Mark 10:27
A focused desk for reading, commentary, cross-references, original language notes, and your own observations.
Mark 10:27
27 And Jesus looking upon them saith, With men it is impossible, but not with God: for with God all things are possible.
Chapter Context
Mark 10 is a action-oriented gospel chapter in the New Testament that explores themes of obedience, creation, covenant. Written during the mid first century CE (c. 65-70 CE), this chapter should be understood within its historical context: Composed during or just after Nero's persecution when eyewitnesses were disappearing.
The chapter can be divided into several sections:
- Verses 1-5: Introduction and setting the context
- Verses 6-12: Development of key themes
- Verses 13-20: Central message and teachings
- Verses 21-52: Conclusion and application
This chapter is significant because it provides essential context for understanding God's covenant relationship with His people. When studying this passage, it's important to consider both its immediate context within Mark and its broader place in the scriptural canon.
Verse Study
Mark 10:27
27 And Jesus looking upon them saith, With men it is impossible, but not with God: for with God all things are possible.
Analysis
This verse articulates the fundamental principle of divine omnipotence and its pastoral application to human despair. 'With God all things are possible' (para theo panta dynata) establishes that the scope of divine capability encompasses all conceivable possibilities. The Greek 'dynata' (things able, possible) indicates not merely theoretical possibilities but practical possibilities - what God can actually accomplish. 'Para theo' (beside God, with God) uses a preposition suggesting God's presence and partnership, not distant transcendence. The statement follows Jesus' declaration that it is easier for a camel to enter a needle's eye than for a rich man to enter God's kingdom - an apparent impossibility suggesting human salvation through wealth-renunciation is humanly impossible. The disciples respond with existential despair: 'Who then can be saved?' This verse responds not by minimizing the difficulty but by recontextualizing it. The human impossibility of self-generated righteousness becomes irrelevant when divine omnipotence enters the equation. What cannot be accomplished through human effort, discipline, or achievement becomes possible through God's transformative grace. The theological movement here is essential to Christian soteriology: salvation requires not better human effort but divine intervention. The principle extends beyond soteriology - it addresses any human situation where circumstances appear intractable. Divine omnipotence provides the ultimate hope for believers facing terminal illness, seemingly impossible reconciliation, or entrenched patterns of sin and brokenness.
Historical Context
Mark presents this verse in the context of Jesus' encounter with the rich young ruler (Mark 10:17-31), a narrative emphasizing the conflict between worldly security and kingdom allegiance. The young man possessed considerable wealth and asked what he must do to inherit eternal life. Jesus instructed him to sell all and distribute to the poor - a radical demand that wealth's security would become an obstacle to faith. The young man departed grieved, unable to relinquish his possessions. Jesus then teaches that 'How hardly shall they that have riches enter into the kingdom of God!' The disciples, understanding wealth as a sign of God's blessing (a common Deuteronomic assumption), respond with shock: if the blessed cannot enter easily, what of ordinary people? This verse answers their confusion. The first-century context valued wealth and security as indicators of God's favor. Jesus inverts this understanding: security in God comes not through wealth but through trusting God's transformative power. The historical Jesus directed this statement to disciples who would shortly face seemingly impossible challenges - persecution, execution of their leader, dispersion. Yet Mark's gospel, written after these events, demonstrates that what seemed impossible (the resurrection, the gospel's spread throughout the Roman Empire) proved possible through God's power. The verse thus serves as an apologetic justification for Christian hope amid suffering.
Reflection
- How does acknowledging God's omnipotence specifically address the human tendency toward despair when circumstances seem insurmountable?
- What is the relationship between recognizing human impossibility and receiving God's transformative power?
- Why does Jesus emphasize this principle specifically in the context of wealth and kingdom entrance?
- In what ways does divine omnipotence address the problem of apparently permanent brokenness in human relationships and personal sin patterns?
- How does this promise account for situations where God's intervention does not occur in the ways believers desperately desire?
Word Studies
- God: Θεός (Theos) G2316 - God
Cross-References
- References Jesus: Matthew 19:26
- References God: Jeremiah 32:17, 32:27, Luke 1:37, 18:27, Hebrews 11:19
- Kingdom: 2 Kings 7:2, Philippians 3:21
- Parallel theme: Job 42:2, Zechariah 8:6