Gospel According to St. Mark, Volume 1

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John Daniel Jones 1919
English
  • The Beginning of the Gospel (Mark 1:1)
  • The Forerunner (Mark 1:2-8)
  • The Baptism (Mark 1:9-11)
  • The Temptation (Mark 1:12-13)
  • John and Jesus (Mark 1:14-15)
  • The Call of the First Disciples (Mark 1:16-20)
  • The Authority of Christ (Mark 1:21-28)
  • Christ in the Home (Mark 1:29-31)
  • The Balanced Life (Mark 1:32-35)
  • The Philanthropy of Jesus (Mark 1:36-39)
  • The Healing of the Leper (Mark 1:40-45)
  • The Healing of the Paralytic - I. (Mark 2:1-5)
  • The Healing of the Paralytic - II. (Mark 2:5-12)
  • The Originality of Jesus Christ (Mark 2:12)
  • The Call of Levi (Mark 2:14-17)
  • The Law of Congruity (Mark 2:18-22)
  • The Sabbath (Mark 2:23-28)
  • The Calling of the Twelve (Mark 3:1-15)
  • The Twelve: The Men and their Work (Mark 3:16-19)
  • The Twelve: their Diversity (Mark 3:16-19)
  • Christ and his Kinsfolk (Mark 3:20, 21, 31-35)
  • Christ and the Scribes (Mark 3:22-27)
  • The Eternal Sin (Mark 3:28-30)
  • The Parables (Mark 4:1-3)
  • The Sower (Mark 4:3-20)
  • The Sower and the Soils (Mark 4:1-20)
  • The Responsibility of Hearing (Mark 4:21-25)
  • The Parable of the Fruit-Growing Earth (Mark 4:26-29)
  • The Parable of the Mustard Seed (Mark 4:30-32)
  • The Storm (Mark 4:35-41)
  • The Gadarene Demoniac (Mark 5:1-20)
  • The Gadarenes and the Healed Man (Mark 5:17-20)
  • The Woman with the Issue of Blood (Mark 5:21-34)
  • The Raising of Jairus' Daughter (Mark 5:21-24; 35-43)
  • Jesus at Nazareth (Mark 6:1-3)
  • The Nazarenes and their Error (Mark 6:3-6)
Bible students and Bible readers have long felt the necessity for some commentary which should aim simply and solely at helping the spiritual life of those who use it. The Religious Tract Society is now producing a series of volumes designed to fill this gap. In every case the aim has been so to comment upon the words of Holy Scripture as to help the spiritual life of the reader. There has, of course, been some treatment of perplexing passages and a steady attempt to draw out the general character as well as the particular lessons of each book. - Summary by Series Preface

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