MARK
Chapter 4
Mark | Twenty | 4:1 | Jesus again began to teach by the Sea; and, as an immense crowd was gathering round him, he got into a boat, and sat in it on the Sea, while all the people were on the shore at the water's edge. | |
Mark | Twenty | 4:2 | Then he taught them many truths in parables; and in the course of his teaching he said to them. | |
Mark | Twenty | 4:4 | And presently, as he was sowing, some of the seed fell along the path; and the birds came, and ate it up. | |
Mark | Twenty | 4:5 | Some fell on rocky ground, where it had not much soil, and, having no depth of soil, sprang up at once; | |
Mark | Twenty | 4:7 | Some of the seed fell among brambles; but the brambles shot up and completely choked it, and it yielded no return. | |
Mark | Twenty | 4:8 | Some fell into good soil, and, shooting up and growing, yielded a return, amounting to thirty, sixty, and even a hundred fold." | |
Mark | Twenty | 4:10 | Afterwards, when he was alone, his followers and the Twelve asked him about his parables; | |
Mark | Twenty | 4:11 | And he said. "To you the hidden truth of the Kingdom of God has been imparted; but to those who are outside it all teaching takes the form of parables, that-- | |
Mark | Twenty | 4:12 | 'Though they have eyes, they may see without perceiving; And though they have ears, they may hear without understanding; Lest some day they should turn and be forgiven.' | |
Mark | Twenty | 4:13 | You do not know the meaning of this parable!" he went on; "Then how will you understand all the other parables? | |
Mark | Twenty | 4:14 | The sower sows the Message. The People meant by the seed that falls along the path are these--where the Message is sown, but, as soon as they have heard it, Satan immediately comes and carries away the Message that has been sown in them. | |
Mark | Twenty | 4:16 | So, too, those meant by the seed sown on the rocky places are the people who, when they have heard the Message, at once accept it joyfully; | |
Mark | Twenty | 4:17 | But, as they have no root, they stand only for a short time; and so, when trouble or persecution arises on account of the Message, they fall away at once. | |
Mark | Twenty | 4:18 | Those meant by the seed sown among the brambles are different; they are the people who hear the Message, | |
Mark | Twenty | 4:19 | But the cares of life, and the glamour of wealth, and cravings for many other things come in and completely choke the Message, so that it gives no return. | |
Mark | Twenty | 4:20 | But the people meant by the seed sown on the good ground are those who hear the Message, and welcome it, and yield a return, thirty, sixty, and even a hundred fold." | |
Mark | Twenty | 4:21 | And Jesus said to them. "Is a lamp brought to be put under the corn- measure or under the couch, instead of being put on the lampstand? | |
Mark | Twenty | 4:22 | Nothing is hidden unless it is some day to come to light, nor was anything ever kept hidden but that it should some day come into the light of day. | |
Mark | Twenty | 4:24 | Take care what you listen to," said Jesus. "The measure you mete will be meted out to you, and more will be added for you. | |
Mark | Twenty | 4:25 | For, to those who have, more will be given; while, from those who have nothing, even what they have will be taken away." | |
Mark | Twenty | 4:26 | Jesus also said. "This is what the Kingdom of God is like--like a man who has scattered seed on the ground, | |
Mark | Twenty | 4:27 | And then sleeps by night and rises by day, while the seed is shooting up and growing--he knows not how. | |
Mark | Twenty | 4:28 | The ground bears the crop of itself--first the blade, then the ear, and then the full grain in the ear; | |
Mark | Twenty | 4:29 | But, as soon as the crop is ready, immediately he 'puts in the sickle because harvest has come'." | |
Mark | Twenty | 4:31 | By what can we illustrate it? Perhaps by the growth of a mustard- seed. This seed, when sown in the ground, though it is smaller than all other seeds, | |
Mark | Twenty | 4:32 | Yet, when sown, shoots up, and becomes larger than any other herb, and puts out great branches, so that even 'the wild birds can roost in its shelter.'" | |
Mark | Twenty | 4:33 | With many such parables Jesus used to speak to the people of his Message, as far as they were able to receive it; | |
Mark | Twenty | 4:34 | And to them he never used to speak except in parables; but in private to his own disciples he explained everything. | |
Mark | Twenty | 4:36 | So, leaving the crowd behind, they took him with them, just as he was, in the boat; and there were other boats with him. | |
Mark | Twenty | 4:37 | A violent squall came on, and the waves kept dashing into the boat, so that the boat was actually filling. | |
Mark | Twenty | 4:38 | Jesus was in the stern asleep upon the cushion; and the disciples roused him and cried. "Teacher! is it nothing to you that we are lost?" | |
Mark | Twenty | 4:39 | Jesus rose and rebuked the wind, and said to the sea. "Hush! Be still!" Then the wind dropped, and a great calm followed. | |