Mark 3:1 - Matthew Poole's English Annotations on the Holy Bible

Bible Comments

OLBGrk; MARK CHAPTER 3 Mark 3:1-5 Christ appealing to reason healeth the withered hand on the sabbath day. Mark 3:6-12 The Pharisees conspire his death: he retires to the seaside, and healeth many. Mark 3:13-19 He chooseth his twelve apostles. Mark 3:20-21 His friends look upon him as beside himself. Mark 3:22-30 He confutes the blasphemous absurdity of the Pharisees in ascribing his casting out of devils to the power of Beelzebub. Mark 3:31-35 Those who do the will of God he regardeth as his nearest relations. Ver. 1-5. See Poole on "Matthew 12:9", and following verses to Matthew 12:13. The word pwrwsei, used Mark 3:5, may be understood to signify blindness, or hardness, as it may derive from pwrov, callus, or pwrov, caecus, but the derivation of it from the former best obtains. Hardness being a quality in a thing by which it resisteth our touch, and suffers us not to make an impression upon it, that ill condition of the soul by which it becomes rebellious, and disobedient to the will of God revealed, so as it is not affected with it, nor doth it make any impression of faith or holiness upon the soul, is usually called hardness of heart. But for the argument of this history, proving acts of mercy lawful on the sabbath day, it is fully spoken to in the notes on Matthew 12:9-13.

Mark 3:1

1 And he entered again into the synagogue; and there was a man there which had a withered hand.