{
  "kind": "commentary_unit",
  "branch": "new-testament-lite",
  "custom_id": "MRK_033",
  "book": "Mark",
  "title": "Teaching on greatness, causes of sin, and salt",
  "reference": "Mark 9:30 - Mark 9:50",
  "canonical_url": "https://ai-bible-commentary.com/commentary/new-testament-lite/mark/teaching-on-greatness-causes-of-sin-and-salt/",
  "full_url": "https://ai-bible-commentary.com/commentary/new-testament/mark/teaching-on-greatness-causes-of-sin-and-salt/",
  "overview_url": "https://ai-bible-commentary.com/commentary/book-overviews/mark/",
  "main_point": "Jesus teaches that greatness in his kingdom is not measured by status, control, or being first in the world's way. True greatness is seen in humble service, receiving the lowly in his name, honoring genuine work done in his name, and dealing radically with sin because the stakes are life in the kingdom or final judgment.",
  "commentary": "Jesus traveled quietly through Galilee because he was giving focused instruction to his disciples. He told them again that the Son of Man would be handed over, killed, and then rise after three days. This handing over includes human betrayal, yet it also unfolds within God's redemptive plan. That prediction of suffering sets the tone for the whole passage. Jesus is moving steadily toward betrayal, death, and resurrection, but the disciples still do not understand his path. They are afraid to ask, and their failure to grasp the meaning of the cross is immediately exposed by what follows.\n\nWhen they arrive at Capernaum, Jesus asks what they had been discussing on the road. They remain silent because they had been arguing about which of them was the greatest. Their silence reveals their guilt. Jesus answers their ambition directly: if anyone wants to be first, he must be last of all and servant of all. He does not deny greatness; he redefines it. In his kingdom, greatness is measured not by rank over others, but by willing lowliness and service to others.\n\nJesus then takes a small child, places the child among them, and embraces the child. The point is not mainly that children are innocent or sweet. In this setting, the child represents someone socially small, weak, and easily overlooked. Jesus says that whoever receives one such child in his name receives him, and not only him, but also the Father who sent him. In other words, the way a disciple treats the lowly is a direct test of his attitude toward Jesus and toward God. Receiving those who seem least important is not a minor social virtue. It is bound up with receiving Christ himself.\n\nJohn then raises another issue. The disciples had tried to stop a man from casting out demons in Jesus' name because he was not following with their group. This shows the real problem: not concern for Jesus' honor, but possessiveness and insider control. Jesus tells them not to stop him. Someone who genuinely does a mighty work in Jesus' name is not likely to turn around and speak evil of Jesus. Then Jesus gives the broader principle: whoever is not against us is for us. In this context, that is not a blanket approval of every ministry claim or every use of Jesus' name. It is a rebuke to jealous gatekeeping when real work is being done in his name outside the disciples' own circle.\n\nJesus goes on to say that even giving a cup of water to his followers because they belong to Christ will not go unrewarded. This widens the point. Not only dramatic acts such as exorcism, but even small acts of care done out of allegiance to Christ matter to God. The Lord sees and remembers ordinary faithfulness and mercy shown to those who bear his name.\n\nThe tone then becomes sharper. Jesus warns that if anyone causes one of these little ones who believe in him to sin, it would be better for that person to be drowned with a huge millstone around his neck. Here the little ones are not limited to literal children. The phrase is shaped by the child Jesus has just used as an example, but the key description is \"who believe in me.\" So the warning extends to vulnerable believers, especially those who are weak, dependent, or easily harmed. To trip up such believers spiritually is a dreadful offense that invites severe judgment.\n\nJesus then turns from causing others to stumble to dealing with one's own sin. If a hand, foot, or eye causes sin, it must be cut off or torn out. This is not a command for literal self-mutilation. Jesus is using vivid overstatement to demand ruthless action against whatever leads a person into sin. The hand, foot, and eye point to concrete avenues of action, movement, and desire. The meaning is that no source of sin should be tolerated. Anything that repeatedly becomes an occasion for rebellion must be removed decisively.\n\nJesus speaks this way because the comparison is between temporary loss now and final destiny later. It is better to enter life crippled than to go whole into hell. It is better to enter the kingdom of God with one eye than to be thrown into hell with two. In this passage, entering life and entering the kingdom are parallel ways of describing the final saving outcome. On the other side stands Gehenna, portrayed with the words from Isaiah about the worm that does not die and the fire that is not quenched. The imagery is not meant to provide a detailed physical map of the afterlife, but it does clearly communicate irreversible divine judgment. Jesus does not allow sin to be treated lightly, because the stakes are eternal.\n\nThe saying, \"Everyone will be salted with fire,\" is difficult and has been understood in different ways. In this context, the best reading is that every disciple undergoes purifying, consecrating severity, though some conservative interpreters hear a stronger note of judgment as well. The background of salt in sacrifice and covenant helps explain the image. Jesus is not changing the subject. He is summing up the hard demands of discipleship. Following him includes painful purification, moral seriousness, and a willingness to endure what preserves true faithfulness.\n\nHe ends by saying that salt is good, but if it loses its saltiness, it cannot be restored. Then he says, \"Have salt in yourselves, and be at peace with one another.\" The point is that disciples must possess this inward moral and covenantal seriousness themselves. If they lose that distinctiveness, they become spiritually useless. And this inner salt is tied to peace with one another. The rivalry, pride, and possessiveness seen earlier among the disciples are the opposite of what Jesus requires. Peace in the community does not come from ignoring holiness, but from humble, disciplined, Christ-centered discipleship.\n\nTaken together, this whole unit centers on life under Jesus' name. Jesus is on the way to the cross, and his disciples must learn that his kingdom is not built by status-seeking, tribal control, or indulgence of sin. It is marked by lowly service, welcome for the insignificant, generosity toward genuine work done in Christ's name, protection of vulnerable believers, radical resistance to sin, and a serious holiness that produces peace.",
  "key_truths": [
    "Jesus' prediction of his betrayal, death, and resurrection frames the whole passage and shows how misplaced the disciples' ambition really is.",
    "Greatness in Jesus' kingdom is not denied but redefined: the first must become last and servant of all.",
    "Receiving the lowly in Jesus' name is treated as receiving Jesus and the Father who sent him.",
    "Jesus rebukes sectarian jealousy; his name is not the private property of one circle of disciples.",
    "Even small acts done because someone belongs to Christ are noticed and rewarded by God.",
    "Causing vulnerable believers to stumble is a terribly serious sin and brings a severe warning.",
    "The commands to cut off hand, foot, or eye are hyperbolic, but they demand real and costly removal of sin's occasions.",
    "This passage presents a true contrast between entering life or the kingdom and being cast into final judgment.",
    "The closing sayings about salt call for inward holiness, purifying seriousness, and peace within the community."
  ],
  "warnings": [
    "Do not sentimentalize the child as though the main point were innocence; the child chiefly represents one who is socially small and easily overlooked.",
    "Do not use \"whoever is not against us is for us\" as a slogan to suspend all discernment; in context it rebukes jealous exclusivism toward genuine work done in Jesus' name.",
    "Do not reduce the warnings about hell to merely earthly consequences; Jesus is speaking with real final-stakes seriousness.",
    "Do not take the amputation sayings literally or use them to justify self-harm, but do not weaken them into vague good intentions either.",
    "The saying about being salted with fire is compact and debated, so it should be explained with humility even though its main thrust here is clear enough."
  ],
  "application": [
    "Measure spiritual greatness by service, not by recognition, influence, or position.",
    "Receive weak, unnoticed, and unimpressive believers as those identified with Christ himself.",
    "Resist group pride and jealous control when others are genuinely honoring Jesus and acting in his name.",
    "Do not despise small acts of help given to Christ's people; God remembers them.",
    "Take responsibility not to trip up weaker believers by your example, influence, or carelessness.",
    "Identify concrete habits, relationships, and access points that lead you into sin, and remove them decisively.",
    "Pursue peace in the church through humility and holiness, not through competition or shallow conflict management."
  ]
}