Commentary
Jesus returns to Nazareth and teaches in the synagogue. The hearers register both his wisdom and the reports of his mighty works, yet they interpret him through the categories of village familiarity—his trade, his mother, his siblings, his local place among them—and they take offense at him. Jesus answers with a proverb about a prophet dishonored in his own circle, and Mark links the thin pattern of miracles there directly to their unbelief. Coming after the faith-filled scenes in Mark 5, the episode shows how amazement can harden into rejection rather than trust.
Mark 6:1-6 portrays Nazareth’s rejection of Jesus as a case where ordinary familiarity becomes the ground of offense: the people stumble over the one they think they already know, and their unbelief accompanies a markedly reduced display of his mighty works.
6:1 Now Jesus left that place and came to his hometown, and his disciples followed him. 6:2 When the Sabbath came, he began to teach in the synagogue. Many who heard him were astonished, saying, "Where did he get these ideas? And what is this wisdom that has been given to him? What are these miracles that are done through his hands? 6:3 Isn't this the carpenter, the son of Mary and brother of James, Joses, Judas, and Simon? And aren't his sisters here with us?" And so they took offense at him. 6:4 Then Jesus said to them, "A prophet is not without honor except in his hometown, and among his relatives, and in his own house." 6:5 He was not able to do a miracle there, except to lay his hands on a few sick people and heal them. 6:6 And he was amazed because of their unbelief. Then he went around among the villages and taught.
Observation notes
- The crowd’s response begins with astonishment but does not mature into faith; in Mark, amazement by itself is not yet discipleship.
- Their questions in 6:2 are not neutral inquiry. The sequence moves from marveling at wisdom and miracles to dismissing Jesus through social familiarity.
- The wording of 6:3 anchors their offense in ordinary village knowledge: trade, mother, brothers, sisters, and local presence.
- The final clause of 6:3 is decisive: the issue is not mere confusion but scandalized rejection.
- Jesus’ proverb identifies him as a prophet and locates the dishonor most sharply within concentric circles of belonging: hometown, relatives, household.
- Verse 5 does not say Jesus performed no healings; it distinguishes between a few healings and the absence of a broader display of mighty works.
- Verse 6 reverses expected roles: the people are astonished at Jesus in 6:2, and Jesus is amazed at their unbelief in 6:6.
- The unit follows two prominent faith episodes in Mark 5, creating a strong narrative contrast between faith that receives and unbelief that refuses.
Structure
- Jesus comes to his hometown with his disciples following him (6:1).
- On the Sabbath he teaches in the synagogue, and the listeners react with astonishment framed by skeptical questions about the source of his wisdom and works (6:2).
- Their skepticism crystallizes in their appeal to Jesus’ ordinary family and social identity, and they take offense at him (6:3).
- Jesus interprets the moment with a proverb about prophetic dishonor in one’s hometown, relatives, and household (6:4).
- Mark reports the practical consequence: only a few healings occur there, and the broader sphere of mighty works is absent because of unbelief (6:5-6a).
- Jesus then moves on through surrounding villages teaching, which keeps the mission advancing despite local rejection (6:6b).
Key terms
ekplessomai
Strong's: G1605
Gloss: to be amazed, astounded
The term helps show that amazement is an ambiguous response in Mark; wonder can coexist with spiritual refusal.
sophia
Strong's: G4678
Gloss: wisdom, skill in understanding
Their unwillingness to accept the legitimacy of this wisdom exposes the collision between divine gifting and human social expectations.
dynameis
Strong's: G1411
Gloss: powers, miracles
The term links Jesus’ miracles to divine power and shows that the issue is not inability in the abstract but the relational context of unbelief.
skandalizo
Strong's: G4624
Gloss: to stumble over, be offended by
This verb marks Jesus himself as the stumbling point; their problem is not lack of evidence but rejection of his person.
prophetes
Strong's: G4396
Gloss: prophet, spokesman of God
The saying places Nazareth’s response within the wider biblical pattern of God’s messengers being dishonored by their own people.
apistia
Strong's: G570
Gloss: unbelief, lack of faith
This term governs the whole unit by identifying the moral-spiritual barrier behind the offense.
Syntactical features
rhetorical question sequence
Textual signal: "Where did he get these ideas? ... what is this wisdom ... ? What are these miracles ... ? Isn't this the carpenter ... ?"
Interpretive effect: The string of questions reveals escalating skepticism rather than open-minded investigation; the syntax performs their movement from astonishment to dismissal.
adversative narrative turn
Textual signal: The movement from astonishment in 6:2 to "and so they took offense at him" in 6:3
Interpretive effect: This turn prevents reading the initial amazement positively; Mark directs the reader to see the response as fundamentally hostile.
exceptive proverb formulation
Textual signal: "A prophet is not without honor except..."
Interpretive effect: The exceptive form sharpens the irony: the very place where honor might be expected becomes the place of dishonor.
imperfective description of inability
Textual signal: "He was not able to do a miracle there, except..."
Interpretive effect: The wording describes what, in that situation, did not occur as the ordinary pattern of Jesus’ ministry, while the exception clause guards against a metaphysical reading of absolute incapacity.
causal link
Textual signal: "And he was amazed because of their unbelief"
Interpretive effect: Mark explicitly connects Jesus’ amazement and the restricted miraculous activity to unbelief, so the theological explanation is supplied by the text itself.
Textual critical issues
"carpenter" or "carpenter's son" in 6:3
Variants: Most witnesses read "Is not this the carpenter?" while a smaller strand reflects "the carpenter's son," likely influenced by Matthew 13:55.
Preferred reading: "Is not this the carpenter?"
Interpretive effect: The preferred reading intensifies the townspeople’s appeal to Jesus’ own ordinary trade rather than merely his family background.
Rationale: The harder reading best explains the rise of the softened alternative and is strongly supported in Markan transmission.
spelling of Joses/Joseph
Variants: The brother’s name appears in forms equivalent to Joses or Joseph in the manuscript tradition.
Preferred reading: Joses
Interpretive effect: The difference does not materially change interpretation.
Rationale: Joses is well supported and coheres with Mark’s usage elsewhere.
Old Testament background
Jeremiah 11:21
Connection type: pattern
Note: Jeremiah faces hostility from his own local setting, supplying a prophetic pattern that illumines Jesus’ saying about dishonor at home.
Jeremiah 12:6
Connection type: pattern
Note: The prophet’s own household proves unreliable, which parallels Jesus’ mention of relatives and household in the proverb.
Isaiah 53:2-3
Connection type: thematic_background
Note: The Servant’s unimpressive social appearance and rejection by men resonate with Nazareth’s inability to see beyond Jesus’ ordinary origins.
Interpretive options
Why was Jesus "not able" to do mighty works in Nazareth?
- The statement expresses a real relational-moral limitation: in the setting of entrenched unbelief Jesus did not act in the fuller miracle pattern typical elsewhere, though not because divine power was absent.
- The statement means only that Jesus chose not to do miracles there, with "not able" functioning as a softened idiom for unwillingness.
- The statement implies that unbelief somehow depleted or overpowered Jesus’ miraculous ability.
Preferred option: The statement expresses a real relational-moral limitation: in the setting of entrenched unbelief Jesus did not act in the fuller miracle pattern typical elsewhere, though not because divine power was absent.
Rationale: Verse 5 must be read with the exception clause and verse 6. Jesus still heals a few people, so the text cannot mean absolute inability. Yet Mark does not merely say Jesus was unwilling; he ties the reduced pattern of mighty works to unbelief in a way that is stronger than a bare decision not to act.
What is the force of calling Jesus "the son of Mary"?
- It is simply an identifier based on local knowledge, with no necessary insult intended beyond the broader dismissive tone.
- It may carry a derogatory edge by bypassing the father’s name and so contribute to the contempt of the scene.
Preferred option: It is simply an identifier based on local knowledge, with no necessary insult intended beyond the broader dismissive tone.
Rationale: The text’s central point is their offense rooted in familiarity, not a coded slur. A derogatory nuance is possible, but the narrative does not require it to explain their rejection.
Does the proverb primarily identify Jesus as a prophet only, or more broadly as God’s rejected messenger?
- It identifies Jesus straightforwardly within the line of rejected prophets.
- It uses prophetic language more broadly and analogically, without reducing Jesus’ identity to that office alone.
Preferred option: It uses prophetic language more broadly and analogically, without reducing Jesus’ identity to that office alone.
Rationale: Within this scene the proverb clearly frames Jesus as a rejected prophet-like messenger, but Mark’s Gospel presents him as more than a prophet. The local saying should not flatten his larger identity.
Conner principles audit
context
Relevance: high
Note: The immediate contrast with Mark 5 controls interpretation: faith there accompanies healing and life, while unbelief here accompanies offense and restricted mighty works.
mention_principles
Relevance: medium
Note: The text mentions Jesus’ family and trade only to explain Nazareth’s dismissive reasoning; these details should not be expanded into speculative biographies beyond their narrative function.
christological
Relevance: high
Note: Jesus is interpreted through his own prophetic proverb, yet the reader must hold this with Mark’s broader presentation of him as more than a prophet; the saying is locally explanatory, not exhaustively definitional.
moral
Relevance: high
Note: Unbelief is treated as culpable resistance, not as a harmless lack of information. This prevents sentimental readings of Nazareth’s reaction as merely understandable familiarity.
symbolic_typical_parabolic
Relevance: medium
Note: Nazareth functions typologically as a preview of wider rejection of Jesus and, by extension, of the rejection his messengers will face in the next unit, but the scene remains a real historical episode.
Theological significance
- Jesus cannot be rightly measured by ordinary social knowledge; knowing his family and trade does not amount to knowing who he is.
- In this scene unbelief is not mere uncertainty but resistance to the wisdom and power already on display.
- Jesus stands in the scriptural pattern of God’s messengers being dishonored by their own people, even while Mark’s wider portrait of him exceeds the category of prophet.
- The restricted pattern of mighty works in Nazareth shows that Jesus’ miracles are not presented as detached displays available apart from the moral reality of response to him.
- Jesus does not remain stalled in Nazareth’s refusal; he continues teaching in the surrounding villages.
Philosophical appreciation
Exegetical and linguistic: The scene turns on a sharp movement from astonishment to offense. The villagers ask where Jesus received such wisdom and power, but instead of following those questions toward recognition, they answer them with local knowledge about his trade and family. Mark’s wording exposes a familiar error: true facts are used to avoid the larger truth those facts can no longer contain.
Biblical theological: Jesus’ proverb places Nazareth within the biblical pattern of rejected prophetic ministry. In the immediate narrative, the episode stands against the trust shown in chapter 5 and anticipates the mixed reception that will meet the Twelve in the next scene.
Metaphysical: Divine power here is personal and morally situated, not mechanical. Jesus’ mighty works are acts of God’s reign, and Nazareth’s unbelief is treated as a real condition affecting how that power is manifested in their midst.
Psychological Spiritual: The passage shows how people defend themselves against revelation by shrinking it to manageable proportions. Because they know where Jesus came from, they assume they have explained him. Familiarity becomes a strategy of refusal.
Divine Perspective: Jesus’ amazement at their unbelief shows that this response is not trivial. The village does not merely misunderstand a gifted local teacher; it refuses the significance of the one speaking and acting before them.
Category: character
Note: God’s truth is not altered by local dismissal; Jesus remains what his wisdom and works show him to be.
Category: works_providence_glory
Note: Jesus’ mighty works are ordered expressions of divine power, not spectacles detached from the response they evoke.
Category: revelatory_self_disclosure
Note: God makes himself known through Jesus’ teaching and deeds, yet that disclosure can be resisted even where Jesus is most historically familiar.
- Jesus is powerful enough to heal, yet Nazareth’s unbelief coincides with a restricted pattern of mighty works.
- The villagers possess accurate information about Jesus’ ordinary life, yet that accuracy becomes the vehicle of blindness.
- Astonishment is not the same as faith; wonder may stop at offense.
Enrichment summary
Nazareth’s rejection is shaped by village status logic: the people treat Jesus’ household, trade, and kinship network as sufficient grounds to deny the authority evident in his teaching and works. His proverb therefore names more than hometown awkwardness; it locates their response within the recurring pattern of dishonoring God’s messenger. Mark’s statement that Jesus "was not able" to do a miracle there is best read as a real restriction in the setting of communal unbelief—stronger than mere reluctance, yet not a loss of divine power.
Traditions of men check
The assumption that exposure to Christian things naturally produces genuine faith.
Why it conflicts: Nazareth had extensive familiarity with Jesus’ human context, yet that familiarity fed contempt rather than trust.
Textual pressure point: The villagers know his trade and family and still "took offense at him."
Caution: This should not be turned into disdain for ordinary church upbringing; the point is that familiarity without faith can harden into resistance.
The slogan that miracles are always available if divine power is present, regardless of the moral and faith context.
Why it conflicts: Mark explicitly links the reduced pattern of mighty works in Nazareth to unbelief.
Textual pressure point: "He was not able to do a miracle there, except..." followed by "because of their unbelief."
Caution: The text should not be abused to blame every case of suffering on insufficient faith; the passage addresses a communal posture of rejection in this setting.
The reflex that Jesus can be fully understood through his social background or merely human credentials.
Why it conflicts: The townspeople use true biographical facts to dismiss the divine significance of his wisdom and works.
Textual pressure point: Their catalog of his trade and relatives leads directly to offense.
Caution: The corrective is not anti-history or anti-embodiment, but refusal to reduce Jesus to ordinary categories.
Thought-world reading
Dynamic: honor_shame
Why It Matters: Calling Jesus "the carpenter," "son of Mary," and brother of named siblings places him within a known social map. The problem is not bare biography but the use of that biography to rule out his authority.
Western Misread: A modern reader may treat these references as neutral small-town detail.
Interpretive Difference: The scene reads instead as a status-laden refusal to honor the authority evident in Jesus’ words and deeds.
Dynamic: covenantal_identity
Why It Matters: Jesus’ proverb frames the rejection in terms of hometown, relatives, and household, echoing the scriptural pattern in which God’s messenger is resisted from within his own communal bonds.
Western Misread: The episode can be reduced to private skepticism or family tension.
Interpretive Difference: Mark presents a shared local posture of unbelief, which helps explain why the setting as a whole is marked by diminished mighty works.
Idioms and figures
Expression: A prophet is not without honor except in his hometown, and among his relatives, and in his own house
Category: idiom
Explanation: This is proverb-like speech. The point is not that prophets are always honored everywhere else, but that the very circle where honor might naturally be expected often becomes the place of sharpest dishonor.
Interpretive effect: Jesus interprets the Nazareth episode through the biblical pattern of rejected prophetic ministry rather than through mere hometown familiarity.
Expression: they took offense at him
Category: idiom
Explanation: The expression carries the sense of being scandalized or stumbling over him. Jesus himself becomes the point of collision; his ordinary known identity becomes the reason they refuse his true significance.
Interpretive effect: The problem is not insufficient information but rejection provoked by who Jesus proves to be.
Expression: He was not able to do a miracle there, except to lay his hands on a few sick people and heal them
Category: other
Explanation: The wording is stronger than a bare statement that Jesus chose not to act, yet the exception clause forbids reading it as absolute incapacity. It describes a real moral-relational restriction in that setting of hardened unbelief.
Interpretive effect: The verse should be read as contextual limitation of ministry expression, not depletion of Christ’s power and not a denial that he remained able to heal.
Application implications
- Long exposure to Jesus’ name can produce either faith or contempt disguised as familiarity; communities should examine which response has taken root.
- Those who teach or bear witness should expect resistance not only from distant opponents but also from people who assume they already know what will be said.
- Interest in Jesus, even strong admiration, should not be mistaken for faith; Nazareth hears, marvels, and still stumbles.
- Jesus must be interpreted by his wisdom and works, not reduced to manageable social labels.
- Rejection in one place need not end faithful ministry; Jesus leaves Nazareth and continues teaching elsewhere.
Enrichment applications
- Churches and families most familiar with Jesus’ story should ask whether that familiarity has deepened trust or dulled responsiveness.
- Historical and social facts about Jesus matter, but they must not be used to domesticate him and blunt the force of his authority.
- Rejection from one’s own circle does not by itself prove unfaithfulness; in this scene it belongs to the recognizable pattern of resistance to God’s messenger.
Warnings
- Do not press verse 5 into a theory that unbelief nullifies divine omnipotence; the exception clause shows Jesus still healed and the text is describing this ministry context, not denying his power.
- Do not flatten Jesus’ proverb into a complete christology; it explains this rejection scene in prophetic terms without exhausting Mark’s presentation of Jesus.
- Do not overstate the phrase "son of Mary" as certainly derogatory; the tone is dismissive overall, but the insult level of that expression remains debated.
- Do not treat astonishment in Mark as equivalent to faith; the narrative repeatedly distinguishes amazement from true reception.
Enrichment warnings
- Do not overstate "son of Mary" as certainly derogatory here; the dismissive tone is clear without making that phrase carry more than the text requires.
- Do not turn village honor-shame background into a total explanation that replaces Mark’s explicit emphasis on unbelief.
- Do not let prophetic language here flatten Mark’s broader christology; Jesus is prophetically rejected, but Mark presents him as more than a prophet.
Interpretive misread risks
Misreading: Reducing the scene to the slogan "familiarity breeds contempt."
Why It Happens: The hometown setting is immediately relatable, so readers can turn the passage into a general comment about envy or overfamiliarity.
Correction: Mark’s point is more specific: Nazareth uses ordinary social knowledge to dismiss the authority disclosed in Jesus’ wisdom and mighty works.
Misreading: Reading "He was not able" as if unbelief overpowered Jesus’ power.
Why It Happens: The language of inability is isolated from the exception clause and from Mark’s wider presentation of Jesus.
Correction: The verse describes a real restriction of ministry in that setting, not a collapse of Jesus’ power; he still heals a few people.
Misreading: Softening the verse until it means only that Jesus decided to do nothing there.
Why It Happens: Readers may try to protect Christology by turning inability into simple unwillingness.
Correction: Mark’s wording says more than that. The text is best read as describing a genuine moral-relational limitation in this context, without implying any ontological weakness in Jesus.
Misreading: Using the passage as a formula to explain every instance of non-healing by lack of faith.
Why It Happens: Readers import a universal rule from the connection between unbelief and reduced mighty works here.
Correction: The scene concerns Nazareth’s communal posture of rejection. It should not be converted into a comprehensive explanation for all suffering or every case where healing does not occur.