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Mark 5

The Gerasene Demoniac, Jairus’ Daughter, and the Woman with a Hemorrhage

Three miracles that reveal Jesus’ power over demons, disease, and death

📖 Analysis of Mark 5

Mark 5:1
"Context and introduction to chapter 5"
Mark 5 fits within the shortest and most urgent Gospel of the four. Mark, likely writing for a Roman audience, presents Jesus as the powerful Servant of God—a man of action. Mark’s favorite word is euthys ('immediately'), which appears over 40 times, creating a fast-paced narrative rhythm. In this chapter, we see another aspect of Jesus’ mission that reveals his authority over sin, disease, demons, and death. Mark is not interested in long theological dissertations—he shows who Jesus is through what he does.
Mark 5 — The Suffering Servant
"The theology of service and the cross in Mark"
One of Mark’s central themes is the theology of the cross—the revelation of God not in power and glory, but in weakness and suffering. Jesus in Mark is the Servant of Isaiah 42-53: he does not come to be served but to serve and to give his life as a ransom for many (Mark 10:45). This chapter contributes to this portrait by showing Jesus in action—healing, teaching, confronting—always moving toward the cross. Discipleship in Mark is following Jesus on the path of service and the cross, not on the path of glory and power.