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Ryle on Mark 14:10-16

J. C. Ryle, Expository Thoughts on Mark

Ryle on Mark 14:10-16

Imported boundary: J. C. Ryle's Expository Thoughts on Mark from the Internet Archive DjVu OCR for the 1858 Robert Carter St. Mark volume. Title pages, preface, contents, running heads, page numbers, OCR boilerplate, and indexes are not mirrored. The source includes Ryle's printed Scripture text and exposition; this scan-derived text remains needs-verification.

Primary passage: Mark 14:10-16.

Source Text

10 And Judas Iscariot, one of the twelve, went unto the Chief Priests, to betray him unto them. 11 And when they heard U, they were glad, and promised to give him money. And he sought how he might conveniently betray him. 12 And the first day of unleavened bread, when they killed the Passover, his disciples said unto him, Where wilt thou that we go and prepare that thou mavest eat the Passover ? 13 And he sendeth forth two of his disciples, and saith unto them, Go ye into the city, and there shall meet you a man bearing a pitcher of water : follow him. 14 And wheresoever he shall go in, say ye to the goodman of the house, The Master saith, Where is the guest- chamber, where I shall eat the Pass- over with my disciples ? 15 And he will shew you a large upper room furnished and prepared : there make ready for us. 16 And his disciples went forth, and came into the city, and found as he had said unto them : and they made ready the Passover. In these verses, St. Mark tells us how our Lord was delivered into the hands of His enemies. It came to pass through the treachery of one of His own twelve disciples. The false apostle, Judas Iscariot, betrayed Him.

We ought to mark, firstly, in this passage, to what lengths a man may go in a false profession of religion. It is impossible to conceive a more striking proof of this painful truth, than the history of Judas Iscariot. If ever there was a man who at one time looked like a true disciple of Christ, and bade fair to reach heaven, that man was Judas. He was chosen by the Lord Jesus Himself to be an apostle. He was privileged to be a companion of the Messiah, and an eye-witness of His mighty works, throughout His earthly ministry. He was an associate of Peter, James and John. He was sent forth to preach the kingdom of God, and to work miracles in Christ's name. He was regarded by all the eleven apostles as one of themselves. He was so like his fellow disciples, that they did not suspect him of being a traitor. And yet this very man turns out at last a false-hearted child of the devil - departs entirely from the faith - assists our Lord's deadliest enemies, and leaves the world with a worse reputation than any one since the days of Cain. Never was there such a fall, such an apostacy, such a miserable end to a fair begin- ning- such a total eclipse of a soul ! And how can this amazing conduct of Judas be ac- counted for ? There is only one answer to that question. " The love of money" was the cause of this unhappy man's ruin. That same grovelling covetousoess, which enslaved the heart of Balaam, and brought on Gehazi a leprosy, was the destruction of Iscariot' s soul. No other explanation of his behavior will satisfy the plain 303 statements of Scripture. His act was an act of mean covetousness, without a redeeming feature about it. The Holy Ghost declares plainly " he was a thief." (John xii. 6.) And his case stands before the world as an eternal comment on the solemn words, " the love of money is the root of all evil." (1 Tim. vi. 10.)

Let us learn from this melancholy history of Judas, to be "clothed with humility," and to be content with nothing short of the grace of the Holy Ghost in our hearts. Knowledge, gifts, profession, privileges, church- member-ship, power of preaching, praying, and talking about religion, are all useless things, if our hearts are not converted. They are all no better than sounding brass, and a tinkling cymbal, if we have not put off the old man, and put on the new. They will not deliver us from hell. - Above all, let us remember our Lord's cau- tion, to " beware of covetousness." (Luke xii. 15.) It is a sin that eats like a canker, and once admitted into our hearts, may lead us finally into every wickedness.

Let us pray to be " content with such things as we have." (Heb. xiii. 6.) The possession of money is not the one thing needful. Kiches entail great peril on the souls of those who have-them. The true Christian ought to be far more afraid of being rich than of being poor.

We ought to mark, secondly, in this passage, the in- tentional connection between the time of the Jewish passover and the time of Christ 's death. We cannot doubt for a moment that it was not by chance, but by God's provi- dential appointment, that our Lord was crucified in the passover week, and on the very day that the passover lamb was slain. It was meant to draw the attention of the Jewish nation to Him as the true Lamb of God. It was meant to bring to their minds the true object and purpose of His death. Every sacrifice, no doubt, was intended to point the Jew onward to the one great sac- rifice for sin which Christ offered. But none, certainly, was so striking a figure and type of our Lord's sacrifice, as the slaying of the passover lamb. It was pre-emi- nently an ordinance which was a " schoolmaster unto Christ," (Gral. iii. 24.) Never was there a type so full of meaning in the whole circle of Jewish ceremonies, as the passover was at its original institution. Did the passover remind the Jew of the marvellous deliverance of his forefathers out of the land of Egypt, when God slew the first-born ? No doubt it did. But it was also meant to be a sign to him of the far greater redemption and deliverance from the bondage of sin, which was to be brought in by our Lord Jesus Christ. Did the passover remind the Jew, that by the death of an innocent lamb, the families of his forefathers were once exempted from the death of their first-born ? No doubt it did. But it was also meant to teach him the far higher truth, that the death of Christ on the cross was to be the life of the world. Did the passover remind the Jew that the sprinkling of blood on the door-posts of his forefathers' houses, preserved them from the sword of the destroying angel ? No doubt it did. But it was also meant to show him the far more important doctrine that Christ's blood sprinkled on man's conscience, cleanses it from all stain of guilt, and makes him safe from the wrath to come. Did the passover remind the Jew that none of his fore- fathers were safe from the destroying angel, in the night when he slew the first-born, unless he actually ate of the slain lamb ? No doubt it did. But it was meant to guide his mind to the far higher lesson, that all who would receive benefit from Christ's atonement, must actually feed upon Him by faith, and receive Him into their hearts. Let us call these things to mind, and weigh them well. We shall then see a peculiar fitness and beauty in the time appointed by God for our Lord Jesus Christ's death on the cross. It happened at the very season when the mind of all Israel was being directed to the deliverance from Egypt, and to the events of that wondrous night, when it took place. The lamb slain and eaten by every member of the family - the destroying angel - the safety within the blood-sprinkled door, would have been talked over and considered in every Jewish household, the very week that our blessed Lord was slain. It would be strange indeed if such a remarkable death as His, at such a time, did not set many minds thinking, and open many eyes. To what extent we shall never know till the last day. Let it be a rule with us, in the reading of our Bibles, to study the types and ordinances of the Mosaic law with prayerful attention. They are all full of Christ. The altar - the scape-goat - the daily burnt-offering - the day of atonement, are all so many finger-posts point- ing to the great sacrifice offered by our Lord on Calvary. Those who neglect to study the Jewish ordinances, as dark, dull, and uninteresting parts of the Bible, only show their own ignorance, and miss great advantages. Those who examine them with Christ as the key to their meaning, will find them full of Gospel light and com- fortable truth.*

Source and provenance

Citation: J. C. Ryle, Expository Thoughts on the Gospels: St. Mark, New York: Robert Carter & Brothers, 1858; Internet Archive / Princeton Theological Seminary Library scan OCR, Mark 14:10-16, accessed 2026-07-10. Source URL: https://archive.org/details/expositorythough02ryle

Original work: public-domain nineteenth-century Anglican exposition; Mark volume print basis New York: Robert Carter & Brothers, 1858

Digital source: Internet Archive / Princeton Theological Seminary Library scan

Edition status: Needs verification

Proof texts: Proof texts not attached

Scripture refs: MRK.14.10-MRK.14.16

Source provider: Internet Archive / Princeton Theological Seminary Library scan

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