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							We’re about to begin a series of sermons from 
							the Book of Mark. The Book of Mark tells of the 
							ministry of Jesus from His baptism by John the 
							Baptist to His death and burial and the discovery of 
							the empty tomb. 
 The Gospel of Mark is sometimes called the “New York 
							Gospel.” It’s fast paced, blunt, and
 totally honest. Mark shows King Jesus taking back 
							what is His as He comes to seek, serve, and save.
 
 I have always enjoyed the Gospel of Mark for its 
							“ADHD” approach to telling the story of Jesus. As 
							one reads this gospel, he or she is quickly, (and 
							usually without warning,) whisked from one location 
							to another, from one character to another, and from 
							one issue to another. The story moves very fast and 
							there are not many teachings and sermons to slow the 
							story down. (Did a preacher just say that?) Those 
							moments are saved for the other gospels.
 
 There are several purposes for the Book of Mark, but 
							what I consider to be one of the more obscure 
							lessons is that this is a writing from a follower of 
							Jesus who may or may not have known Him personally. 
							Regardless, there is enough evidence of Jesus’ 
							Messiahship for this young man to become a believer 
							during a time of growing persecution.
 
 For Mark, Jesus was more than a miracle worker. 
							Jesus’ teachings shocked His contemporaries and 
							ultimately led to His execution. His revolutionary 
							teaching style was oddly popular with the common 
							man. The profound compassion of Jesus combined with 
							His truth claims won over multitudes of people.
 
 Who was Jesus to you? What does it mean that He is 
							the Son of God? Everyone has an opinion as to who 
							Jesus was. But for Mark, the evidence was too great 
							to ignore.
 
 Mark gives us the person and work of Jesus in black 
							and white. Uncensored. Unadorned. The book of Mark 
							packs a punch. Why? It just puts Jesus out there in 
							all His humanity and mystery: Son of Man, Son of 
							God, friend and enemy, visionary leader and 
							suffering servant. Mark’s Jesus does not fit into a 
							nice box. Mark pulls his readers into the tensions 
							of the irony and controversy of a man who faced a 
							criminal’s execution and still came out victorious. 
							For Mark, Jesus is Raw and Real, and someone 
							deserving of his discipleship.
 
 For reasons that will be quickly discovered by the 
							reader, the book of Mark will receive the highest 
							honor of being placed along side of 65 other books 
							set apart to be the very Word of God. And as God 
							Himself has said of His Word, “The grass is going to 
							wither and the flowers are going to fade, but the 
							Word of God will remain forever. “
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							We need to be reading this book and be familiar with 
			Jesus. Because in the end, it’s going to be about Him. His authority 
			will be the only authority. 
 One last thing. My wife and I have twin sons. I named my first born 
			son, Mark and my second born son, Matthew. Why didn’t I name them in 
			the same order these books are found in the Bible? Isn’t it Matthew 
			and Mark? Why is our Mark first? I’ll share the answer on January 11 
			when we begin the series.
 
 
 
 Upcoming Sermon Series
 Jan 11 Why the Hurry? Intro to the Book of Mark
 Jan 18 Not Worthy to Untie Jesus Sandals (Mk 1)
 Jan 25 Jesus’ Critics, Crowds, and Followers (Mk 2–3)
 Feb 1 Jesus—More than a Story Teller (Mk 4)
 Feb 8 Jesus—A Force to be Reckoned With (Mk 5)
 Feb 15 Jesus Never Said it Would be Easy (Mk 6)
 Feb 22 Jesus the Teacher (Mk 7:1–8:26)
 Mar 1 Seeing Jesus for Who He Really Is (Mk 8:27–9)
 Mar 8 What Jesus Stands For( Mk 10)
 Mar 15 Jesus Enters Jerusalem (Mk 11:1–12:44)
 Mar 22 Jesus Unveils the Future (Mk 13)
 Mar 29 Jesus—Suffering King? (Mk 14:1–15:20)
 Apr 5 Jesus Finishes His Work (Mk 15:21–16:20)
 
 [Ron Otto, Preaching Minister, Lincoln Christian Church]
 
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