakness.
- Honor costly devotion to Jesus instead of judging it by surface efficiency.
- Come to the Lord's Supper with covenant wonder and gospel clarity.
- Confess self-confidence before it becomes denial.
- Watch and pray before temptation arrives.
- Bring sorrow honestly to the Father.
- Submit desires to the Father's will.
- Refuse betrayal disguised as religious convenience.
- Do not follow Jesus at a safe distance.
- Let Jesus' word expose sin and lead to repentance.
- Find hope in the risen Shepherd who goes ahead of scattered sheep.
Costly devotion, covenant gratitude, prayerful vigilance, honest anguish before God, surrender to the Father's will, courage under pressure, repentance after failure, and renewed trust in Jesus' faithful word.
- Passover and redemption : Jesus' final meal stands in the context of Israel's exodus redemption and reframes deliverance around His own death.
- Blood of the covenant : Jesus' words over the cup recall covenant ratification and point to new covenant fulfillment.
- For many : Jesus' blood poured out for many resonates with servant suffering and Mark's ransom theology.
- Betrayal by a close companion : The betrayal at table echoes biblical patterns of intimate treachery.
- Struck shepherd and scattered sheep : Jesus cites Zechariah to interpret the disciples' scattering at His arrest.
- The cup : Jesus' Gethsemane cup draws from Old Testament imagery of judgment and divine wrath.
- Silent sufferer : Jesus' silence before false accusation resonates with the suffering servant.
- Son of Man and enthronement : Jesus combines Psalm 110 and Daniel 7 in His trial confession.
- Mocked righteous sufferer : Jesus' humiliation fits the biblical pattern of the mocked righteous sufferer.
- Denial and restoration : Peter's failure prepares for the grace of resurrection restoration.
The woman’s anointing anticipates Christ’s sacrificial death; through His burial and resurrection, redemption is secured and proclaimed to all nations.