Sign in
Mark 6:28 — King James Version← Study notes

And brought his head in a charger, and gave it to the damsel: and the damsel gave it to her mother.


Mark 6:28Greek Interlinear

Greek · Mark 6:2820 words
GreekMeaning
καὶkai
andwordG2532
ἤνεγκενēnenken
broughtverbG5342
τὴνtēn
thearticleG3588
κεφαλὴνkephalēn
headnounG2776
αὐτοῦautou
of himpronounG846
ἐπὶepi
onprepositionG1909
πίνακιpinaki
a platternounG4094
καὶkai
andwordG2532
ἔδωκενedōken
gaveverbG1325
αὐτὴνautēn
itpronounG846
τῷ
to thearticleG3588
κορασίῳkorasiō
girlnounG2877
καὶkai
andwordG2532
τὸto
thearticleG3588
κοράσιονkorasion
girlnounG2877
ἔδωκενedōken
gaveverbG1325
αὐτὴνautēn
itpronounG846
τῇ
to thearticleG3588
μητρὶmētri
mothernounG3384
αὐτῆςautēs
of herpronounG846
Greek text from the SBL Greek New Testament (SBLGNT). Transliteration follows SBL Academic conventions.

Church Fathers on Mark 6:28

The Evangelist Mark, taking occasion from what went before, here relates the death of the Forerunner, saying, 'For Herod himself had sent forth and laid hold upon John, and bound him in prison for Herodias' sake, his brother Philip’s wife: for he had married her.'

Theophylact · 11th century

Ancient history relates, that Philip, the son of Herod the great, under whom the Lord fled into Egypt, the brother of this Herod, under whom Christ suffered, married Herodias, the daughter of king Aretas; but afterwards, that his father-in-law, after certain disagreements had arisen with his son-in-law, had taken his daughter away, and, to the grief of her former husband, had given her in marriage to his enemy; therefore John the Baptist rebukes Herod and Herodias for…

Bede · 8th century

Or else, the head of the law, which is Christ, is cut off from His own body, that is, the Jewish people, and is given to a Gentile damsel, that is, the Roman Church, and the damsel gives it to her adulterous mother, that is, to the synagogue, who in the end will believe. The body of John is buried, his head is put in a dish; thus the human Letter is covered over, the Spirit is honoured, and received on the altar.

Pseudo-Jerome · 5th century
Read all 17 entries in the readerCatena Aurea · St. Thomas Aquinas, tr. J. H. Newman · public domain
COMMUNITY REFLECTIONS
Publish a note on this verse
No notes on this verse yet. Be the first to write one!