Today the Church celebrates the
life and ministry of St. Mark the Evangelist.
James Kiefer writes:
The
book of Acts mentions a Mark, or John Mark, a kinsman of Barnabas (Col. 4:10).
The house of his mother Mary was a meeting place for Christians in Jerusalem
(Acts 12:12). When Paul and Barnabas, who had been in Antioch, came to
Jerusalem, they brought Mark back to Antioch with them (12:25), and he
accompanied them on their first missionary journey (13:5), but left them
prematurely and returned to Jerusalem (13:13). When Paul and Barnabas were
about to set out on a second missionary journey, Barnabas proposed to take
Mark, but Paul thought him unreliable, so that eventually Barnabas made one
journey taking Mark, and Paul another journey taking Silas (15:36-40). Mark is
not mentioned again in Acts. However, it appears that he became more reliable,
for Paul mentions him as a trusted assistant in Colossians 4:10 and again in 2
Timothy 4:11.
The
Apostle Peter had a co-worker whom he refers to as "my son Mark" (1
Peter 5:13). Papias, an early second century writer, in describing the origins
of the Gospels, tells us that Mark was the "interpreter" of Peter,
and that he wrote down ("but not in order") the stories that he had
heard Peter tell in his preaching about the life and teachings of Jesus.
The
Gospel of Mark, in describing the arrest of Jesus (14:51f), speaks of a young
man who followed the arresting party, wearing only a linen cloth wrapped around
his body, whom the arresting party tried to seize, but who left the cloth in
their hands and fled naked. It is speculated that this young man was the writer
himself, since the detail is hardly worth mentioning if he were not.
Tradition
has it that after the death of Peter, Mark left Rome and went to preach in
Alexandria, Egypt, where he was eventually martyred.
It is
natural to identify the John Mark of Acts with the Gospel-writer and
interpreter of Peter, and this identification is standard in liturgical
references to Mark. However, "Mark" is the commonest of Latin first
names, and they may well have been separate persons.
Mark's
symbol in art is a lion, usually winged.
Let us pray: Almighty God, who by the hand of Mark the
evangelist have given to your Church the Gospel of Jesus Christ the Son of God:
We thank you for this witness, and pray that we may be firmly grounded in its
truth; through Jesus Christ our Lord, who lives and reigns with you and the
Holy Spirit, one God, for ever and ever.
Amen.
CALENDAR REMINDERS
For those who have signed up,
we will have the Share Your Faith Dinner on Thursday at 6:30 p.m. at the
Taylors.
Please remember everyone on our
Prayer List, especially Mary Pearson who will be undergoing open heart surgery
this morning.
Your servant in Christ,
Fr. Chester J. Makowski+
St. Augustine of Hippo
Episcopal Church
Galveston, Texas
77550
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