Marcus & Demas
Colossians 4:10,14
Marcus: He Followed, Fled, and Returned
A.
Review of John Mark
- He was a Jew (of the
circumcision – vs.11)
- He was from Jerusalem.
- John was his Jewish
name.
- Marcus was his Roman or
Latin name.
- Sometimes he is called
John (Acts 13:5) and sometimes he is called Mark (Acts 15:37; II Tim. 4).
- His mother Mary opened
her home for prayer meetings (Acts 12:12).
- The church in Jerusalem became very large overnight and the church met in various
homes on occasion.
- We know nothing of his
father. He may have been dead or an unbeliever.
- If he was saved and
alive, one would think Luke would referred to it as HIS house, not
Mary’s.
- Mary did her best to
bring up her young son John Mark in the things of God – and to encourage
him to believe on Christ and be saved.
- She held prayer
meetings in her home and made sure her son John Mark attended.
- I Peter 5:13 implies that Peter led John Mark to faith in
Christ.
- It was at Mary’s house
where the prayer meeting was held as they prayed for Peter to be released
from prison – and he WAS released.
- It is quite possible
that at that occasion Peter led Mary’s son John Mark to faith in Christ.
- He certainly had good
reason to believe God after that prayer meeting!
- Perhaps Mary – a
believer in Christ – MADE her son come to prayer meeting. As an unsaved
young man, it might have seemed quite boring to him… not much interest in
praying.
- However, over time God
gave this young man a stupendous, undeniable example of answered prayer!
- When Peter came into
his home that night – I’m sure he gave one inspiring testimony
as to what God had done for him.
i.
John Mark MUST have been
impressed with Peter’s faith and courage.
ii.
Peter believed the gospel so
deeply that he was willing to suffer and be beaten and imprisoned in order to
preach Christ. That’s impressive.
iii.
And his testimony of how God
released him must have made an indelible impression on John Mark’s mind and
heart.
- That may well have been
the night Peter led John Mark to Christ… for Peter calls Marcus his “son”
in the faith.
- It IS a good idea for
parents to bring their children to prayer meeting – even if they do think
it’s a bit boring. Even if they would rather stay home and play Nintendo.
- It may be just the
thing God uses to lead them to saving faith Christ.
- Don’t let the kids rule
the roost. It’s up to Christian parents to set the tone and the example.
- I know prayer meeting
is on a school night. But I’m convinced (through years of observation)
that kids who come to prayer meeting faithfully still do well in school.
- And even if they stay
up an extra 45 minutes on prayer meeting night - the Lord is able to give
them that extra oomph they need for Thursday morning.
- God honors those who
honor Him.
- Some wonderful
spiritual testimonies and times of rejoicing and fellowship occur during
prayer meeting that are priceless…
- That’s not to mention
the nearly 400 lessons on Proverbs they could be getting as well… divine
wisdom recorded for the young & inexperienced to gain discernment,
understanding, and insight.
- Prayer meeting was good
for John Mark. It would be good for your family too!
- Acts 13:1-3 – Later John Mark went with the apostle Paul
on his first missionary journey. (vs. 5 – John = John Mark)
- John Mark went along
with Paul & Barnabus on this journey.
- Remember, John Mark was
the nephew of Barnabus – which probably influenced the decision to take
him along.
- He went as their “minister”
= A subordinate, servant, attendant, associate in any work.
- Evidently, John Mark
was given duties to perform for the seasoned preachers, Paul &
Barnabus. He may well have been responsible for supplies, food, setting
up tents, etc.
- It must have been
rigorous work too… travel was not easy in those days. They did not
traverse the country in an air conditioned Winnebago.
- It involved a lot of
walking; hiking; carrying heavy loads; in the elements; hot; sweaty; dirty;
hungry; thirsty; etc.
- There was much
opposition everywhere they went. The gospel is a hated message. The
Savior we proclaim was hated and crucified.
- John Mark experienced
much of this opposition as he traveled with Paul and Barnabus.
- Acts 13:13 – Paul, Barnabus, and John Mark came to Perga
in Pamphilia…
- At that point in the
missionary journey, John Mark quit.
- We are not told WHY… we
are just told that he returned home to Jerusalem.
- He didn’t want to
travel with the missionaries any more.
- This happens often
among missionaries.
i.
Becoming a missionary sounds
exciting!
ii.
Traveling to exotic locations
around the globe…
iii.
Grandiose ambitions of
establishing a flourishing church in a foreign land…
iv.
Young people read missionary
stories of missionaries who led thousands to Christ… whole tribes who come to
faith in Christ…
v.
It can sound quite attractive… idealistic…
fascinating… thrilling…
vi.
And folks who go on a two week
missionary trip might experience a bit of that thrill… (seeing dozens of cute
little Indian kids or Zambian children run up to you… ministering in their
midst…) Even sleeping on the floor in a grass hut is different and exciting.
vii.
But we get to come home after a
couple of weeks.
viii.
But real missionaries – those
called of God - stay there… for the rest of their lives.
ix.
If you have NOT been called to
serve as a missionary, the novelty wears off in a hurry.
x.
Living in difficult, hot, dirty
locations with lousy food… riddled with disease… unsanitary conditions… and no
relief in sight - that can get to you after a while.
xi.
Many mission boards have to
deal with missionaries who return home after their first term…
xii.
Some went because of an
emotional appeal or a guilt trip imposed by a well meaning but misguided pastor
or a visiting missionary.
xiii.
Missionaries come home because
they didn’t really count the cost before they left… or God never called them
to leave in the first place.
xiv.
They return home discouraged,
defeated, dejected, and feeling like a traitor.
- We don’t know the
REASONS why John Mark returned home… all we know is the FACT that he left
on a long missionary journey with Paul and Barnabus… and mid stream left
the team and went home. He quit.
i.
It could have been more
difficult than he expected.
ii.
It could have been that he
discovered he just wasn’t cut-out for that kind of lifestyle.
iii.
Perhaps he discovered that it
was more dangerous than he had expected.
iv.
It could have been he was too
immature as a believer to handle the trials and opposition along the way.
v.
It could have been that he left
on impulse and emotion… rather than the leading of the HS.
vi.
Cf. Acts 13:3 – the HS called
Paul & Barnabus.
vii.
Vs.5 says nothing about the HS
calling John Mark.
- We just don’t know
exactly WHY he left.
i.
But when he came to Perga, he
went home.
ii.
And that meant that all the
work he HAD been doing for Paul and Barnabus would no longer get done.
iii.
That meant a great imposition
on Paul & Barnabus.
iv.
They would have to take care of
all those chores and duties.
v.
That meant that the work itself
would be slower… hindered… stalled… perhaps some projects would never get
finished as a result.
vi.
Paul was a man who was DRIVEN
by his work… and the fact that Mark quit in the midst of the work was a hard
pill for him to swallow.
vii.
He saw it from a very different
perspective than uncle Barnabus did.
B.
The Rift
- Acts 15:36 – Paul & Barnabus plan the second
missionary journey.
- Evidently, John Mark
had had a change of heart in between these two missionary
journeys.
- He wanted to return
to the work of the Lord and minister unto Paul and Barnabus as he
did before.
- No doubt he apologized
for any inconvenience he was to them before… and tried to convince them
that things would be different now. He had matured. He had grown in the
Lord. He was dedicated to the work now. He would not depart any more.
- Vs.37 – Barnabus determined to take John Mark
with them on the journey (his nephew).
- Barnabus was
“determined” to do so. [determine: resolve, determine,
purpose after deliberation] Barnabus had his mind made up to take his
nephew.
- The name “Barnabus”
means son of consolation.
- He was true to his
name. He was a comforter; an encourager; one who tried to lift the
spirits of others.
- His nephew had failed
on the first missionary journey but now he wanted to return to the work.
- Uncle Barnabus – the
consoler – the comforter – wanted to encourage his nephew to do just
that: get back to the work.
- Barnabus was DETERMINED
to take him back and give him a second chance.
- Acts 15:38 – Paul thought it not good to take John Mark.
- The REASPON: Mark departed
from them on the last trip.
i.
ἀφίστημι
- withdraw, remove oneself, forsake, desert,
retire, cease from something.
ii.
This is a stronger term than is
used in Acts 13:13 - ἀποχωρέω –
to go from; to depart;
”John departed from them returned to Jerusalem.”
iii.
ἀφίστημι
- Used in Heb.3:12 – lest there be in any of
you an evil heart of unbelief… in departing from the living God.
iv.
It is also used in I Tim.4:1 –
in the latter times some shall depart from the faith giving heed
to seducing spirits.
- The term does not mean
that Paul felt that John Mark was an unbelieving apostate who departed
from the faith and denied Christ.
i.
But it IS a stronger term.
ii.
Evidently the apostle Paul saw
Mark’s departure as much more serious a matter than uncle Barnabus did.
iii.
Perhaps Paul had in mind
the words of the Lord Jesus in giving qualifications for disciples: “He that
loveth father or mother more than me is
not worthy of me: and he that loveth son or daughter more than me is not worthy
of me.”
iv.
“He went not with them to
the work.” (15:38c)
v.
There was work to do and Mark left.
He left the work for the others to do while he departed to his comfortable home
in Jerusalem.
vi.
Paul saw John Mark as derelict
in his duties.
vii.
As far as Paul was concerned he
abandoned the work of the Lord.
viii.
Paul saw John Mark as a soldier
who I the middle of a campaign went awol – a deserter.
ix.
Paul saw the work of the Lord
as too serious to take a chance on this young man again.
- Here we see a serious
rift among the missionaries.
- Barnabus was DETERMINED
to take John Mark.
- Paul saw him as a
deserter and refused to have him come.
- The contention was
SHARP between Paul & Barnabus over this issue.
i.
Contention: stirring up of
anger, sharp contention, angry dispute.
ii.
Paul & Barnabus split
company over this matter.
- Who was right and
who was wrong in
this matter? Paul or Barnabus?
i.
I don’t think either of them
was right or wrong.
ii.
They just looked at the matter
from a different angle.
iii.
Barnabus had a good point: If the young man repented and wanted to serve the
Lord again, it is good to give him a second chance… encourage him in the things
of the Lord. (Gal. 6:12 – restore such an one in the spirit of meekness!)
iv.
Paul also had a good point: if he failed once, he could fail again. He
probably wasn’t the very best candidate for the job. Paul thought it risky to
take along a proven failure. Be wise as a serpent!
v.
Barnabus looked at from a
“people perspective” and Paul looked at from the perspective of the work of God
and the souls of men being at stake.
vi.
This is a good reminder to us
all: good men with good intentions often DIFFER… and sometimes sharply!
vii.
And their difference – right or
wrong – wasn’t the end of the world. God USED it.
viii.
Instead of ONE missionary team,
it resulted in TWO missionary teams.
ix.
God can bring good even out of nasty
disputes and separation!
x.
Paul went on to preach Christ
with Silas and Barnabus went on to preach Christ with John Mark… and more
people came to know the Lord!
xi.
God can STILL bring good out of
disputes and arguments among believers today. He is still God!
C.
The Restoration
- John Mark’s life ought
to be an encouragement to us all.
- He failed (like we do).
- But he repented and
returned to the work of the Lord and God used him greatly!
- Even when he determined
to return to the work of the Lord, he was hindered by Paul.
- That must have been a
great discouragement to him… what a blow that must have been!
- But he didn’t let that
get him down either.
- John Mark returned to
the work and PROVED himself to be a faithful servant of God.
- Over time even Paul saw
the value of this young man in the work of God.
- Later Paul commends
Mark in Philemon 24 – his fellow laborer.
- An in Col. 4:10,
Paul commands the Colossian believers to RECEIVE John Mark!
- Don’t be afraid to
receive him – as Paul had been.
- It is likely that the
rift between Paul and Barnabus was well known in Christian circles… &
in Colossae.
- Paul wanted everyone to
know that reconciliation had occurred… and that Paul felt John Mark was now
worthy of being received.
- As a young man, John
Mark fell and failed… but he later grew up and matured and
became a useful servant of the Lord.
- Have you fallen
and failed?
- Learn a lesson from
John Mark.
- If you have fallen – get
back up and get back to the work of the Lord.
- Don’t sit around
licking your wounds and feeling sorry for yourself. You’re wasting God’s
time! Redeem the time!
- God is in the business
of restoring souls and servants.
- Prov. 24:16 - Righteous men fall… maybe even seven times!
But they keep on getting up again.
- Psa. 37:23-24 – a good man may fall, but will NOT be
utterly cast down. The Lord will hold him up.
- When we try to get back
up there will be some (who with good intentions) try to console and
encourage us like Barnabus.
- There may be others
(with good intentions) who may be a bit skeptical as to whether we
are ready to return to the work.
- Be like John Mark. He
returned to serve where he could… where he was received… and PROVED
himself faithful… and God honored him for that.
- And even Paul – the one
who was skeptical at first – later on had to acknowledge the wonderful
work that God did in his heart.
- Even Paul learned to
see him as a valuable servant of the Lord…
- “Take Mark and bring
him with thee: for he is profitable to me for the
ministry” (II Tim. 4:11).
- The disappointment,
distrust, hurt, and resentment over Mark’s departure was completely
restored and the wound was healed. Relationships CAN be healed!!!
- Men, women, and
children who fail can repent and return to the Lord and be used of the
Lord again.
i.
God wasn’t finished with Abram
when he went down to Egypt.
ii.
God wasn’t done with Moses when
smashed the tablets in anger.
iii.
God wasn’t finished with David
when he committed adultery.
iv.
God wasn’t done with Peter when
spoke out of turn… again and again…
v.
Virtually every hero of the
faith also has mentioned in the Scriptures some of their failures too.
vi.
God doesn’t cast them away
because they failed… nor does he cast us away when we fall.
vii.
The good Shepherd RESTORES
our souls and leads us to green pastures… that we might be strengthened
and return to the work he has called us to do!
- God sure had a great
work for John Mark to do.
i.
He is the man who later was used
of the Lord to write the gospel of Mark.
Demas: He Followed and Fled (Col. 4:14)
- Demas is mentioned here
as one of Paul’s friends and a faithful servant of God.
- In one of the letters
Tychicus was delivering to Paul’s friend Philemon he mentions Demas again
– (vs.24 – as one of Paul’s fellow laborers.)
- We don’t know for how
long and in how many different places Demas served the Lord with Paul… but
we do know that he was a trusted friend of Paul at this
time.
- And Paul was a diligent
and careful planner.
- When he chose men to
serve with him – he was a bit picky.
- He didn’t want just
anyone… he wanted men who were faithful… dedicated… godly… who loved the
Lord and put Christ first.
- No doubt he interviewed
and grilled men on doctrine before they were accepted to serve with him.
- Demas no doubt went
through an extensive screening process before Paul would take him
on as a fellow laborer.
- And evidently, at that
time, he was approved and passed the test! Paul was impressed and pleased
with Demas early on.
- We have one more mention
of this man Demas in Paul’s final epistle. (II Tim. 4:10)
- What a different
picture we have of Demas in this verse!
- Years later, Demas did
something similar to what John Mark did. He departed from the work
of the Lord.
- He departed because he loved
the present world system.
- Not all who start well,
end well.
- It must have broken
Paul’s heart to have to write these words about his friend &
former fellow worker, Demas.
- Evidently Demas had a
colossal internal, spiritual struggle taking place.
i.
On the one hand, he saw Paul & other believers suffering in a
dingy prison for their faith in Christ… perhaps facing a death sentence.
ii.
On the other hand, there in the bustling city of Rome, the capital
of the world, he saw the lights that dazzle… the tempting sounds he heard…
there was the glitter of fashion… the gorgeous gardens and the magnificent
halls and palaces of the Ceasars.
iii.
In Rome, he
had access to the plays, the music halls, the night life, the women, the
carnivals and the countless distractions and festivities of that outstanding
city.
iv.
Over time, it got to him. He
caved in to the pressure and the allurements of the world.
- II Tim. 4:10 - World: aiwn – the age – the spirit of the age – the
philosophy of the world: you only go around once – grab for all the gusto
you can! Live it up! Live for today!
- Demas didn’t want to
live the crucified life any more. He wanted to live it up.
- He became enamored
by the world and the things of the world: the lust of the eyes,
the lust of the flesh, and the pride of life! (I John 2:15-16)
- Many a believer who
started off well has been HOOKED by the same enticements of the world’s
pleasure that hooked Demas.
- As a result, Demas FORSOOK
Paul…
i.
This is the same word as used
in Heb.10:25 – forsake not the assembling of yourselves together.
ii.
He left Paul and the work of
the Lord just like John Mark did… though for a different reason.
iii.
This must have been extremely
painful to the apostle.
iv.
It is always painful
when folks we come to know and love in the Lord DEPART… and return to the
world.
v.
Unfortunately, in the Lord’s
work, it happens all the time.
vi.
And in our age, we should
expect it more and more.
vii.
Cf. II Tim.3:1,2,4 – lovers
of themselves (vs.2), traitors to the cause of Christ (vs.4a)… lovers
of pleasure more than lovers of God (vs.4).
viii.
Note that Paul does not say
they have NO love for God. They love God – but they love the world and its
pleasures more.
ix.
That is a debilitating BLIGHT
upon the church of Jesus
Christ in our age.
x.
The work of God SUFFERS
as a result.
xi.
It’s hard to find qualified
folks to serve in the LC and COMMIT to being a SS teacher, choir member, or any
other ministry… much less a missionary… when they are MORE committed to
personal pleasure.
xii.
Demas looked at where Paul’s
faithfulness landed him (in a dingy prison cell)… and then he looked at all the
pleasures available in Rome – and chose to place his love on the world rather
than on Christ and His ministry.
xiii.
He made his choice.
xiv.
In the earthly here and
now – it seemed reasonable.
xv.
At the Bema Seat of
Christ he will see how foolish his worldly decisions were in light of
eternity… what a waste of God’s time to pursue the trinkets and pleasures of
the world that last but a moment… and loss of rewards forever.
xvi.
Paul knew the eternal
consequences of the poor choices Demas made and it broke his heart.
xvii.
For the believer, it is
suffering in this life… sacrifice in this life… the crucified life now… and the
crown in glory!
xviii.
“So I’ll cherish the old rugged
cross, till my (earthly) trophies at last I lay down; I will cling to the old
rugged cross and exchange it someday for a crown!”
xix.
Demas was unwilling to lay down
the trophies of this life. He was unwilling to pick up a cross to follow
Christ. He had his fun in this life. He will miss out on his crown forever and
ever.
xx.
Oh, he’ll make it to heaven…
but with precious little fruit… no crown to cast at the feet of the Lord Jesus
in worship… no “Well done thou good and faithful servant!”
- With no more information
than that, one might wonder about whether Demas was a believer at all.
i.
Was he like Judas? A false
disciple who pretended to walk the walk for a while and then quit because he
was not a genuine believer?
ii.
Was he like the folks John
describes in I John 2:19?
iii.
Was he like the seed that
landed on rocky soil… sprout up… and then dried up.
iv.
Did he depart from Paul and the
Lord because he was never truly born again?
v.
The only information we have is
that he followed for a while and departed.
vi.
That’s exactly what we are told
of John Mark too.
vii.
I’m inclined to believe that he
was a true believer… but a carnal, worldly believer who lived for himself
rather than for the Lord.
- But we don’t have the
final chapter on Demas.
- With the scant
information we have, it’s impossible to know for sure where he stood with
the Lord. (True believer or imposter)
- There are lots of men
and women like Demas – who started out well… and then departed.
- Where they stand with
the Lord we may never know. Only the Lord knows that.
- Because we don’t know
about so many folks “Demas” like followers today, we should believe
the best and keep on praying for them!
- God may have had a
wonderful final chapter for the life of Demas too…
- If all we knew about
John Mark was the information up to Acts 13, we might wonder the same
thing about him.
- God gave us more
info about John… but not about Demas.
- Perhaps Demas too
repented…
i.
Maybe he got sick
of the empty chaff the world had to offer… and returned to fellowship with His
heavenly Father like the prodigal son!
- We just don’t know.
- We have to leave Demas
in the hands of the Lord. He knows all things… He doeth all things well.
He never makes a mistake… never misjudges a heart.
- There are lots of men
and women who started off like John Mark and like Demas. They started off
well… and then they returned to the world.
- We ought to PRAY for
folks like Demas.
- We also ought to help encourage
and restore folks like John Mark.
- Maybe you ARE a
John-Mark or a Demas and
have departed from the Lord.
i.
There is no time like the
present to repent of your sin – see the error of your ways – the
wasted years away from Christ –
ii.
Return to fellowship with
Christ and His Body, the LC, and bear fruit once again!
iii.
Just like the father in the
story of the prodigal son, your Heavenly Father is waiting for you to return…
to receive you with open arms upon repentance.
iv.
What are you waiting for?
v.
So you’ve wasted time on
worldly pleasures and pursuits.
vi.
Use what time you have left for
the service of Christ… if you’ve forsaken the assembling of yourselves in the
LC – be like John Mark.
vii.
God may have a wonderful
ministry for you as He had for John Mark!
- God is still in the
business of restoring souls… and drawing wanderers back to
Himself… and transforming them into useful servants for His
glory!