Mark 1:33-43

33 et erat omnis civitas congregata ad ianuam
34 et curavit multos qui vexabantur variis languoribus et daemonia multa eiciebat et non sinebat loqui ea quoniam sciebant eum
35 et diluculo valde surgens egressus abiit in desertum locum ibique orabat
36 et persecutus est eum Simon et qui cum illo erant
37 et cum invenissent eum dixerunt ei quia omnes quaerunt te
38 et ait illis eamus in proximos vicos et civitates ut et ibi praedicem ad hoc enim veni
39 et erat praedicans in synagogis eorum et omni Galilaea et daemonia eiciens
40 et venit ad eum leprosus deprecans eum et genu flexo dixit si vis potes me mundare
41 Iesus autem misertus eius extendit manum suam et tangens eum ait illi volo mundare
42 et cum dixisset statim discessit ab eo lepra et mundatus est
43 et comminatus ei statim eiecit illum

Mark 1:33-43 Meaning and Commentary

INTRODUCTION TO MARK

This is the title of the book, the subject of which is the Gospel; a joyful account of the ministry, miracles, actions, and sufferings of Christ: the writer of it was not one of the twelve apostles, but an evangelist; the same with John Mark, or John, whose surname was Mark: John was his Hebrew name, and Mark his Gentile name, Ac 12:12,25, and was Barnabas's sister's son, Col 4:10, his mother's name was Mary, Ac 12:12. The Apostle Peter calls him his son, 1Pe 5:13, if he is the same; and he is thought to have wrote his Gospel from him {a}, and by his order, and which was afterwards examined and approved by him {b} it is said to have been wrote originally in Latin, or in the Roman tongue: so say the Arabic and Persic versions at the beginning of it, and the Syriac version says the same at the end: but of this there is no evidence, any more, nor so much, as of Matthew's writing his Gospel in Hebrew. The old Latin copy of this, is a version from the Greek; it is most likely that it was originally written in Greek, as the rest of the New Testament.

{a} Papias apud Euseb. Hist. l. 3. c. 39. Tertull. adv. Marcion. l. 4. c. 5. {b} Hieron. Catalog. Script. Eccles. p. 91. sect. 18.

The Latin Vulgate is in the public domain.