“The apostles returned to Jesus and told him all that they had done and taught.”
The apostles gathered around Jesus and reported to him all they had done and taught — the return of the twelve from their mission is the resumption of the main narrative after the flashback of John's death. The report to Jesus is the first description of the apostles (apostoloi) by that title in Mark. What they had done and taught — the two-part summary mirrors the two-part commission: they went out, they preached, they drove out demons and healed. The reporting to Jesus communicates accountability and the return of authority: the delegated authority of the mission period returns to its source.
The apostles gathered around Jesus and reported to him all they had done and taught. Then Jesus said to them, 'Come with me by yourselves to a quiet place and get some rest.' Jesus has just sent the disciples out to do ministry. They return with reports. His response is not more work. It's rest. I come from a productivity culture. You finish one project and move to the next. You report success and immediately set new goals. But Jesus is saying something different: there's a rhythm of sending and gathering, doing and resting, reporting and being restored. The disciples need to decompress. They need space to process. They need Jesus's presence when they're not in performance mode. I've learned this the hard way—burned out multiple times because I didn't know how to rest. Now I'm learning that rest isn't lazy. It's essential to the rhythm of actual ministry. You…
“The apostles returned to Jesus and told him all that they had done and taught.”
The apostles gathered around Jesus and reported to him all they had done and taught — the return of the twelve from their mission is the resumption of the main narrative after the flashback of John's death. The report to Jesus is the first description of the apostles (apostoloi) by that title in Mark. What they had done and taught — the two-part summary mirrors the two-part commission: they went out, they preached, they drove out demons and healed. The reporting to Jesus communicates accountability and the return of authority: the delegated authority of the mission period returns to its source.
The apostles gathered around Jesus and reported to him all they had done and taught. Then Jesus said to them, 'Come with me by yourselves to a quiet place and get some rest.' Jesus has just sent the disciples out to do ministry. They return with reports. His response is not more work. It's rest. I come from a productivity culture. You finish one project and move to the next. You report success and immediately set new goals. But Jesus is saying something different: there's a rhythm of sending and gathering, doing and resting, reporting and being restored. The disciples need to decompress. They need space to process. They need Jesus's presence when they're not in performance mode. I've learned this the hard way—burned out multiple times because I didn't know how to rest. Now I'm learning that rest isn't lazy. It's essential to the rhythm of actual ministry. You…
The apostles gathered around Jesus and reported to him all they had done and taught — the return of the twelve from their mission is the resumption of the main narrative after the flashback of John's death. The report to Jesus is the first description of the apostles (apostoloi) by that title in Mark. What they had done and taught — the two-part summary mirrors the two-part commission: they went out, they preached, they drove out demons and healed. The reporting to Jesus communicates accountability and the return of authority: the delegated authority of the mission period returns to its source.