Mark
When Your Hometown Doesn't Believe the Hype
Mark 6 — Rejection, John the Baptist, feeding 5000, and walking on water
7 min read
📢 Chapter 6 — No Prophet in His Hometown 🏘️
had been on an absolute tear — healing people, casting out , teaching with authority nobody had ever seen. So naturally, He decided to go back home to . You'd think the hometown crowd would be hyped. You'd think wrong.
What followed was one of the wildest chapters in : hometown rejection, a power-up for the , a brutal flashback to death, a lunch that fed thousands, and Jesus literally walking on water. Buckle up.
The Hometown That Wasn't Buying It 🏠
Jesus rolled back into Nazareth with His . On the , He started teaching in the , and people were initially blown away — but not in a good way.
"Where did this guy get all this? What's with this wisdom? How is He doing these Miracles? Isn't this just the carpenter? Mary's son? We know His brothers — James, Joses, Judas, Simon. His sisters are literally right here with us."
They couldn't handle it. They knew Him as the kid who grew up down the street, and they refused to see Him as anything more. They were offended by Him.
Jesus said: "A is honored everywhere — except in his hometown, among his relatives, and in his own household."
And here's the wildest detail: Jesus couldn't do many Miracles there. Not because He lost His power, but because their unbelief shut the door. He healed a few sick people, but that was it. The text says He actually marveled at their unbelief. The was shook — not by , but by the lack of it. Then He moved on and kept teaching in the surrounding villages. 💯
The Disciples Go on Their First Mission 🚀
Jesus called the twelve and started sending them out — two by two — with authority over unclean spirits. But His packing list was wild:
Jesus said: "Take nothing for the journey except a staff. No bread, no bag, no money. Wear sandals. Don't pack a second outfit.
Jesus said: When you enter a house, stay there until you leave that town. And if any place won't receive you or listen to you — shake the dust off your feet as a testimony against them."
No backup plan. No emergency fund. No extra drip. Jesus was teaching them to rely completely on God's provision and the hospitality of people who received the message. The dust-shaking wasn't petty — it was a prophetic act declaring that the town had been warned.
So the went out and proclaimed that people should . They cast out Demons and healed the sick with oil. These twelve guys who had been watching Jesus do the work were now doing it themselves. The was spreading. ⚡
Herod's Guilty Conscience 👑
Meanwhile, Jesus' name was getting big enough that it reached . And the rumors were flying:
"It's John the Baptist — he's been raised from the dead. That's why he can do all this."
Others were saying He was . Others said He was a like the old-school ones. But Herod had a very specific reaction:
"It's John. The one I beheaded. He's back."
That's the voice of a man whose conscience won't let him rest. He wasn't making a theological argument — he was confessing out loud what was living rent free in his head. And what Mark does next is pull us into a flashback to explain exactly why. 💀
The Death of John the Baptist ⚔️
This section is heavy. There's no softening it.
Herod had arrested John the Baptist and thrown him in prison. The reason: John had been calling Herod out publicly for marrying Herodias, his brother wife. John kept saying it plainly:
"It is not lawful for you to have your brother's wife."
Herodias wanted John dead for it. She carried that grudge. But Herod was conflicted — he feared John because he knew John was a and holy man. He actually kept John safe. And when he listened to John speak, he was deeply perplexed but kept coming back to hear more. There was something about the truth that both disturbed and drew him.
Then came Herod's birthday banquet — a massive gathering of nobles, military commanders, and the leading men of . Herodias's daughter came in and danced, and Herod was so pleased that he made a reckless vow in front of everyone:
"Ask me for whatever you want, and I'll give it to you. Up to half my kingdom."
The girl went to her mother and asked what she should request. Herodias didn't hesitate:
"The head of John the Baptist."
The daughter rushed back to Herod:
"I want you to give me — right now — the head of John the Baptist on a platter."
Herod was deeply grieved. But he'd made the oath in front of his guests, and his pride wouldn't let him back down. So he sent an executioner. John was beheaded in prison, his head brought on a platter, given to the girl, and the girl gave it to her mother.
When John's heard, they came, took his body, and laid it in a tomb.
There's no punchline here. A man who spoke truth to power was murdered because of a grudge, a reckless promise, and a man too proud to do the right thing in front of his friends. Caring about what people think more than what God thinks will cost you everything. 💔
Rest That Didn't Last Long 🛶
The came back from their mission trips and told Jesus everything — all they'd done and taught. And Jesus saw they were running on empty:
Jesus said: "Come away by yourselves to a quiet place and rest for a while."
They couldn't even find time to eat — people were constantly coming and going. So they got in a boat and headed for a remote spot.
But the crowds saw them leaving, recognized them, and literally ran on foot from all the surrounding towns — and beat them there. When Jesus stepped off the boat and saw this massive crowd that had chased them down, He didn't get frustrated. He didn't send them away. He had compassion on them, because they were like sheep without a shepherd. And He began to teach them.
That's the heart of Jesus. Even when He was heading toward rest, the needs of people moved Him. He saw the crowd not as an interruption but as people who were lost and looking for someone to lead them. 🫶
Five Loaves and Two Fish Feed Thousands 🍞🐟
It was getting late and the were doing the math:
"This is the middle of nowhere and it's getting dark. Send these people to the villages so they can buy food."
Reasonable suggestion. But Jesus hit them with:
Jesus said: "You give them something to eat."
The were like:
"Should we go spend two hundred denarii on bread? That's like eight months of wages!"
(Quick context: a denarius was a full day's wage. Two hundred denarii was a massive amount of money — and they didn't even have it.)
Jesus said: "How many loaves do you have? Go and see."
They came back with the report: five loaves and two fish. That's it. Jesus told everyone to sit down on the green grass in organized groups of hundreds and fifties. Then He took those five loaves and two fish, looked up to , said a blessing, broke the bread, and handed it to the to distribute.
And they all ate. Every single person was satisfied. They collected the leftovers afterward — twelve baskets full of broken pieces. Twelve. More left over than they started with. And the number who ate? Five thousand men, not even counting women and children.
Jesus didn't need their resources to be enough. He just needed them to bring what they had. He does the multiplying. 💯
Walking on Water 🌊
Right after the feeding, Jesus made His get in the boat and head to while He dismissed the crowd. Then He went up on a mountain to pray — alone.
By evening, the boat was out in the middle of the and Jesus was still on land. He could see them struggling hard against the wind, barely making progress. Around the fourth watch of the night — that's somewhere between 3 and 6 AM — He came to them, walking on the water.
He actually meant to pass by them. But when the saw a figure walking on the sea, they thought it was a ghost and started screaming. Every single one of them saw it. They were terrified.
Jesus said: "Take heart. It is I. Do not be afraid."
He climbed into the boat. The wind stopped immediately. And the ? They were utterly astounded.
Mark doesn't let us off easy here. After watching Jesus feed five thousand people with a sack lunch, the still couldn't process what they were seeing. The one who multiplies bread is the same one who walks on waves. He's not just a great teacher — He has authority over creation itself. ⚡
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