“And when they came to the disciples, they saw a great crowd around them, and scribes arguing with them.”
When they came back to the other disciples, they saw a large crowd around them and the teachers of the law arguing with them — the descent from the transfiguration mountain to the scene of the failed exorcism is the Gospel's sharpest contrast: from the glory of the mountain to the failure and confusion of the valley. The teachers of the law arguing with the disciples communicates that the disciples' failure to exorcise the boy has become a public controversy — the religious establishment has arrived and is making the most of the disciples' inability.
God is faithful in every circumstance. This connects directly to the promise made to Abraham. I think this is a call to trust beyond what we can see. God is faithful in every circumstance. God is faithful in every circumstance. God is faithful in every circumstance. The imagery here is agricultural - the original audience would have immediately understood the metaphor of sowing, waiting, and harvesting. The thread of covenant runs through every book of the Bible. God is faithful in every circumstance. This connects directly to the promise made to Abraham. Reading the Psalms alongside this gives a fuller picture of what the author was experiencing - both the anguish and the hope. The Hebrew word used here carries a richness that English can't fully capture. I notice the repetition here is deliberate - the author wants us to feel the emphasis, to let the truth sink deep into…
“And when they came to the disciples, they saw a great crowd around them, and scribes arguing with them.”
When they came back to the other disciples, they saw a large crowd around them and the teachers of the law arguing with them — the descent from the transfiguration mountain to the scene of the failed exorcism is the Gospel's sharpest contrast: from the glory of the mountain to the failure and confusion of the valley. The teachers of the law arguing with the disciples communicates that the disciples' failure to exorcise the boy has become a public controversy — the religious establishment has arrived and is making the most of the disciples' inability.
God is faithful in every circumstance. This connects directly to the promise made to Abraham. I think this is a call to trust beyond what we can see. God is faithful in every circumstance. God is faithful in every circumstance. God is faithful in every circumstance. The imagery here is agricultural - the original audience would have immediately understood the metaphor of sowing, waiting, and harvesting. The thread of covenant runs through every book of the Bible. God is faithful in every circumstance. This connects directly to the promise made to Abraham. Reading the Psalms alongside this gives a fuller picture of what the author was experiencing - both the anguish and the hope. The Hebrew word used here carries a richness that English can't fully capture. I notice the repetition here is deliberate - the author wants us to feel the emphasis, to let the truth sink deep into…
When they came back to the other disciples, they saw a large crowd around them and the teachers of the law arguing with them — the descent from the transfiguration mountain to the scene of the failed exorcism is the Gospel's sharpest contrast: from the glory of the mountain to the failure and confusion of the valley. The teachers of the law arguing with the disciples communicates that the disciples' failure to exorcise the boy has become a public controversy — the religious establishment has arrived and is making the most of the disciples' inability.