April 25th, Feast of St Mark the
Evangelist
In the
Roman Martyrology for April 25th, we find: “At Alexandria, the
[heavenly] birthday of Blessed Mark the Evangelist, he, for the faith of
Christ, being stretched and bound with cords, was dragged over the rocks, and
grievously tormented. Afterwards, being shut up in prison, he was first
comforted by an angelic vision, and at last by the appearance of the Lord
Himself, by whom he was called to the heavenly kingdom in the eighth year of
Nero.”
In honor
of this great saint and evangelist, we do well to consider certain details of
his person. Who was he? Is he John Mark? Was he a priest? Had he ever met
Jesus? Why is he presented under the figure of a lion?
Who was Saint Mark?
While
there are some who maintain that St Mark the Evangelist was among the 72
disciples and had for a time lapsed from the true faith only to be re-converted
and reconciled through St Peter some time after Pentecost, it is better to assert
that St Mark had never known Christ during his earthly life but was converted
to the faith by St Peter some time in the first years after Pentecost. This is
the most natural read of Sacred Scripture, when St Peter testifies that St Mark
is his spiritual son (“Mark, my son”, 1 Peter 5:13).
Some maintain
that the young man who followed our Lord after his arrest in the Garden but who
was then seized by the soldiers and abandoned his garment to flee away naked
into the night (cf. Mark 14:51) is St Mark the Evangelist, but nothing in the
text indicates this. Indeed, while it is clear that this young man must not
have been one of the Apostles (who had already fled), there is no indication
that he is the Author of the Gospel either. Rather, it is more probably that he
was either some other disciple of the Lord who had only just come upon the
scene, or with less probability, he may have been John Mark (who is supposed to
have been the man who owned the house in which the Last Supper took place).
Indeed,
another common confusion is to identify St Mark the Evangelist with John Mark
who was a disciple of St Paul and traveled with St Paul and Barnabas in their
missionary journeys through Greece. John Mark is referred to by St Paul in his
Letter to Philemon as well as in Colossians 4 and 2 Timothy 4. However, that
John Mark is not the same as Mark the Evangelist is clear from this point: St
Mark the Evangelist was the close disciple of St Peter and was with St Peter in
Rome at the same time that John Mark was with St Paul in Greece. Indeed, the
ancient tradition connects St Mark the Evangelist with the cities of Aquileia
in Italy and Alexandria in Egypt – John Mark, on the other hand, is not known
to have preached the Gospel in these places.
Thus,
following Father Cornelius a Lapide, it is perhaps best to assert that St Mark
the Evangelist was an Hebrew and likely a priest of the tribe of Levi (as St
Bede the Venerable teaches). He was converted to Christianity and baptized by
St Peter some time after Pentecost, and accompanies the Prince of the Apostles
even to Rome. Later, he was sent by St Peter to preach the Gospel in Egypt and
was Bishop of the Church in Alexandria. Here he gave witness to Christ through
martyrdom.
Why is St Mark pictured as a lion?
And as for the likeness of their faces: there
was the face of a man, and the face of a lion on the right side of all the
four: and the face of an ox, on the left side of all the four: and the face of
an eagle over all the four. (Ezekiel 1:10)
The
Church interprets the four living creatures as symbolic of the four
Evangelists. Borrowing from Ezekiel and from the Book of Revelation, we see St
Matthew pictured as a man, St Mark as a lion, St Luke as an ox, and St John as
an eagle. Why is St Mark represented by the figure of a lion?
The
images of the four Evangelists are taken in large part from the manner in which
they begin their Gospels. As St Matthew begins with the human geneology of
Jesus, he is pictured as a man. St John soars to the heights of the eagle with In the beginning was the Word, and St Luke calls to mind the sacrificial
offering of the ox beginning with the sacrifice which Zachariah offered in the
Temple. Thus also St Mark, who opens with the mighty roar of St John the
Baptist’s call to repentance, is pictured under the powerful image of the lion.
An additional meaning which could be signified by the lion relates to a tradition which considers St Mark as the founder of monastic life and of the desert fathers. Since St Mark is the father of the Church of Alexandria and since this Church produced the great movement of consecrated religious life as hermit, anchorite, monk, or nun, St Mark is rightly considered by St Jerome and John Cassian to be the founder of monasteries and hermitages. Now, lions are often connected with the desert fathers and other ancient monks -- whether we think of St Paul the Hermit and St Anthony of Egypt (whose graves were dug by lions), or of St Jerome (pictured with the lion he cured), or even St Blase (who as a hermit was surrounded by lions and other wild beasts). Therefore, the image of the lion calls to mind St Mark's connection with Alexandria and his role as the spiritual father of religious life in the Church.
An additional meaning which could be signified by the lion relates to a tradition which considers St Mark as the founder of monastic life and of the desert fathers. Since St Mark is the father of the Church of Alexandria and since this Church produced the great movement of consecrated religious life as hermit, anchorite, monk, or nun, St Mark is rightly considered by St Jerome and John Cassian to be the founder of monasteries and hermitages. Now, lions are often connected with the desert fathers and other ancient monks -- whether we think of St Paul the Hermit and St Anthony of Egypt (whose graves were dug by lions), or of St Jerome (pictured with the lion he cured), or even St Blase (who as a hermit was surrounded by lions and other wild beasts). Therefore, the image of the lion calls to mind St Mark's connection with Alexandria and his role as the spiritual father of religious life in the Church.
Additional
notes to support our thesis above:
St Jerome
(Catalogue of Ecclesiatical Writers: “Mark was a disciple and interpreter of St
Peter. At the request of the brethren at Rome, he wrote a short Gospel, based
upon what he had heard St Peter relate. This, when Peter had heard, he approved
of, and sanctioned its being read in the Church […] Mark took his Gospel, which
he had compiled, and went to Egypt. He first preached Christ at Alexandria, and
founded a Church there, which possessed such great purity of doctrine and life
that it influenced all followers of Christ by its example.”
Again, St
Jermone (Introduction to the Commentary on Matthew): “Mark, the interpreter of
the Apostle Peter, who indeed had not himself seen the Lord, the Saviour, but
had heard his master’s preaching, related according to the truth of the things
which were done, rather than the order in which they were done.”
Clement of
Alexandria (tom. 6, in Biblioth. Patr. in Edit. Parisiensi.): “Mark, the
follower of Peter, when Peter was preaching the Gospel publicly at Rome, in the
presence of certain knights of Caesar’s household, and was advancing many
testimonies about Christ, being requested by them, wrote from the things which
were spoken by Peter a Gospel, which is called that according to Mark.”
Thank you for this wonderful discourse on St. Mark. When seeking an understanding of Scripture, I too seek the exegesis of Fr. a Lapide. It is a great counter point to the modernist tendencies of today's Biblical scholars who often scoff at the teachings of the Church Fathers and of men such as Fr. a Lapide and Fr. George Haydock.
ReplyDeleteSuch a wonderful way to get to know better someone who spent a good portion of their life to proclaiming God's Glory through His Son.
ReplyDeleteJimPas