Mark 13:32
Summary for Mark 13:32-37: 13:32-37 a Just as 13:28-31 b seems to pick up the theme of 13:5-23 c in speaking of the destruction of Jerusalem, 13:32-37 d apparently picks up the theme of 13:24-27 e and speaks of the coming of the Son of Man. An introductory warning against speculations concerning the end time (13:32 f) is followed by a warning to be on guard because one cannot know the time of the end (13:33 g). A story illustrates the need to be ready for the Lord’s return (13:34 h), and its application repeats the need to watch lest they be found unprepared (13:35-36 i); the concluding warning is also for watchfulness (13:37 j). 13:32 k The statement no one knows the day or hour (cp. Acts 1:7 l) introduces the warning to be watchful (Mark 13:33-37 m) and discourages speculation.• Jesus refers to himself as the Son, higher than the angels in an ascending hierarchy that begins with no one and ends with only the Father. The authenticity of this saying is assured by the limitation it places on the Son’s knowledge, something the early church would not likely have imagined—in the apocryphal gospels (about AD 150–300), the tendency is to exalt and magnify Jesus’ divine attributes (e.g., see the Infancy Gospel of Thomas). In the miracle of the incarnation, Jesus experienced limitation (Mark 10:40 n; 13:32 o). If the Son himself did not know the day or hour, Christians should refrain from seeking such knowledge for themselves.
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