Mark 15:33–41
The crucified Son bears judgment, tears the veil, and is publicly recognized.
Scripture Text
15:33 When the sixth hour had come, there was darkness over the whole land until the ninth hour.
15:34 At the ninth hour Jesus cried with a loud voice, saying, “Eloi, Eloi, lama sabachthani?” which is, being interpreted, “My God, my God, why have You forsaken me?”
15:35 Some of those who stood by, when they heard it, said, “Behold, He is calling Elijah.”
15:36 One ran, and filling a sponge full of vinegar, put it on a reed, and gave it to Him to drink, saying, “Let Him be. Let’s see whether Elijah comes to take Him down.”
15:37 Jesus cried out with a loud voice, and gave up the spirit.
15:38 The veil of the temple was torn in two from the top to the bottom.
15:39 When the centurion, who stood by opposite Him, saw that He cried out like this and breathed His last, He said, “Truly this man was the Son of God!”
15:40 There were also women watching from afar, among whom were both Mary Magdalene, and Mary the mother of James the less and of Joses, and Salome;
15:41 Who, when He was in Galilee, followed Him and served Him; and many other women who came up with Him to Jerusalem.
The crucified Son bears judgment, tears the veil, and is publicly recognized.
Jesus bears covenantal forsakenness, opens access to God, and is confessed as Son of God.
God's people must be delivered from crowd-pleasing, shame over the cross, superficial definitions of power, and failure to recognize God's saving wisdom in apparent weakness.
- Jesus before Pilate Jesus is handed over to Roman authority, accused by the priests, and remains largely silent.
- The crowd chooses Barabbas Pilate releases Barabbas and condemns Jesus to crucifixion to satisfy the crowd.
- Mock enthronement Roman soldiers parody Jesus' kingship with purple, thorns, salutes, spitting, striking, and false homage.
- Crucifixion at Golgotha Jesus is crucified as king of the Jews, with His garments divided and rebels on either side.
- Mockery at the cross Passersby, religious leaders, and crucified criminals mock Jesus for not saving Himself.
- Death and divine sign Darkness covers the land, Jesus cries out forsaken, dies, the temple curtain tears, and a centurion confesses Him Son of God.
- Faithful women witnesses Women who followed and served Jesus remain watching at the crucifixion.
- Burial by Joseph Joseph boldly secures Jesus' body and buries Him, while women witness the tomb location.
Mark 15 moves from Jewish leadership condemnation to Roman sentencing, from Barabbas's release to Jesus' crucifixion, from mock kingship to true kingship revealed in suffering, from public derision to cosmic darkness and divine abandonment, from Jesus' death to the torn temple curtain and Gentile confession, and from apparent defeat to honorable burial awaiting resurrection.
Mark 15 argues that the crucifixion is the paradoxical revelation of Jesus' kingship and sonship. Human courts condemn Him, crowds reject Him, soldiers mock Him, and leaders deride Him, but every insult is turned by divine irony into truth. Jesus is the king of the Jews. He saved others precisely by not saving Himself. He is the temple-replacing Son whose death tears the curtain. He is the righteous sufferer whose cry of abandonment enters the depth of judgment. His death becomes the moment of Gentile confession: this crucified man is the Son of God.
Theological logic
- Jesus' condemnation is driven by religious envy and political cowardice.
- Jesus is condemned in the place of a guilty man.
- Jesus' silence displays righteous suffering, not helplessness.
- The mockery of Jesus' kingship ironically proclaims truth.
- Jesus' crucifixion fulfills Scripture's pattern of the righteous sufferer.
- Jesus is identified as king even in the charge of execution.
- Jesus is numbered with sinners and rebels.
- Jesus saves others by refusing to save himself.
- The darkness signals divine judgment and cosmic seriousness.
- Jesus enters the agony of forsakenness in the place of sinners.
- Jesus' death transforms temple access.
- Jesus' identity is revealed at the cross.
- Faithful witness continues even when most disciples have fled.
- Jesus truly dies and is truly buried.
- The burial prepares the narrative for resurrection witness.
- Do not interpret abandonment as Trinitarian rupture.
- Do not detach Psalm 22 from fulfillment context.
- Do not deny penal substitution implications.
- Do not reduce veil tearing to symbolism alone.
- Understand the seriousness of sin borne by Christ.
- Rest in finished atonement.
- Approach God confidently through torn veil access.
- Proclaim Christ’s Sonship boldly.
- Recognize faithfulness in suffering.
- Confess where You have chosen crowd approval over truth.
- See Yourself in Barabbas: guilty, yet released because Jesus was condemned.
- Worship Jesus as king precisely at the cross.
- Stop demanding that Jesus prove Himself by avoiding suffering.
- Approach God through the torn curtain with reverent confidence.
- Stand with the crucified Christ when public opinion mocks Him.
- Practice faithful presence like the women at the cross.
- Honor Jesus boldly like Joseph, even when the cost is visible.
- Wait for the kingdom when all seems buried.
Cross-centered faith, courage before public pressure, gratitude for substitution, reverent access to God, worship of the crucified King, faithful witness in dark moments, and hope while waiting for resurrection.
- The innocent condemned : Jesus stands in the line of the righteous sufferer who is falsely accused and unjustly condemned.
- The substitute : Barabbas's release and Jesus' condemnation embody the guilty freed through the innocent condemned.
- The mocked king : Jesus' mocked kingship reveals the paradox of the suffering Messiah.
- The righteous sufferer of Psalm 22 : Mark's crucifixion account echoes Psalm 22 through mockery, garments, and Jesus' cry.
- Numbered with transgressors : Jesus is crucified with rebels, fulfilling the servant's identification with sinners.
- The cup and judgment : The darkness and forsakenness show Jesus bearing judgment in fulfillment of the cup He accepted.
- Temple access opened : The torn curtain signals the end of restricted access and the opening of approach through Christ.
- Son of God revealed : Mark begins with Jesus as Son of God and reaches a confessional climax at the cross.
- Gentile inclusion : The centurion's confession anticipates Gentile reception of the crucified Son.
- Burial and resurrection preparation : Jesus' burial confirms His real death and prepares for resurrection proclamation.
The crucified Son bore the judgment of sin, opening access to God through His death; through His resurrection, forgiveness and eternal life are granted to all who believe.