Learn Mark 4: What It Means and Why It Matters
Chapter Summary: The Point
Mark 4 presents Jesus teaching beside the sea, explaining the parable of the sower, describing the growth of God’s Kingdom, and calming a dangerous storm. Jesus speaks to the multitude in parables and then explains the meaning privately to the twelve and those around him. The chapter centers on hearing: some hearers lose the word, some receive it shallowly, some become unfruitful, and some bear abundant fruit. Jesus also teaches that hidden things will be revealed and that the measure a person uses in hearing will return upon them. The kingdom grows by God’s power, often beyond human observation or control. The chapter ends with Jesus commanding the wind and sea, revealing authority that belongs to God. The disciples move from fear of the storm to fear-filled wonder before Jesus.
Outline: The Structure of Mark 4
- Verses 1-9: Jesus teaches the parable of the sower by the sea.
- Verses 10-12: Jesus explains why he teaches in parables.
- Verses 13-20: Jesus interprets the soils and the word.
- Verses 21-25: Jesus teaches about the lamp, hidden things, and careful hearing.
- Verses 26-29: Jesus compares God’s Kingdom to seed growing secretly.
- Verses 30-34: Jesus compares God’s Kingdom to a mustard seed.
- Verses 35-41: Jesus crosses the sea and calms the storm.
Context: The Setting
Literary Flow and Genre: Mark is narrative Gospel. It announces Jesus Christ through his actions, teaching, suffering, death, and resurrection. The original readers were Christians who needed a clear account of Jesus’ identity, authority, and call to discipleship. Mark 4 belongs within the Galilean Ministry (Mark 1:14-8:26), where Jesus proclaims God’s Kingdom, gathers disciples, confronts evil, heals the sick, and reveals authority. More immediately, it forms a focused unit within The Parables and Sea Crossing (Mark 4:1-41). Readers should follow repeated words, especially hearing, seed, word, and fear, and should read the parables as concrete comparisons that reveal kingdom truth to receptive hearers.
History and Culture: Jesus teaches beside the Sea of Galilee, a setting that fits the large crowds already pressing around him in Mark’s early chapters. Sitting to teach was normal for a Jewish teacher, and the boat gives Jesus space from the crowd while allowing the multitude to hear. Agricultural images would be familiar to the audience: seed was scattered across varied ground, and harvest language carried both everyday and Old Testament theological weight. The chapter follows conflict about Jesus’ authority and family in Mark 3, then prepares for further displays of authority over demons, sickness, and death in Mark 5.
Mark 4 Commentary: The Walkthrough
Verses 1-9: The Sower
Jesus begins teaching again by the sea. The crowd is large enough that he enters a boat and teaches from it while the people stand on the land. Mark places the scene in public view, with Jesus addressing a multitude through parables.
Jesus opens with a command: “Listen! Behold, the farmer went out to sow.” The parable begins with hearing before it explains hearing. The farmer scatters seed across four kinds of ground: the road, rocky ground, thorns, and good ground. The different soils receive the same seed, yet the outcomes differ sharply.
The road is hard and exposed, so birds devour the seed. The rocky ground produces quick growth with no depth. The thorny ground allows growth, then chokes it. The good ground receives seed and produces thirty, sixty, and one hundred times as much. The emphasis falls on reception and fruitfulness, because the seed’s result reveals the condition of the ground. Jesus ends with the command, “Whoever has ears to hear, let him hear.” The command calls for spiritual attention, not mere exposure to religious speech.
Verses 10-12: The Mystery
When Jesus is alone, those around him with the twelve ask about the parables. Mark distinguishes the crowd from those who stay near Jesus and seek understanding. The disciples receive further explanation because they come to him for it.
Jesus says, “To you is given the mystery of God’s Kingdom.” In Scripture, a mystery is a divine truth God makes known. Here, the mystery concerns God’s Kingdom arriving in Jesus’ ministry through preaching, hiddenness, conflict, and eventual fruit. The kingdom is given to be received, and Jesus’ explanation is part of that gift.
Jesus then quotes Isaiah 6:9-10. Isaiah’s commission came in a setting of hardened hearers. Jesus uses that passage to explain why parables both reveal and judge. Receptive hearers press in and receive more. Hardened hearers remain outside with the truth in front of them and no understanding in them. The wording about seeing and hearing stresses accountable exposure. The problem lies in the hearer’s refusal, and the judgment is that continued resistance leaves the person with diminished perception.
Verses 13-20: The Soils
Jesus asks, “Don’t you understand this parable? How will you understand all of the parables?” The sower parable becomes a key for reading the others. Jesus identifies the seed directly: “The farmer sows the word.” The word is the message of God’s Kingdom that Jesus proclaims.
The road describes hearers who receive the word only externally. Satan immediately takes it away. Mark has already shown Satan opposing Jesus in the wilderness, and now Satan opposes the word in hearers. The battle over hearing is spiritual warfare, not only intellectual confusion.
The rocky places describe quick joy without root. These hearers respond immediately, then stumble when oppression or persecution arises because of the word. The repeated “immediately” matters. Fast reception can look promising, but endurance reveals depth.
The thorny ground describes divided hearing. Jesus names “the cares of this age,” “the deceitfulness of riches,” and “the lusts of other things.” These forces enter and choke the word. The good ground describes those who hear, accept, and bear fruit. The fruit varies, but all fruitful hearing produces real increase.
The soils trace three dangers:
- Satanic removal of the word from hardened hearers.
- Shallow joy that collapses under pressure.
- Divided desire that makes the word unfruitful.
Verses 21-25: The Lamp and Measure
Jesus turns from seed to light. A lamp belongs on a stand, where it gives light. The basket in verse 21 refers to a dry measuring basket of about 9 liters. The image is ordinary and precise: light has a public purpose.
Jesus says hidden things will be made known. In context, the kingdom mystery is presently veiled through parables and unbelief, yet God intends revelation. The private explanations to disciples will lead to public proclamation. Mark’s Gospel moves in that direction as Jesus’ identity becomes clearer through his works, cross, and resurrection.
Jesus again says, “If any man has ears to hear, let him hear.” He then adds, “Take heed what you hear.” Hearing carries responsibility. The measure a person uses will be measured back, and more will be given to the one who truly hears. The one who lacks receptive hearing will lose even what he has. Spiritual understanding grows through faithful reception. Neglected light results in deeper darkness.
Verses 26-29: The Hidden Growth
Jesus gives a parable found only in Mark. God’s Kingdom is compared to a man casting seed on the earth. The man sleeps and rises night and day while the seed springs up and grows, though he does not know how. Human work is real, because the man casts seed and later harvests. The growth belongs to God’s hidden power.
The phrase “by itself” does not remove God from the process. It describes growth that comes apart from the farmer’s control. The earth bears fruit in stages: blade, ear, then full grain. Kingdom growth has order, patience, and timing.
The harvest comes when the fruit is ripe. The sickle image can suggest final judgment in the wider biblical pattern, yet here it also completes the agricultural picture. The parable teaches confidence in God’s work through the word. Teachers, parents, pastors, and witnesses sow faithfully. God gives growth in ways they cannot master or measure at every moment. The kingdom advances quietly, then visibly.
Verses 30-34: The Mustard Seed
Jesus asks how to compare God’s Kingdom. He answers with the mustard seed. It is small when sown and grows into a large garden plant with branches where birds can lodge. The point concerns the kingdom’s surprising scale from modest beginnings.
Mustard was known for small seed and strong growth. Jesus uses common agricultural speech rather than a botany lesson. The kingdom begins in apparent smallness through Jesus’ preaching, a band of disciples, and hidden reception of the word. It grows into a sheltering reality that exceeds its visible start.
The birds lodging under its shadow may echo Old Testament tree imagery, where kingdoms are pictured as great trees giving shelter. Jesus’ parable presents God’s Kingdom as the true growing dominion. Mark then says Jesus used many such parables, speaking “as they were able to hear it.” Jesus adapts instruction to capacity. Public parables invite hearing, and private explanation trains disciples. Revelation and discipleship belong together.
Verses 35-38: The Storm
On the same day, when evening comes, Jesus says, “Let’s go over to the other side.” The command comes from Jesus. The crossing is not a disciple-made plan. They take him in the boat as he is, and other small boats go with him. Mark keeps the movement simple and concrete.
A big wind storm rises, and waves beat into the boat until it is already filling. Several disciples were fishermen, so their fear is not the reaction of inexperienced travelers. The danger is real. The storm tests faith in the word Jesus has just spoken, because he has already commanded the crossing.
Jesus is asleep in the stern on the cushion. His sleep shows true humanity and calm trust. The disciples wake him with a sharp question: “Teacher, don’t you care that we are dying?” Their words reveal fear and accusation together. The chapter has been about hearing the word. Now the disciples must trust Jesus’ word while circumstances appear to contradict it. Fear interprets danger quickly and Christ poorly.
Verses 39-41: The Lord of the Sea
Jesus wakes and rebukes the wind. He says to the sea, “Peace! Be still!” The wind ceases, and there is a great calm. Mark moves from “big wind storm” to “great calm,” making Jesus’ authority unmistakable. Creation obeys his command.
Jesus then questions the disciples: “Why are you so afraid? How is it that you have no faith?” Their fear during the storm exposed deficient trust. They had heard Jesus teach about the word, the kingdom, and hidden growth. In the boat, they needed faith in the presence and command of Jesus.
The disciples become greatly afraid and ask, “Who then is this, that even the wind and the sea obey him?” That question is central to Mark’s Gospel. In the Old Testament, God rules the sea, stills waves, and delivers those in distress. Jesus acts with that divine authority. The chapter began with a call to hear. It ends with a question that demands hearing at the deepest level: the teacher of parables is also the Lord who commands wind and sea. The right response is reverent faith.
Timeline: The Dates
- Night and day: In Jesus’ parable, the farmer sleeps and rises while the seed grows beyond his understanding (Mark 4:27).
- On that day: Jesus moves from teaching by the sea toward crossing to the other side (Mark 4:35).
- When evening had come: Jesus commands the disciples to cross the sea (Mark 4:35).
- After the storm arises: The disciples wake Jesus as the boat fills with water (Mark 4:37-38).
- After Jesus speaks: The wind ceases, a great calm comes, and the disciples ask who he is (Mark 4:39-41).
Application: The Practice
Personal Faith and Discipleship
- Hear with endurance | Jesus warns that shallow reception withers when pressure comes, so faithful discipleship receives the word with roots that endure hardship. Christian obedience now means holding to Christ’s word when joy is tested by cost. References: Mark 4:16-17.
- Guard your desires | The cares of this age, the deceitfulness of riches, and the lusts of other things can choke the word into unfruitfulness. Faith responds by naming these rivals and bringing them under the rule of Christ. References: Mark 4:18-20.
- Trust Jesus in danger | The disciples feared because the storm looked stronger than Jesus’ command to cross. The chapter exposes the fear that assumes Christ’s care has failed, and it calls believers to faith in his authority. References: Mark 4:35-41.
Church and Community
- Keep sowing the word | Jesus describes the farmer sowing and the seed growing beyond human control. Churches serve faithfully by preaching, teaching, discipling, and trusting God for growth. References: Mark 4:14, 26-29.
- Expect mixed responses | The same word meets different soils, so the church should expect resistance, shallow enthusiasm, distraction, and true fruit. This protects ministry from panic and keeps attention on faithful proclamation. References: Mark 4:3-20.
Leadership and Teaching
- Teach for real hearing | Jesus repeats the call to hear and warns hearers to take heed what they hear. Leaders should aim for understanding, repentance, faith, and fruit rather than bare exposure to biblical information. References: Mark 4:9, 23-25.
- Explain with patience | Jesus speaks publicly in parables and explains privately to his disciples as they are able to hear. Teachers should give clear instruction, then help learners work through questions with patience and care. References: Mark 4:10-13, 33-34.
- Reject secret control | Jesus reveals the kingdom mystery to make disciples faithful hearers, not to create dependence on hidden human authorities. Christian leaders should bring truth into the light and point people to Christ’s word. References: Mark 4:21-25.
- Frame fear under Christ’s authority | Jesus rebukes the wind and sea, then addresses the disciples’ fear and lack of faith. Pastors should teach suffering and danger honestly while keeping Christ’s authority at the center. References: Mark 4:37-41.
Interpretive Options: The Differences
How do the parables reveal and conceal?
- Broad Christian consensus: Jesus’ parables reveal kingdom truth to receptive hearers and expose the hardness of resistant hearers. The Isaiah quotation explains judgment on those who see and hear yet remain unresponsive. The disciples receive explanation because they come to Jesus for understanding.
- Reformed: Reformed interpreters often emphasize God’s sovereign giving of kingdom understanding. The phrase “To you is given” carries strong weight in this reading. Human responsibility remains real, since the chapter repeatedly commands hearers to listen and take heed.
- Wesleyan/Arminian: Wesleyan and Arminian interpreters often stress accountable response to grace. The parables confront hearers with truth and reveal whether they will receive it. The hardening language describes judgment upon resisted light.
Do the rocky and thorny soils describe true believers?
- Reformed: Many Reformed interpreters read the rocky and thorny soils as temporary or fruitless responses that fall short of saving faith. The good soil alone bears lasting fruit. Persevering fruit marks genuine reception of the word.
- Wesleyan/Arminian: Wesleyan and Arminian interpreters often treat these soils as serious warnings about falling away or becoming unfruitful after an initial response. The warning has direct pastoral force. Hearers must continue in faith and avoid the pressures that choke the word.
- Catholic and Eastern Orthodox: Catholic and Orthodox readings often emphasize ongoing cooperation with grace, perseverance, and fruit-bearing life. The chapter calls hearers to receive the word deeply and live in a way that produces fruit. Faithfulness is seen through lasting participation in the life God gives.
What does the calming of the storm reveal about Jesus?
- Broad consensus: Historic Christian interpretation sees this event as a revelation of Jesus’ divine authority. The Old Testament repeatedly presents God as ruling the sea and stilling its waves. Mark’s final question, “Who then is this?” leads readers to confess more than prophetic power.
- A minority modern proposal: Some modern interpreters treat the storm story mainly as a symbolic lesson about courage under pressure. The symbolism is present only because the event reveals who Jesus is. Mark grounds the disciples’ fear and wonder in Jesus’ actual command over wind and sea.
Common Misreadings: The Mistakes
“The parable of the sower mainly teaches better evangelism techniques.” The farmer’s action matters, but Jesus explains the parable around the word and the hearers. The main issue is the condition of reception: Satanic removal, shallow endurance, divided desire, and fruitful acceptance.
“The mystery of God’s Kingdom means Jesus hid secret doctrines for spiritual insiders.” The chapter speaks of divine revelation given by Jesus, then immediately moves toward lamps, disclosure, and careful hearing. The mystery is God’s Kingdom being revealed through Jesus’ ministry, not a coded system controlled by elite interpreters.
“Jesus sleeping in the storm means he lacked control over the danger.” His sleep shows true humanity and calm trust, while his command over the wind and sea reveals divine authority. The disciples’ question about his care is corrected by his question about their faith.
Cult Watch: The Counterfeits
Shincheonji: This movement has a documented pattern of treating biblical parables as coded language that requires the group’s special interpretive system. Mark 4 does teach that Jesus explains parables to his disciples, yet the chapter also places the lamp on a stand and calls hearers to receive the word plainly and fruitfully. Jesus is the giver of the mystery of God’s Kingdom. No later teacher receives the role of necessary mediator for hidden saving knowledge.
Leading: The Teaching Guide
The Aim: Mark 4 teaches that Jesus’ word demands true hearing and that his kingdom grows by God’s power, with his authority revealed finally in the calming of the storm (vv. 13-20, 35-41). Teach the chapter so hearers see the connection between receiving the word and trusting the Lord who speaks.
A Teaching Flow:
- Begin with the public setting by the sea and the parable of the sower, emphasizing the four soils and the call to hear.
- Move to Jesus’ explanation of parables, showing how receptive disciples receive more understanding while hardened hearers remain outside.
- Trace the lamp, measure, growing seed, and mustard seed as teachings about revelation, responsibility, and kingdom growth.
- End with the storm, where the disciples must trust Jesus’ word and confront the question of his identity.
The Approach: Teach this chapter as one unified lesson on hearing Jesus. Avoid treating the parables as isolated moral sayings and the storm as a detached miracle. Mark places them together so readers see that the one who teaches the kingdom also commands creation. In the wider storyline of Scripture, the chapter points to the promised reign of God arriving in Christ, growing through the word, and calling all hearers to faith.
Cross-References: The Connections
Isaiah 6:9-10 – Jesus uses Isaiah’s commission to explain how hearing can become judgment for hardened people.
Psalm 107:23-32 – The psalm describes God stilling stormy seas and delivering those who cry to him in distress.
Ezekiel 17:22-24 – The image of a growing tree with birds in its branches helps illuminate kingdom growth and shelter.
Daniel 4:10-12 – The great tree imagery gives background for royal and kingdom pictures involving branches and birds.
1 Corinthians 3:6-7 – Paul states that one plants and another waters, while God gives the growth.
Colossians 1:5-6 – The gospel bears fruit and grows, echoing the fruitful word imagery of Mark 4.
Hebrews 4:2 – Hearing must be joined with faith, which fits Jesus’ warning about unfruitful hearing.
James 1:21-22 – Believers are called to receive the implanted word and become doers, not hearers only.
Further Study: The Articles
Coming Soon!
Mark 4 Commentary: Parables, Hearing, and the Storm