Mark 10:38-40
10:38 a The two brothers didn’t know what they were asking: To share in his glory, they must share in his suffering as servants.• to drink from the bitter cup: Drinking from a cup is often associated with suffering and death (Ps 75:8 b; Isa 51:17 c, 22 d; Jer 25:15 e; 49:12 f; Lam 4:21 g; see also Mark 14:24 h, 36 i).
• The baptism of suffering recalls Jesus’ total commitment to God’s calling at his baptism, and it speaks of the believer’s own baptism into Jesus’ death, burial, and resurrection (Rom 6:3-5 j; Col 2:12 k).
10:39 l James and John did indeed drink a bitter cup ... of suffering for Jesus. James died for his faith (Acts 12:1-5 m). John died an old man, having experienced persecution (Tertullian, The Soul 50; Jerome, Commentary on Galatians 6, 10). Yet the death of James and John was not the same as that of Jesus—no believer can die Jesus’ death as a vicarious sacrifice for the sins of the world (Mark 10:45 n) or experience the divine wrath as he did (15:34 o).
10:40 p Whatever James and John would experience, Jesus did not have the authority to grant their request. Only God the Father could (see also 13:32 q).
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