According to Mark, did Jesus claim He was God? Three paradigm-shifting passages…
Out of the 4
Gospel accounts, Mark is generally believed to have been written the earliest (c.
AD 66-70, or potentially earlier). In the Gospel of John, the divinity of Jesus
is emphasised in particular, but is the same evidence for Jesus’ self-understanding
also present in the synoptic Gospel of Mark?
Here are three paradigm-shifting passages on Jesus’ self-understanding as God Incarnate from Mark:
1) The Baptism of Jesus – Mark 1:9-11
In those days Jesus came from
Nazareth of Galilee and was baptized by John in the Jordan. And just as he was
coming up out of the water, he saw the heavens torn apart and the Spirit descending
like a dove on him. And a voice came from heaven, “You are my Son, the Beloved;
with you I am well pleased.”
Given how
subtle the general narrative of Mark is, the strong nature of this experience
is very significant – literally a direct affirmation that Jesus is the very Son
of God, in a literal sense. This would later cause an extremely hostile
reaction at Jesus’ trial:
2) The Trial of Jesus - Mark 14:61b-64
Again the high priest asked him, “Are
you the Messiah, the Son of the Blessed One?” Jesus said, “I am; and
‘you will see the Son of Man
seated at the right hand of the Power,’
and ‘coming with the clouds of
heaven.’”
Then the high priest tore his clothes
and said, “Why do we still need witnesses? You have heard his blasphemy! What
is your decision?” All of them condemned him as deserving death.
Here Jesus
directly affirms what was proclaimed at His baptism – it is a testament to His
humility that Jesus decided to wait to this crucial moment.
Three points are very interesting here:
A) Significantly, Jesus claims to be
seated at the right hand of God, a position affirming unique closeness to God,
indeed reigning with the rule of God.
B) According
to Leviticus 21:10, “The priest … shall not dishevel his hair, nor tear his
vestments.” The High Priest was forbidden by Mosaic Law to do the very thing he
does here – tear his clothes in disgust. Leviticus 10:6 reiterates this.
Fascinating is the fact that the very moment that Jesus affirms His status is
the very moment when the high priest invalidates his. Clearly this is not
without significance – an affirmation that, in some sense, the Son of God
replaces the ministry of the High Priest, implying a unique status that Mark
clearly was portraying as very different to the prophets that had come before,
none of whose presence had invalidated the very Levitical priesthood that was
held so dear.
C) Even more
significantly, the very high priest calls Jesus’ claim to be the Son of God “blasphemy”.
In this, Judaism, unlike the Greeks, had no concept of a ‘semi-God’ or the like
– only God was divine, and everything else created and very much not divine. It
is thus as though this claim to be the Son of God in some sense implied
equality with God, being of the very Being of God Himself.
3) Jesus Heals a Paralytic – Mark 2:1-13
When Jesus saw their faith, he said
to the paralytic, “Son, your sins are forgiven.” Now some of the scribes were
sitting there, questioning in their hearts, “Why does this fellow speak in this
way? It is blasphemy! Who can forgive sins but God alone?”
Why does
Jesus bother to create controversy here by declaring “your sins are forgiven”?
If He could have healed the man, why did He need to offend the scribes? Jesus
gives the answer:
Which is easier, to say to the
paralytic, ‘Your sins are forgiven,’ or to say, ‘Stand up and take your mat and
walk’? But so that you may know that the Son of Man has authority on earth to
forgive sins”
This is just
before Jesus successfully heals the man. He, then, is saying by the success of
His miracle here, that this demonstrates God’s vindication of the truth of His
proclamation of forgiveness. Otherwise, it would have simply been an empty
statement – by the associated miracle, Jesus turned it into a demonstration of
the evidence of His “authority on earth to forgive sins”.
Why is this
relevant? The scribes claim such a statement as “your sins are forgiven” is not
simply offensive, but actual “blasphemy”. Why? They state clearly – “Who can
forgive sins but God alone?” They view Jesus’ proclamation of forgiveness as a
statement that He is God.
Two reasons
why this is particularly significant:
A) The fact
this interaction was recorded by Mark is very meaningful. It did not have to be
included. The early Christians, readers of Mark, were not stupid – they could
see that this passage is primarily intended to demonstrate Jesus’ “authority on
earth to forgive sins”, which then, as the scribes are recorded to have pointed
out (which didn’t have to be recorded!) implies that Jesus is claiming to be God.
This indicates that the idea of Jesus’ divinity as an inherent idea of His
ministry was very much present at the time of the writing of Mark’s Gospel.
B) Unlike
John the Baptist, who readily denied being the Christ when asked in order to prevent
misunderstanding, Jesus never denied what the scribes were claiming. Instead,
knowing their accusations, deliberately heals the man as evidence of their
truth. By this, Jesus clearly (yet characteristically subtly) affirms that
their claims about Him were correct.
What does all this mean?
In contrast
to some contemporary critics, who claim that the idea of Jesus’ divinity was a
later development, and that Mark had a much lower view of Jesus, we see the
idea of Jesus claiming identity as God as interwoven with the very message of
Mark. This implies an understanding of Jesus as God existed, at very least,
well within 30 years of Jesus’ death, within the lifetime of many who had been
with Him (and, crucially, would have been the first to correct any later
misunderstandings).
Not the earliest!
This is not
to include the even earlier Pauline references to Jesus’ status, one of the
earliest of which is in Philippians 2:5-11, a hymn from which Paul quotes (the
very fact Christians sung hymns to Jesus this early on is a bit of a giveaway!),
and which both directly states that Jesus has “equality with God” and that He has
a name “that is above every name.” Indeed, given how strongly the Old Testament
insists that “you shall have no other gods” and the consequences when this is
not the case, these statements are utterly remarkable. The highest Name was,
unequivocally, that of God. Equality with God, then, was impossible unless, in
fact, Jesus was God Himself. It even states that “Jesus Christ is Lord”, with “Lord”
being a word used by Jews very reservedly indeed, to only refer to God.
Philippians
was written around A.D. 60, and the hymn would have thus come from the 50s or
perhaps even earlier. Then, the well-developed beliefs contained therein were
earlier still. The strength of these statements both in Paul and Mark, some of the earliest documents of the Church, is striking, and makes any
claim that Jesus’ divinity was a later invention by the Christian church categorically
false, according not to out-of-context prooftexts, but the natural conclusions
of the evidence.
In short, the evidence points very strongly to the idea that early Christians indeed believed Jesus was God!
Comments
I had frankly never noticed the significance of the conflict between Jesus and the High Priest, as Jesus affirms His divinity at the same time that the High Priest defiles his holy office by rending his garments. Thus the High Priest not only violates the OT law directly, but "tears" it out of context in order to justify the execution of Jesus.