Commentary
After the crowded healings of the previous evening, Jesus leaves before dawn for a solitary place to pray. When Simon and the others find him and report that everyone is searching for him, Jesus declines to return to the same center of demand. He directs the mission toward the nearby villages so that he may preach there as well, and Mark closes with a Galilean summary in which synagogue proclamation and exorcism remain joined.
Mark presents Jesus' pre-dawn prayer and his decision to leave Capernaum as a mission-defining refusal to let local acclaim set his course: he moves on to preach through Galilee, with exorcistic authority accompanying that proclamation.
1:35 Then Jesus got up early in the morning when it was still very dark, departed, and went out to a deserted place, and there he spent time in prayer. 1:36 Simon and his companions searched for him. 1:37 When they found him, they said, "Everyone is looking for you." 1:38 He replied, "Let us go elsewhere, into the surrounding villages, so that I can preach there too. For that is what I came out here to do." 1:39 So he went into all of Galilee preaching in their synagogues and casting out demons. Cleansing a Leper
Observation notes
- The scene follows immediately after the intense success of 1:32-34, so the contrast between public acclaim and solitary prayer is narratively sharp.
- Mark piles up action verbs in verse 35 ('got up,' 'departed,' 'went out,' 'was praying'), portraying intentional withdrawal rather than accidental absence.
- The location is a 'deserted' or solitary place, echoing Mark's earlier wilderness setting and marking separation from the crowd.
- Simon's report, 'Everyone is looking for you,' frames the issue as mounting demand and rising popularity.
- Jesus does not deny the demand; he simply refuses to let it determine his next move.
- In verse 38 the purpose clause centers on preaching, not on returning to continue healings in Capernaum.
- Verse 39 summarizes preaching and exorcism together, showing that the broader ministry does not abandon deeds of power but orders them under the mission's advance.
- The paragraph ends before the leper narrative but prepares for it by showing Jesus repeatedly moving through Galilee rather than remaining fixed in one success center.
Structure
- Jesus rises while it is still dark, leaves the house area, and prays alone in a deserted place (v. 35).
- Simon and his companions track him down and report the pressure of public demand: 'Everyone is looking for you' (vv. 36-37).
- Jesus answers by redirecting the group to neighboring villages so that he may preach there also, grounding the move in his mission ('for this I came out') (v. 38).
- Mark closes with a summary of Jesus' Galilean circuit: synagogue preaching joined with casting out demons (v. 39).
Key terms
eremos topos
Strong's: G5117
Gloss: solitary/wilderness place
It marks intentional separation for communion with the Father and recalls Mark's earlier wilderness motifs, reinforcing that Jesus' ministry is directed from hidden dependence rather than public pressure.
proseuchomai
Strong's: G4336
Gloss: to pray
The verb shows that the transition in ministry direction arises out of prayerful dependence, not mere strategic calculation.
katadio ko
Strong's: G2614
Gloss: to hunt down, search eagerly
The term carries a tone stronger than neutral looking; it fits the urgency of the crowd's expectations and heightens the tension between public demand and Jesus' mission.
kerysso
Strong's: G2784
Gloss: to proclaim, herald
This term gives the explicit purpose of the journey and clarifies that proclamation is central in this stage of Mark's presentation of Jesus' work.
exelthon
Strong's: G1831
Gloss: went out, came forth
The expression is crucial but debated; it may refer to leaving the place of prayer for ministry or more broadly to his mission from Capernaum, and in either case it grounds the next action in divine purpose rather than human demand.
Syntactical features
Temporal sequence with intensified time markers
Textual signal: "early in the morning, when it was still very dark"
Interpretive effect: The doubled time reference slows the narrative and underscores deliberate priority: before public activity resumes, Jesus seeks solitude for prayer.
Purpose clause governing mission
Textual signal: "Let us go elsewhere ... so that I can preach there too"
Interpretive effect: The hina clause identifies proclamation as the stated aim of relocating, which controls the paragraph's center of gravity.
Grounding explanatory clause
Textual signal: "For that is what I came out here to do"
Interpretive effect: The gar clause gives the rationale for refusing the crowd's agenda; Jesus' movement is tethered to mission, not convenience or popularity.
Summary participial-style compression of ministry
Textual signal: "preaching in their synagogues and casting out demons"
Interpretive effect: Mark condenses a wider Galilean campaign into two paired activities, indicating that proclamation and exorcistic authority belong together in Jesus' kingdom ministry.
Textual critical issues
Wording of Jesus' mission statement in verse 38
Variants: Some witnesses read a form equivalent to 'for this I came out,' while others expand or slightly reshape the wording toward 'for this I have come' or similar clarifying forms.
Preferred reading: The shorter reading reflected by 'for this I came out' is preferred.
Interpretive effect: The main thrust remains stable, but the shorter reading preserves Mark's terse wording and leaves open whether Jesus refers narrowly to coming out from the solitary place or more broadly to his missionary emergence.
Rationale: The shorter and somewhat less explicit reading better explains later expansion by scribes seeking clarity and fits Mark's concise style.
Old Testament background
Isaiah 61:1
Connection type: thematic_background
Note: The combination of Spirit-directed proclamation and liberating action forms a broad prophetic backdrop for Jesus' preaching joined with release from demonic oppression, though Mark does not quote the text here.
Isaiah 42:2-3
Connection type: thematic_background
Note: Jesus' refusal to be driven by public clamor coheres with the Servant pattern of quiet, purposeful ministry rather than self-advertising, even if the allusion is indirect.
1 Kings 19:4-13
Connection type: pattern
Note: A servant of God withdrawing to a solitary place before renewed mission offers a narrative pattern that helps frame prayerful retreat preceding public action.
Interpretive options
Meaning of 'for this I came out' in verse 38
- Jesus refers specifically to coming out from the place of prayer, meaning that he emerged from solitude in order to preach in other villages.
- Jesus refers more broadly to coming out on mission, likely leaving Capernaum or entering public ministry in Galilee for the purpose of proclamation.
Preferred option: Jesus refers more broadly to his mission in Galilee, though the wording may intentionally resonate with the immediate movement out from the solitary place.
Rationale: The statement functions as the rationale for a regional shift in ministry, not merely for ending a prayer session. The following summary of ministry throughout Galilee favors the broader missionary sense.
Force of Simon's statement 'Everyone is looking for you'
- It is a neutral report that people are waiting for Jesus.
- It carries narrative pressure, implying that Jesus should return to meet the expectations created by his successful healing ministry.
Preferred option: It carries narrative pressure, implying that Jesus is being urged back into the role the crowd wants.
Rationale: Jesus' immediate redirection to other villages reads as a response to more than simple information; the whole scene contrasts crowd demand with Jesus' mission priorities.
Relationship between preaching and exorcism in this unit
- Preaching is primary, and exorcism is a secondary validating sign within the same mission.
- Preaching and exorcism are equal co-centers with no stated hierarchy.
Preferred option: Preaching is primary in this paragraph, while exorcism remains an accompanying expression of Jesus' authority.
Rationale: Verse 38 gives explicit purpose to preaching, and verse 39 then includes exorcism as part of the wider enacted ministry rather than as the stated reason for the journey.
Conner principles audit
context
Relevance: high
Note: The paragraph must be read against 1:32-34. Without that immediate context, Jesus' withdrawal can be romanticized as generic spirituality rather than a mission-directing response after explosive public demand.
mention_principles
Relevance: medium
Note: The text mentions prayer briefly but centrally; interpretation should not inflate this into a full doctrine of prayer detached from the stated mission outcome of preaching in other villages.
christological
Relevance: high
Note: Jesus' actions reveal his identity through authority and mission. His prayer does not imply weakness in a reductionistic sense; in Mark it displays the obedient Son's dependence within his messianic work.
moral
Relevance: medium
Note: The unit supports imitation in ordered priorities and prayerful dependence, but moral application must remain subordinate to the narrative's presentation of Jesus' mission.
symbolic_typical_parabolic
Relevance: low
Note: The deserted place may echo wilderness themes, but the scene should not be over-symbolized beyond what the narrative actually develops.
Theological significance
- Jesus' ministry is ordered by prayerful communion with the Father rather than by the momentum of public success.
- In this scene, proclamation is the stated reason for moving on, while exorcism remains an accompanying display of Jesus' authority.
- Faithfulness may require leaving a fruitful center when obedience calls for the message to spread further.
- Jesus acts with clear purpose while also displaying real human dependence in prayer.
- Mark does not let Jesus be reduced to a local miracle worker; his works of power accompany the announcement of God's reign.
Philosophical appreciation
Exegetical and linguistic: Mark's clipped sequence moves from darkness and solitude to pursuit, pressure, and renewed movement. The scene is not built around popularity management but around the transition from prayer to clarified mission.
Biblical theological: Jesus answers need without allowing need alone to dictate his route. The Galilean circuit keeps proclamation at the center while showing that deliverance from demonic powers belongs to the same kingdom mission.
Metaphysical: The passage assumes that reality is not finally governed by the strongest immediate demand. Human urgency is real, but Jesus' actions are ordered by a prior divine purpose.
Psychological Spiritual: Simon's report captures the pressure created by visible success: once people know where help is found, expectation hardens quickly into claim. Jesus resists that pressure not by indifference, but by remaining anchored in prayer and vocation.
Divine Perspective: Divine mercy here is purposeful rather than reactive. Jesus does not simply stay where he is most wanted; he moves according to a wider saving intention.
Category: personhood
Note: Jesus' withdrawal and decision show deliberate agency aligned with the Father's will.
Category: works_providence_glory
Note: The spread of ministry through Galilee reflects purposeful divine direction rather than crowd-driven accident.
Category: revelatory_self_disclosure
Note: Jesus reveals himself not only through power over demons but through his insistence on proclaiming God's reign.
- Immediate needs matter, yet mission is not reducible to meeting every demand in one place.
- Authority over demons appears in public, but its direction is shaped in hidden prayer.
- A fruitful response can be genuine and still become a pressure that distorts calling.
Enrichment summary
This scene turns on two linked movements: Jesus prays in a deserted place after an evening of intense public demand, and then he insists on continuing through Galilee rather than remaining where success is already concentrated. The synagogue circuit keeps his mission located within Israel's communal life, while the pairing of preaching and exorcism gives the ministry an apocalyptic edge: the message of God's reign arrives with visible defeat of hostile powers. The crowd's urgency is real, but it does not define Jesus' vocation.
Traditions of men check
Equating ministry faithfulness with remaining where numerical response is strongest.
Why it conflicts: Jesus leaves a place of obvious demand because his mission requires wider proclamation.
Textual pressure point: "Let us go elsewhere ... so that I can preach there too."
Caution: This should not be used to justify restlessness or neglect of genuine local responsibility; the point is mission governed by divine purpose, not novelty.
Treating prayer as a private devotional add-on rather than a source of mission alignment.
Why it conflicts: In this narrative, prayer directly precedes and frames Jesus' decision about where ministry should go next.
Textual pressure point: Jesus withdraws to pray, and the ensuing dialogue immediately defines the next step in mission.
Caution: The text does not give a full method for decision-making in every case; it shows a pattern of dependence, not a rigid formula.
Reducing Jesus' ministry to therapeutic miracle-working detached from proclamation.
Why it conflicts: The crowd seeks more access to Jesus after healings, but Jesus names preaching as the reason for going onward.
Textual pressure point: The explicit purpose clause in verse 38 centers on preaching, and verse 39 retains exorcism as accompanying action.
Caution: This must not minimize Christ's compassion in healing; it simply preserves the textual ordering of his mission.
Thought-world reading
Dynamic: apocalyptic_imagery_frame
Why It Matters: Verse 39 pairs synagogue preaching with casting out demons. In a Second Temple Jewish frame, that combination signals not just varied ministry activity but the arrival of God's reign in conflict with hostile powers.
Western Misread: Treating exorcism as a sensational sideline or as mere therapeutic relief detached from kingdom conflict.
Interpretive Difference: Preaching is the stated purpose of moving on, and exorcism functions as a visible sign that the proclaimed reign is displacing opposing powers.
Dynamic: covenantal_identity
Why It Matters: The movement through synagogues places Jesus' work within Israel's ordinary communal gathering places rather than in a modern model of platform expansion.
Western Misread: Reading the passage as though Jesus were simply pursuing larger audiences or better ministry reach.
Interpretive Difference: The move to neighboring villages is a deliberate spread of proclamation through Israel's local communal centers, not a generic growth strategy.
Idioms and figures
Expression: deserted place
Category: other
Explanation: The phrase does not merely denote privacy. In Mark it carries wilderness resonance: a place away from crowd pressure where divine orientation and testing are associated with mission.
Interpretive effect: It discourages a flat reading of Jesus' withdrawal as self-care alone and supports reading the prayer as re-centering his public vocation.
Expression: Everyone is looking for you
Category: hyperbole
Explanation: The statement likely overstates for urgency rather than serving as a census report. Its force is pressure: public demand is swelling and expects Jesus to return.
Interpretive effect: It sharpens the tension of the scene. Jesus is not ignoring neutral information but resisting the crowd's attempt to set his agenda.
Expression: for this I came out
Category: other
Explanation: The wording is terse and genuinely debated. Some responsible conservative readers take it narrowly of Jesus' coming out from the solitary place; others, more broadly of his emergence in mission. The broader sense best fits the Galilean summary in verse 39, though the local echo may be intentional.
Interpretive effect: The phrase grounds Jesus' refusal to remain in Capernaum in purpose, not impulse. It should not be overused here as a standalone proof of preexistence.
Application implications
- Seasons of obvious usefulness can also be seasons of distorted priorities; prayer is needed to keep demand from becoming direction.
- Christian service should not be organized only by whoever is nearest, loudest, or most responsive; it must answer to Christ-given purpose.
- Works of mercy should remain tied to verbal witness rather than becoming a self-contained ministry identity.
- Even well-meaning coworkers may carry real pressures that are understandable but not decisive.
- Moving toward less concentrated or less celebrated fields of labor may be obedience rather than failure.
Enrichment applications
- Demand, even when tied to genuine need, does not authenticate a calling by itself.
- Churches should not separate proclamation from spiritual conflict as though they belonged to unrelated ministries.
- The prayer highlighted here is not retreat for its own sake but communion that clarifies public obedience.
Warnings
- Do not build an entire theology of prayer from this brief narrative alone; Mark's focus is prayer in relation to mission direction.
- Do not overread 'came out' as a full statement of preexistence in this context; the phrase here functions first within the narrative flow of ministry movement.
- Do not pit preaching against healing and exorcism as though Jesus valued one and dismissed the other; the passage orders them without severing them.
- Do not idealize solitude as an end in itself; in this unit solitude serves prayer and renewed outward mission.
Enrichment warnings
- Do not overdevelop the wilderness resonance into a full symbolic scheme; Mark's main point remains prayerful reorientation for mission.
- Do not turn the synagogue setting into background trivia. Its relevance is simply that Jesus' proclamation moves through Israel's ordinary communal gathering places.
- Do not present the broader reading of 'for this I came out' as if no conservative alternative exists; the narrower local sense is possible, though less likely in context.
Interpretive misread risks
Misreading: Making the paragraph mainly a lesson about private devotions or personal recharge.
Why It Happens: Jesus' early solitary prayer is memorable and can be detached from what follows.
Correction: The prayer matters here because it leads into a mission decision. The scene centers on resisting popularity as a guide and moving outward in accord with vocation.
Misreading: Using the passage to oppose preaching and healing/exorcism as though Jesus chose one and rejected the other.
Why It Happens: Verse 38 names preaching as the reason for going elsewhere.
Correction: Mark gives local priority to proclamation, but verse 39 keeps exorcism attached to the Galilean mission. The issue is order, not exclusion.
Misreading: Treating 'Everyone is looking for you' as self-evident proof that Jesus should stay and maximize success there.
Why It Happens: Modern ministry habits often equate concentrated demand with clear calling.
Correction: In this scene the report creates pressure, but Jesus does not treat that pressure as decisive. He answers to vocation clarified in prayer.
Misreading: Using 'for this I came out' to settle a larger doctrinal debate without regard to the immediate narrative function.
Why It Happens: The phrase sounds weighty, so later theological questions can be read back into it too quickly.
Correction: The wording certainly expresses purpose, and the broader missionary sense is likely in context. But here its first job is to explain why Jesus continues through Galilee instead of returning to Capernaum.