Mark chapters 1-4
Mark 1:1-8 - Mark 4:21-25
The promised Lord has arrived, and preparation through repentance is required.
Sets the book's starting burden.
Mark demonstrates that the promised Lord has arrived in Jesus to inaugurate the kingdom of God through authoritative teaching and redemptive action, calling disciples to repent and follow Him into costly obedience, even as the kingdom grows toward its appointed consummation and true worship proves itself by valuing Christ above all material possession and comfort.
Return to the storyline index when you want to compare the wider canonical movement of Scripture by book.
Mark 1:1-8 - Mark 4:21-25
The promised Lord has arrived, and preparation through repentance is required.
Sets the book's starting burden.
Mark 4:26-29 - Mark 8:14-21
God causes kingdom growth and will bring it to fulfillment at the appointed time.
Advances the book's developing tension and movement.
Mark 8:22-26 - Mark 11:1-11
The Messiah restores vision, though clarity may come in stages.
Marks a major turn in the book's movement.
Mark 11:12-14 - Mark 14:1-2
The Messiah seeks fruit, not mere foliage.
Carries the book toward its climactic emphasis.
Mark 14:3-9 - Mark 16:1-8
True worship values Christ above material cost and honors His redemptive mission.
Closes the book's movement and final emphasis.
The kingdom of God is God's sovereign rule exercised over His creation, revealed throughout Scripture, opposed by human rebellion, advanced through His redemptive acts, and brought to its decisive fulfillment in Jesus Christ before reaching its full consummation in the new creation.
Mission is God's purposeful movement to reveal His glory, redeem sinners, gather a people from every nation, and restore creation, carried out through His covenant people and fulfilled through the saving work and authority of Jesus Christ.
Christology is the biblical revelation of the person and work of Jesus Christ, showing that He is the promised Messiah, the Son of God, the true King, the perfect Priest, the final sacrifice, and the one through whom God's redemptive purposes are fulfilled.
Covenant is the binding relationship God establishes by His own authority through which He orders His relationship with humanity, governs His redemptive purposes, and carries His promises forward throughout the biblical storyline.