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One day Jesus left his hometown of
Nazareth and went to the Jordan River where John the Baptist was busy
preaching that the Kingdom of Heaven was at hand and that men needed to
repent and be baptized.
When Jesus asked John to baptize him, John objected,
by saying:
I am the one who needs to be baptized by you.
Jesus reassured John that this is something he needed
to do as a part of what God had already planned.
John then agreed to baptize Jesus. As Jesus came out
of the water, the Holy Spirit in the form of a dove came down from
heaven and rested on Jesus. At the same time a voice thundered from
heaven and said:
This is my beloved Son in whom I am well pleased.
The very next day, Jesus passed by John the Baptist
and two of John's disciples. John, seeing Jesus, proclaimed:
Behold the Lamb of God who takes away the sin of
the world.
John’s two disciples, hearing this, began to follow
Jesus.
Jesus, seeing them, followed and asked them:
What are you looking for?
Teacher, they replied:
Where are you staying?
Jesus answered:
Come and see.
The two men followed Jesus and spent the rest of the
day with him.
One of the men was a fisherman named Andrew. After
spending just a short time with Jesus, Andrew became convinced that
Jesus was the long awaited Messiah. He went and found his brother Simon
and brought him to Jesus.
As soon as Jesus met Simon he looked at him with
intensity and asked:
You are Simon, the son of John? You shall be
called Peter.
Peter, whose name means ‘stone,’ became one of the
most ardent disciples of Jesus and a personal witness to Jesus’ miracles
and his teachings. Peter became one of the leaders of the first
Christian church in Jerusalem after Jesus’ death and resurrection.
It was during that time that Peter became connected
with a man named John Mark (simply known as Mark) Mark became Peter’s
personal secretary. Mark wrote the story of Jesus that is called the
Gospel of Mark.
Most biblical scholars agree that Peter was the
authoritative source of Mark’s account. Mark was not one of the 12
disciples, but he was an eyewitness to many of the events surrounding
Jesus’ life and was part of the wider circle of Jesus’ followers.
The Gospel of Mark is the second source that we will
use to tell the harmonized story of Jesus.
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