Commentary
After John is imprisoned, Jesus enters Galilee announcing God's good news: the appointed time has reached its fulfillment, God's kingdom has drawn near, and the proper response is repentance and belief. Mark then gives that response narrative form as Simon, Andrew, James, and John leave nets, boat, and family business at Jesus' call and follow him into a new vocation as fishers of people.
Mark opens Jesus' Galilean ministry by joining his kingdom announcement to the immediate calling of disciples: because God's appointed time has arrived and his reign has drawn near, people must repent, believe the gospel, and attach themselves to Jesus in concrete obedience.
1:14 Now after John was imprisoned, Jesus went into Galilee and proclaimed the gospel of God. 1:15 He said, "The time is fulfilled and the kingdom of God is near. Repent and believe the gospel!" 1:16 As he went along the Sea of Galilee, he saw Simon and Andrew, Simon's brother, casting a net into the sea (for they were fishermen). 1:17 Jesus said to them, "Follow me, and I will turn you into fishers of people." 1:18 They left their nets immediately and followed him. 1:19 Going on a little farther, he saw James, the son of Zebedee, and John his brother in their boat mending nets. 1:20 Immediately he called them, and they left their father Zebedee in the boat with the hired men and followed him.
Observation notes
- The temporal marker 'after John was imprisoned' links Jesus’ ministry to John’s prior role and signals a shift rather than a disconnected beginning.
- Verse 15 functions as a compact thesis statement for Jesus’ preaching in Mark, combining eschatological announcement with a twofold response command.
- The gospel of God' in verse 14 is then referred to simply as 'the gospel' in verse 15, binding the content of Jesus’ proclamation to God’s own saving action.
- The repeated seeing and calling verbs in verses 16-20 keep the focus on Jesus’ initiative rather than on the disciples’ prior seeking.
- The two call scenes are deliberately parallel, but the second scene intensifies the cost by mentioning father and hired men.
- Mark’s repeated 'immediately' matches the disciples’ response to the urgency created by the fulfilled time and near kingdom.
- The promise 'I will make you become fishers of people' indicates transformation under Jesus’ agency, not merely recruitment for a task already within their natural competence.
- The unit moves from proclamation to enacted response: the message of repentance and belief is illustrated narratively in those who leave and follow.
Structure
- Narrative transition: after John’s imprisonment, Jesus enters Galilee proclaiming the gospel of God (1:14).
- Programmatic summary of Jesus’ message: the time is fulfilled, the kingdom of God has drawn near, therefore repent and believe the gospel (1:15).
- First call scene: Jesus sees Simon and Andrew, commands them to follow, promises to make them fishers of people, and they respond immediately (1:16-18).
- Second call scene: Jesus sees James and John, calls them, and they leave family business and father behind to follow him (1:19-20).
Key terms
euangelion
Strong's: G2098
Gloss: good news
The term identifies Jesus’ message as divine good news, not merely ethical instruction; the required response is faith in what God is doing through Jesus.
kairos
Strong's: G2540
Gloss: appointed time, decisive season
This signals a climactic moment in redemptive history rather than ordinary chronology; Jesus’ ministry is presented as the arrival of God’s appointed moment.
basileia tou theou
Strong's: G932, G2316
Gloss: God’s reign, royal rule
The phrase points to God’s active reign arriving in and through Jesus’ ministry, which explains both the urgency of repentance and the authority of Jesus’ call.
metanoeite
Strong's: G3340
Gloss: change one’s mind and direction
Repentance here is not generic regret but a demanded reorientation before God’s approaching reign.
pisteuete
Strong's: G4100
Gloss: trust, believe
Mark binds inward trust to outward turning; the kingdom announcement calls for a faith response to God’s good news.
deute opiso mou
Strong's: G1205, G3694, G3450
Gloss: come after me
The command centers discipleship on relationship to Jesus himself; allegiance to the kingdom is concretized as following him.
Syntactical features
Temporal transition clause
Textual signal: "After John was imprisoned"
Interpretive effect: This clause frames Jesus’ ministry as emerging at a specific salvation-historical juncture and links John’s fate to the next stage of God’s work.
Fulfillment plus nearness announcement
Textual signal: "The time is fulfilled and the kingdom of God is near"
Interpretive effect: The paired perfect-like assertions ground the commands that follow; repentance and belief are responses to an accomplished and imminent divine action.
Coordinated imperatives
Textual signal: "Repent and believe the gospel"
Interpretive effect: The two commands should be taken together, indicating a unified response of turning and trusting rather than two unrelated acts.
Purpose-result promise in the call
Textual signal: "Follow me, and I will turn you into fishers of people"
Interpretive effect: Jesus’ summons includes both command and transformative promise; mission flows from following and from Jesus’ formative agency.
Narrative repetition of 'immediately'
Textual signal: "Immediately" in 1:18 and implied urgency in 1:20
Interpretive effect: The repeated rapid response reinforces Mark’s portrayal of decisive obedience fitting the eschatological moment.
Textual critical issues
Opening wording of Jesus’ proclamation in verse 14
Variants: Some witnesses read that Jesus proclaimed 'the gospel of God,' while others shorten to 'the gospel.'
Preferred reading: the gospel of God
Interpretive effect: The longer reading more explicitly marks the message as God’s own good news, though the shorter reading does not substantially alter the unit’s meaning.
Rationale: The fuller reading is well supported and fits Mark’s programmatic opening language about the gospel while also explaining a later scribal tendency to simplify.
Old Testament background
Isaiah 52:7
Connection type: thematic_background
Note: The language of good news and God’s reign provides a fitting backdrop for Jesus’ proclamation of the gospel and the nearness of God’s kingdom.
Isaiah 40:1-11
Connection type: thematic_background
Note: Because the preceding context has already invoked Isaiah with John’s preparatory role, Jesus’ appearance after John continues the expected arrival of God to rule and shepherd his people.
Jeremiah 16:16
Connection type: echo
Note: The fishing image may faintly echo prophetic gathering language, though here the image is redirected positively toward gathering people under Jesus’ call rather than toward judgment alone.
Interpretive options
Meaning of 'the kingdom of God is near'
- God’s reign is arriving decisively in Jesus’ person and ministry, though not yet in its final consummation.
- The phrase means only that the kingdom is temporally close and still wholly future at this point.
Preferred option: God’s reign is arriving decisively in Jesus’ person and ministry, though not yet in its final consummation.
Rationale: The nearness announcement is joined to Jesus’ present proclamation and authoritative summons; in Mark, the kingdom is not merely impending but already breaking in through Jesus’ ministry, while later texts still preserve future consummation.
Force of 'repent and believe the gospel'
- The commands address Israel broadly and call for a real moral and faith response to God’s kingdom announcement.
- The wording is mainly a summary slogan with little emphasis on personal conversion or response.
Preferred option: The commands address Israel broadly and call for a real moral and faith response to God’s kingdom announcement.
Rationale: The imperatives are direct, and the call narratives that follow concretize actual response in leaving and following rather than leaving the saying as a bare thematic heading.
Meaning of 'fishers of people'
- A mission image for gathering people into allegiance to Jesus under God’s reign.
- A primarily judgment-oriented allusion in which the disciples chiefly catch people for condemnation.
Preferred option: A mission image for gathering people into allegiance to Jesus under God’s reign.
Rationale: In this immediate context the image is tied to following Jesus and forming a community around him, not to an announced act of destruction.
Conner principles audit
context
Relevance: high
Note: The unit must be read in light of the preceding baptism, divine sonship declaration, and wilderness testing; the one who now proclaims the kingdom is the Spirit-anointed Son already identified by heaven.
mention_principles
Relevance: high
Note: The text mentions kingdom, repentance, belief, and following; interpretation should not replace these concrete terms with abstract later slogans detached from Mark’s narrative presentation.
christological
Relevance: high
Note: The disciples are called to follow Jesus himself, showing that response to God’s kingdom is mediated through response to the person and authority of Jesus.
moral
Relevance: medium
Note: The commands to repent and believe are morally and volitionally meaningful; the passage should not be read as if human response were irrelevant or merely apparent.
chronometrical_dispensational
Relevance: medium
Note: The fulfilled time marks a redemptive-historical turning point; care is needed to affirm inaugurated kingdom realities here without collapsing all kingdom promises into exhaustive present fulfillment.
Theological significance
- Jesus' public ministry begins at the moment marked by John's imprisonment, showing continuity with John's preparatory role while shifting attention decisively to Jesus.
- In Mark, the kingdom of God is God's active reign drawing near in connection with Jesus' presence and summons, not merely an inner feeling, social program, or distant future event.
- Repentance and belief belong together as the proper response to Jesus' announcement; the passage does not permit either empty remorse or detached assent.
- Discipleship is defined here by personal attachment to Jesus that reshapes vocation, loyalties, and purpose.
- Jesus not only commands followers to come after him; he also promises to make them into agents of his gathering mission.
- The repeated immediacy of the disciples' response matches the urgency of Jesus' proclamation: the fulfilled time does not invite indefinite delay.
Philosophical appreciation
Exegetical and linguistic: Verse 15 gives Jesus' message in compressed, programmatic form, and verses 16-20 immediately translate that announcement into action. Mark's sequence keeps repentance and belief from remaining abstract by showing them as enacted response to Jesus' word.
Biblical theological: Jesus' proclamation stands at the intersection of prophetic expectation, kingdom arrival, and the formation of a people around himself. The good news is the arrival of God's long-appointed moment, and the call narratives show that this arrival gathers a community ordered by allegiance to Jesus.
Metaphysical: The scene assumes that history is governed by God's appointed moments rather than by human convenience. When the decisive time arrives, ordinary patterns of work and security are no longer ultimate; they are relativized by God's reign.
Psychological Spiritual: Nets, boats, and the family enterprise represent settled identity and predictable continuity. Jesus' call breaks into that stability and exposes whether one's deepest security lies in familiar structures or in following him.
Divine Perspective: The initiative throughout is God's: God's time is fulfilled, God's kingdom has drawn near, and God's good news is proclaimed by the Son. Yet that initiative comes as summons, requiring repentance, belief, and following rather than bypassing human response.
Category: works_providence_glory
Note: The fulfilled time displays God's sovereign ordering of history and his purposeful advance of his reign.
Category: revelatory_self_disclosure
Note: God makes his saving rule known through Jesus' proclamation, so the gospel is revelation as well as announcement.
Category: character
Note: The opening word is good news joined to a summons to repent, displaying divine mercy before final judgment.
Category: personhood
Note: The command to follow shows that God addresses human beings as responsible persons who answer his call.
- The kingdom is already drawing near in Jesus' ministry, yet its reality is not exhausted by this moment.
- God's initiative governs the scene, yet repentance, belief, and following remain genuine human responses.
- Following Jesus involves real relinquishment, yet that loss is presented as entrance into a larger purpose shaped by him.
Enrichment summary
Mark presents Jesus' first public announcement as a declaration that God's appointed moment has arrived and his reign is now pressing near through Jesus himself. Repentance, belief, and following therefore name a single field of response: not vague religiosity, but concrete allegiance to the one who calls. The fishing metaphor recasts the disciples' trade as participation in Jesus' work of gathering people, and the rapid departures in verses 18 and 20 show the fitting answer to kingdom news when the summons comes from him.
Traditions of men check
Reducing the gospel to private forgiveness with little reference to God’s kingdom.
Why it conflicts: Jesus’ opening proclamation explicitly announces God’s kingdom and then calls for repentance and belief in that message.
Textual pressure point: Verse 15 joins 'the time is fulfilled' and 'the kingdom of God is near' to 'repent and believe the gospel.'
Caution: The correction should not deny personal forgiveness; it should place forgiveness within the larger framework of God’s reign in Christ.
Treating discipleship as a later optional stage beyond basic faith.
Why it conflicts: In this unit the summons to believe the gospel is immediately embodied as following Jesus at personal cost.
Textual pressure point: Verses 17-20 show immediate leaving and following as the concrete shape of responding to Jesus’ call.
Caution: One should not flatten all discipleship decisions into identical external acts; the point is the priority of allegiance, not the requirement that every believer abandon the same occupation.
Assuming divine calling nullifies meaningful human response.
Why it conflicts: Jesus’ initiative is primary, but the text still presents real commands and real obedience.
Textual pressure point: The imperatives 'repent' and 'believe' in verse 15 and the disciples’ actual responses in verses 18 and 20.
Caution: This point should not be used to deny grace or divine initiative; it guards against readings that empty the commands of significance.
Thought-world reading
Dynamic: covenantal_identity
Why It Matters: "The time is fulfilled" and "the kingdom of God is near" sound like the arrival of promised realities, not generic spirituality. Jesus speaks as one announcing that God's long-awaited action has reached its decisive stage.
Western Misread: Treating verse 15 as timeless advice about personal improvement or private religion.
Interpretive Difference: The passage reads instead as a public announcement that God's reign is arriving in history, which gives repentance and belief their urgency and scope.
Dynamic: relational_loyalty
Why It Matters: "Follow me" places the response to the gospel in personal relation to Jesus himself. In verses 16-20, belief is not left as inward assent but appears as transferred loyalty that can reorder work and family obligations.
Western Misread: Separating faith from discipleship so sharply that following Jesus becomes an optional second step.
Interpretive Difference: The call scenes function as Mark's concrete picture of what receiving Jesus' announcement looks like.
Idioms and figures
Expression: "The time is fulfilled"
Category: idiom
Explanation: The phrase refers to God's appointed season reaching its intended point, not merely to time passing. Jesus announces that a divinely marked moment has arrived.
Interpretive effect: It gives the commands to repent and believe their urgency and places the scene within redemptive history.
Expression: "The kingdom of God is near"
Category: metonymy
Explanation: "Kingdom" refers to God's active reign rather than chiefly to a territory. In this context, "near" indicates that God's rule is arriving in connection with Jesus' ministry, while not excluding future consummation.
Interpretive effect: This keeps the phrase from being reduced to inward spirituality, political revolution, or a wholly postponed future.
Expression: "fishers of people"
Category: metaphor
Explanation: Jesus reframes the disciples' trade as an image for gathering people under his call. Any prophetic background must be read through this local scene, where the emphasis falls on mission and transformation.
Interpretive effect: The saying presents mission as something Jesus makes his followers become, not as a decorative slogan or a coded announcement of condemnation.
Application implications
- When Jesus' claim interrupts settled routines, the fitting response is not distant admiration but repentance, trust, and obedience.
- Preaching and witness should keep the pattern of verse 15: announcement of what God has done and is doing, joined to a summons for response.
- Ordinary work and learned skills can be taken up into Jesus' mission rather than treated as spiritually irrelevant.
- Prompt obedience is not rashness when it rests on the authority of Jesus' call.
- Allegiance to Jesus may unsettle economic and family arrangements, though this passage should not be turned into a demand that every disciple abandon the same externals.
Enrichment applications
- Kingdom preaching should sound like announcement plus summons, not bare religious technique or moral uplift.
- A profession of faith that resists any practical reordering of loyalties fits this passage poorly.
- Mission is not presented as leveraging natural talent alone; Jesus makes followers into instruments for gathering others.
Warnings
- Do not isolate 'kingdom of God' from Jesus’ own person and authority in Mark’s narrative flow.
- Do not overread the fishing metaphor with an elaborate symbolism the immediate context does not supply.
- Do not turn the disciples’ immediate leaving into a universal rule that every faithful response requires abandoning one’s trade or family proximity.
- Do not flatten the kingdom into either a purely present experience or a wholly future reality; the wording supports nearness with present implications.
- Do not detach verse 15 from verses 16-20; the call stories are Mark’s narrative demonstration of the response Jesus’ proclamation demands.
Enrichment warnings
- Do not universalize the disciples’ leaving of nets and father into a rule that every believer must abandon occupation or household in the same external way.
- Do not use Jewish background to overclaim a single fixed first-century expectation scheme behind every phrase in verse 15.
- Do not detach the call stories from Jesus’ proclamation; Mark places them here to interpret the required response.
Interpretive misread risks
Misreading: Treating repentance and belief as merely inward states with no necessary outward allegiance to Jesus.
Why It Happens: Verse 15 is often read in isolation from the call narratives that follow.
Correction: Verses 16-20 show the embodied form of receiving Jesus' announcement. Mark does not prescribe identical external acts for all disciples, but he does connect faith with real reorientation.
Misreading: Reading "the kingdom of God is near" as only future and not already active in Jesus' ministry.
Why It Happens: Concern to preserve future consummation can minimize the present force of Jesus' words.
Correction: The kingdom is not exhausted in the present, but in Mark it is already drawing near through Jesus' proclamation and call.
Misreading: Turning "fishers of people" into a fully developed judgment metaphor so that the main point becomes catching people for destruction.
Why It Happens: Readers may import prophetic fishing imagery without sufficient control from the immediate context.
Correction: A prophetic echo is possible, but here the image serves Jesus' call to gather followers, not an elaborate allegory of judgment.