Resource > Expository Notes on the Bible (Constable) >  Mark >  Exposition >  VII. The Servant's passion ministry chs. 14--15 >  B. The Servant's endurance of suffering 14:53-15:47 >  3. Jesus' crucifixion, death, and burial 15:21-47 > 
The death of Jesus 15:33-41 (cf. Matt. 27:45-56; Luke 23:44-49; John 19:28-30) 
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Mark's account of Jesus' death included five climactic events: the darkness, two of Jesus' cries, the tearing of the temple veil, and the Roman centurion's confession. All of these events happened during the last three of the six hours of Jesus' crucifixion.

"For the first three of Jesus' six hours on the cross he suffered in daylight at the hands of humans (15:21-32). In the darkness of the second three hours He suffered at the hands of God."396

15:33 All three synoptic evangelists recorded the supernatural darkness that covered all of Judah from 12:00 noon to 3:00 p.m. None of them explained it. They all evidently viewed it as a sign of God's judgment on Jesus (cf. Isa. 5:25-30; 9:9-10; Joel 2:31; 3:14-15; Amos 8:9-10; Mic. 3:5-7; Zeph. 1:14-15). The Father withdrew the light of His presence from His Son during the hours when Jesus bore the guilt of the world's sins (Isa. 53:5-6; 2 Cor. 5:21). Perhaps darkness covered the whole land of Israel because it also symbolized God's judgment on Israel for rejecting His Son.397

15:34 This cry came at the ninth hour, namely 3:00 p.m. Jesus' cry expressed what the darkness visualized. These are the only words that Jesus spoke on the cross that Mark recorded. Jesus cried out loudly, not weakly with His last available energy. His great agony of soul was responsible for this cry. Mark recorded Jesus' words in Aramaic. Probably Jesus spoke in Aramaic in view of the crowd's reaction (cf. Matt. 27:46-47).

"The depths of the saying are too deep to be plumbed, but the least inadequate interpretations are those which find in it a sense of desolation in which Jesus felt the horror of sin so deeply that for a time the closeness of His communion with the Father was obscured."398

Jesus quoted Psalm 22:1. That is why He expressed His agony of separation as a question. Jesus was not asking God for an answer. As Jesus used this verse, it expressed an affirmation of His relationship to God as His Father and an acknowledgment that the Father had abandoned Him. God abandoned Jesus in the judicial sense that He focused His wrath on the Son (cf. 14:36). Jesus bore God's curse and His judgment for sin (cf. Deut. 21:22-23; 2 Cor. 5:21; Gal. 3:13). God, who cannot look on sin (Hab. 1:13), turned His back, so to speak, on Jesus who bore that sin in His own body on the cross. Jesus experienced separation from God when He took the place of sinners (10:45; Rom. 5:8; 1 Pet. 2:24; 3:18).

Even though the physical sufferings that Jesus experienced were great, the spiritual agony that He underwent as the Lamb of God taking away the sins of the world was infinitely greater. We need to remember this when we meditate on Jesus' death, for example at the Lord's Supper.

15:35-36 Elijah had delivered several people in distress during his ministry. It is difficult to know if the bystanders did what they did because they sincerely misunderstood Jesus or if they were cruelly twisting His words to persecute Him further. In either case they did wound Him deeper. Perhaps one of the soldiers gave Jesus the sour wine (Gr. oxos) to prolong His life so the onlookers could see if Elijah would come and help Jesus.399In Mark's account the soldier spoke (v. 36) and in Matthew's the people did (Matt. 27:49). Both evangelists were undoubtedly accurate.

15:37 Jesus' loud cry indicates that this was not the last gasp of an exhausted man. Jesus' cry was a shout of victory. He announced, "It is finished!"(John 19:30). Then He dismissed His spirit (Matt. 27:50; John 19:30). Normally it took as long as two or three days for crucified people to die.400Jesus' relatively short period of suffering on the cross amazed Pilate (v. 44).

"His comparatively early death was not due to His physical sufferings alone, and it is a mistake to center major attention on the physical agonies of our Lord."401

15:38 All the synoptic writers also recorded this symbolic act. They did not explain it, but the writer of the Epistle to the Hebrews did (Heb. 6:19-20; 9:1-14; 10:19-22). It represented God's opening a way into His presence by the death of His Son. The veil was probably the one that separated the most holy place from the holy place. Probably priests who became believers in Jesus reported the event (cf. Acts 6:7). Priests would have been preparing the evening sacrifices in the temple when this event occurred near 3:00 p.m.

15:39 The centurion (Gr. kentyrion, a transliteration of the Latin centuriothat only Mark used) was the soldier in charge of Jesus' crucifixion (cf. v. 44).402He spoke more truly than he probably knew. He evidently meant that Jesus was a righteous man (Luke 23:47). Still his words spoken as he stood directly in front of Jesus as He died were literally true. His statement constitutes the climax of Mark's demonstration that Jesus was God's divine Son (cf. 1:1; 8:29-30). The torn veil was a Jewish testimony to Jesus' identity, and the centurion's confession was a Gentile testimony to the same thing. Taken together they provide a double witness that Jesus was the Son of God.

15:40-41 Matthew referred to the same three women, and Luke mentioned them generally.403They, like the soldiers, also witnessed Jesus' death. Their loving example contrasts with the enemies of Jesus who ridiculed Him. However verse 41 is unique to Mark. It should be a special encouragement to all female disciples. Many women followed Jesus and served Him throughout His ministry. John mentioned that he was present at the crucifixion (John 19:26-27), but none of the other male disciples appear to have been there. Women can serve Jesus as disciples as well as men. Their roles may be somewhat different from their male counterparts' now as they were then, but their ministry is just as important. Mark's introduction of these three women prepares for their roles as witnesses of Jesus' burial (v. 47) and resurrection (16:1-8).

Some Women Who Observed the Crucifixion

Mary Magdalene

Mary Magdalene

Mary Magdalene

Jesus' mother (Mary)

Mary the mother of James and Joseph =

Mary the mother of James the less and Joses =

Mary the wife of Clopas

Mother of Zebedee's sons =

Salome =

Jesus' mother's sister



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