A Light to the Nations - Scripture Analysis Podcast

St. Anger.

8 min · 27. mar. 2026
episode St. Anger. cover

Beskrivelse

Don’t Try This At Home. If you were to ask someone if Jesus ever got angry, they would probably say yes and refer to the story where he overturns the tables of the money changers. But that’s not accurate. All four of the gospels include a passage about Jesus overturning tables but in none of them does it say anything about his being angry. The noun ὀργῆς (orgēs), anger, appears in Mark 3:5, and it’s a unique example of this word being applied to Jesus. When we are accustomed to understanding anger as sin, then this is a problem. In the gospels Jesus is presented like Isaiah’s suffering servant, one  who does the will of his God and father without arguing, complaining or trying to figure it out. Moreover, in the gospels, as in Isaiah, it is the will of the Lord that his servant is bruised, is smitten. For no reason. In other words, he didn’t do anything to incur being struck. He is faultless, blameless  - without sin. How then do we reconcile that with this passage from the Gospel of Mark?   Join me in a discussion of Mark 3:1-6. Notes: Matthew 5:21-22 ὀργῆς (orgēs) - anger Abba Poemen of Egypt. “Voodoo Who” and “Run Amok” performed by the Flesh.

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episode The Next Generation. cover

The Next Generation.

The Next Generation. In Scripture, the mercy of God is expressed in his extending life to the next generation. We hear this demonstrated in two parallel stories in the Gospel of Mark: one in the raising of Jairus’ daughter in chapter 5, and the other in the healing of the man’s son with a mute spirit in chapter 9. In both of these, we hear the same terminology, presented in the same sequence, found later in the New Testament when Paul speaks of Jesus being raised from the dead and then standing in that raised position. When we understand how these two verbs, ἐγείρω and ἀνίστημι, work, we realize why the English translation of the Nicene Creed says (following 1 Thessalonians) that Christ “rose again from the dead.” Χριστός Ανέστη! Christ is risen! Notes: Joshua 4:5; 8:30-35 Mark 5:35-43; 7:24-30; 9:25-27 1 Corinthians 10:1-11 Galatians 1:1 1 Thessalonians 4:14 ἐγείρω - to raise up; to lift up ἀνίστημι - to be raised up, to be in the raised, standing position  Music courtesy of Crystal Ball rehearsals. Read the article on Substack -https://open.substack.com/pub/alighttothenations/p/the-next-generation?r=1wf6e9&utm_medium=ios [https://open.substack.com/pub/alighttothenations/p/the-next-generation?r=1wf6e9&utm_medium=ios]

18. apr. 202612 min
episode St. Anger. cover

St. Anger.

Don’t Try This At Home. If you were to ask someone if Jesus ever got angry, they would probably say yes and refer to the story where he overturns the tables of the money changers. But that’s not accurate. All four of the gospels include a passage about Jesus overturning tables but in none of them does it say anything about his being angry. The noun ὀργῆς (orgēs), anger, appears in Mark 3:5, and it’s a unique example of this word being applied to Jesus. When we are accustomed to understanding anger as sin, then this is a problem. In the gospels Jesus is presented like Isaiah’s suffering servant, one  who does the will of his God and father without arguing, complaining or trying to figure it out. Moreover, in the gospels, as in Isaiah, it is the will of the Lord that his servant is bruised, is smitten. For no reason. In other words, he didn’t do anything to incur being struck. He is faultless, blameless  - without sin. How then do we reconcile that with this passage from the Gospel of Mark?   Join me in a discussion of Mark 3:1-6. Notes: Matthew 5:21-22 ὀργῆς (orgēs) - anger Abba Poemen of Egypt. “Voodoo Who” and “Run Amok” performed by the Flesh.

27. mar. 20268 min
episode Abba, Father. cover

Abba, Father.

Episode 80 - Abba/Father. Your Status Has Changed But Your Behavior Cannot. Although the Lord’s Prayer does not appear in the Gospel of Mark, key elements of it are found in the passage where Jesus is praying In Gethsemane. One of these is the expression “Abba/Father,” a combination of Aramaic and Greek. Paul uses it in Galatians chapter 4 in his teaching on Christ as the son and heir of God. Using the example of adoption in the Roman regal system, he shows that those who receive the Spirit of the son also call God “Abba/Father;” they are sons of God, and thus, heirs of God through Christ. However, just as the heir who is a child is no better than a slave, so the inheritors of sonship through Christ. Their status may have changed from slaves to sons and thus heirs, but their behavior must still be that of a slave, in other words, they can’t do whatever they want; but must be bound to the will of their Kyrios, their Master,  till he returns. A discussion of Galatians 4:1-7. Notes: πειρασμός (peirasmos) - temptation, testing  Matthew 6:9-15 Mark 14:36 Luke 11:1-4 Romans 8:15-17 Photo by Juan Pablo Serrano : https://www.pexels.com/photo/father-and-child-s-hands-together-1250452/ Original music performed by Raphael Shaheen.

13. mar. 202610 min