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Mark is unavailable, but you can change that!

Understood today as the first written gospel, Mark seems to be the most direct and straightforward account of Jesus’ life. In his verse-by-verse commentary, Ralph P. Martin brings out the power of this eminently practical and persuasive Gospel. Martin emphasizes how Mark’s Gospel is a story of action—as encouraging and compelling today as when it was written.

We can identify three sets of people who have contact with Jesus in this passage. Three sermons might usefully bring them together since they are a diverse cross-section of society and represent different parts of the populace. Yet all are associated with him. (a) The crowds. They are often in the background of Mark’s story and the evangelist uses them to point up Jesus’ initial popularity and appeal. They represent human life at its most obvious need: oppressed
Mark 3:7–35