The Expositor's Bible: The Gospel According to St. Mark by G. A. Chadwick

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By Charlotte Girard Posted on Nov 15, 2025
In Category - Adventure
Chadwick, G. A. (George Alexander), 1840-1923 Chadwick, G. A. (George Alexander), 1840-1923
English
Ever feel like you're reading the Gospel of Mark on fast-forward? It's the shortest, punchiest gospel, packed with action but sometimes leaving you wanting more. That's where G.A. Chadwick's classic commentary comes in. It's like having a wise, patient friend sit down with you, point to a verse, and say, 'Wait, look closer. Did you see that?' He slows down the sprint, showing you the profound meaning hidden in the details you might have missed. If you've ever wanted to understand the urgency and raw power of Mark's account of Jesus's life, this book is your perfect guide.
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The opening of St. Mark’s Gospel is energetic and full of character. St. Matthew traces for Jews the pedigree of their Messiah; St. Luke’s worldwide sympathies linger with the maiden who bore Jesus, and the village of His boyhood; and St. John’s theology proclaims the Divine origin of the Eternal Lord. But St. Mark trusts the public acts of the Mighty Worker to do for the reader what they did for those who first “beheld His glory.” How He came to earth can safely be left untold: what He was will appear by what He wrought. It is enough to record, with matchless vividness, the toils, the energy, the love and wrath, the defeat and triumph of the brief career which changed the world. It will prove itself to be the career of “the Son of God.” In so deciding, he followed the example of the Apostolic teaching. The first vacant place among the Twelve was filled by an eye-witness, competent to tell what Jesus did “from the baptism of John to the day when He was received up,” the very space covered by this Gospel. That “Gospel of peace,” which Cornelius heard from St. Peter (and hearing, received the Holy Ghost) was the same story of Jesus “after the baptism which John preached.” And this is throughout the substance of the primitive teaching. The Apostles act as men who believe that everything necessary to salvation is (implicit or explicit) in the history of those few crowded years. Therefore this is “the gospel.” Men there are who judge otherwise, and whose gospel is not the story of salvation wrought, but the plan of salvation applied, how the Atonement avails for us, how men are converted, and what privileges they then receive. But in truth men are not converted by preaching conversion, any more than citizens are made loyal by demanding loyalty. Show men their prince, and convince them that he is gracious and truly royal, and they will die for him. Show them the Prince of Life, and He, being lifted up, will draw all men unto Him; and thus the truest gospel is that which declares Christ and Him crucified. As all science springs from the phenomena of the external world, so do theology and religion spring from the life of Him who was too adorable to be mortal, and too loving to be disobeyed. Therefore St. Paul declares that the gospel which he preached to the Corinthians and by which they were saved, was, that Christ died for our sins and was buried and rose again, and was seen of sufficient witnesses (1 Cor. xv. 1-8). And therefore St. Mark is contented with a very brief record of those wondrous years; a few facts, chosen with a keen sense of the intense energy and burning force which they reveal, are what he is inspired to call the gospel. He presently uses the word in a somewhat larger sense, telling how Jesus Himself, before the story of His life could possibly be unfolded, preached as “the gospel of God” that “the time is fulfilled, and the kingdom of God is at hand,” and added (what St. Mark only has preserved for us), “Repent, and believe in the gospel” (i. 14-15). So too it is part of St. Paul’s “gospel” that “God shall judge the secrets of men by Jesus Christ” (Rom. ii. 16). For this also is good news of God, “the gospel of the kingdom.” And like “the gospel of Jesus Christ,” it treats of His attitude toward us, more than ours toward Him, which latter is the...

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This book isn't a novel, but it tackles one of the most influential stories ever told. G.A. Chadwick's The Expositor's Bible: The Gospel According to St. Mark is a line-by-line walk through the second gospel. He takes Mark's rapid-fire narrative—the miracles, the teachings, the journey to the cross—and pauses at each moment to explore its significance, context, and connection to the whole story.

Why You Should Read It

What I love about Chadwick is his clarity. He writes with a pastor's heart and a scholar's mind, but never loses the everyday reader. He doesn't just tell you what a passage means; he shows you why it matters. You get a real sense of Jesus's character—his compassion, his authority, his urgency—and how Mark's original audience would have heard this news. It makes familiar stories feel fresh and surprising again.

Final Verdict

This is for anyone curious about the Bible beyond a surface reading. It's perfect for book clubs studying a gospel, new believers looking for a reliable guide, or even seasoned readers who want a thoughtful, classic perspective. If you're ready to move from just reading Mark to truly understanding it, Chadwick's commentary is a fantastic and accessible place to start.



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