Mark 4:35 – Jesus Calms the Storm
BlogGospel of MarkMark 4:35 – Jesus Calms the Storm
Gospel of Mark

Mark 4:35 – Jesus Calms the Storm

{"type":"doc","content":[{"type":"paragraph","content":[{"type":"text","text":"In the midst of a turbulent storm on the Sea of Galilee, Jesus stands with authority, calming the waters and leaving His astonished disciples in awe, asking, \"Who then is this?\""}]},{"type":"blockquo

September 3, 2025·4 min read
Share

{"type":"doc","content":[{"type":"paragraph","content":[{"type":"text","text":"In the midst of a turbulent storm on the Sea of Galilee, Jesus stands with authority, calming the waters and leaving His astonished disciples in awe, asking, \"Who then is this?\""}]},{"type":"blockquote","content":[{"type":"paragraph","content":[{"type":"text","text":"“On the same day, when evening had come, He said to them, ‘Let us cross over to the other side.’ Now when they had left the multitude, they took Him along in the boat as He was. And other little boats were also with Him. And a great windstorm arose, and the waves beat into the boat, so that it was already filling. But He was in the stern, asleep on a pillow. And they awoke Him and said to Him, ‘Teacher, do You not care that we are perishing?’ Then He arose and rebuked the wind, and said to the sea, ‘Peace, be still!’ And the wind ceased and there was a great calm. But He said to them, ‘Why are you so fearful? How is it that you have no faith?’ And they feared exceedingly, and said to one another, ‘Who can this be, that even the wind and the sea obey Him!’” Mark 4:35–41 (NKJV)"}]}]},{"type":"paragraph","content":[{"type":"hardBreak"}]},{"type":"heading","attrs":{"level":2},"content":[{"type":"text","text":"Put Yourself There"}]},{"type":"paragraph","content":[{"type":"text","text":"“On that day, when evening had come…” What day? The very day Jesus sat in a boat teaching the crowds in parables — about seeds scattered, lamps hidden and revealed, mustard seeds becoming shelter. After hours of teaching, He was spent. But He still said, “Let’s cross to the other side.”The “other side” wasn’t neutral. It was Gentile ground — the Decapolis, with Greek cities, pagan shrines, and pig farms."}]},{"type":"paragraph","content":[{"type":"hardBreak"}]},{"type":"paragraph","content":[{"type":"text","text":"Every Jewish instinct told the disciples: We don’t belong there. But they followed anyway.The lake itself made it risky. The Sea of Galilee — thirteen miles long, eight wide, 700 feet below sea level — is notorious. Cold air rushing down from Mount Hermon collides with warm air over the water, and without warning the calm surface can erupt into chaos.That’s what happened. A squall slammed them, waves crashing, water filling the boat. And these weren’t amateurs — they were Galilean fishermen. If they panicked, it meant this was no ordinary storm.Meanwhile, Jesus slept. On a cushion. In the stern."}]},{"type":"paragraph","content":[{"type":"hardBreak"}]},{"type":"heading","attrs":{"level":2},"content":[{"type":"text","text":"First Readers, First Shock"}]},{"type":"paragraph","content":[{"type":"text","text":"For Jewish ears, this scene shouted one thing: only Yahweh commands the sea. “You rule the raging of the sea” (Ps. 89:9). “He calms the storm” (Ps. 107:29). Rabbis could pray for deliverance — but no man speaks and the sea obeys.For Greek ears, the sea belonged to Poseidon. Heroes like Odysseus endured storms, but only gods commanded them. For Mark to say that a man rebuked the wind and silenced the sea? That shattered categories.Both groups would’ve been floored into the same question: “Who then is this?”"}]},{"type":"paragraph","content":[{"type":"hardBreak"}]},{"type":"heading","attrs":{"level":2},"content":[{"type":"text","text":"Why Here in Mark?"}]},{"type":"paragraph","content":[{"type":"text","text":"Mark doesn’t drop this story here by accident. It kicks off a deliberate sequence:- Nature (the storm).- Spirits (Legion).- Disease (the bleeding woman).- Death (Jairus’ daughter).One by one, Jesus faces what humans cannot master. Nature, demons, disease, death — all bow."}]},{"type":"paragraph","content":[{"type":"hardBreak"}]},{"type":"blockquote","content":[{"type":"paragraph","content":[{"type":"text","text":"Sidebar: Why Cross into Gentile Land?Didn’t Jesus say His mission was to Israel first? Yes. But “first” doesn’t mean “only.” This crossing foreshadows the Kingdom’s expansion. On the other side waits a Gentile man possessed by Legion — and he becomes the first missionary Jesus sends to his own people. Right here, Jesus is already showing His lordship doesn’t stop at Israel’s borders."}]}]},{"type":"paragraph","content":[{"type":"hardBreak"}]},{"type":"heading","attrs":{"level":2},"content":[{"type":"text","text":"The Deeper Issue"}]},{"type":"paragraph","content":[{"type":"text","text":"When the disciples shook Him awake, they didn’t ask, “Can You calm this storm?” They didn’t think He could. They accused Him: “Don’t You care?”That’s what fear does. It doesn’t just cry for help — it questions His heart.And His response? Not “Why did you wake Me?” but “Why are you afraid? Have you still no faith?” The real danger wasn’t the waves. It was their unbelief.And when the storm stopped, they weren’t comforted. They were terrified. “They feared a great fear,” Mark says. Because now they knew: the man in the boat wasn’t safe. He was holy."}]},{"type":"paragraph","content":[{"type":"hardBreak"}]},{"type":"heading","attrs":{"level":2},"content":[{"type":"text","text":"The Danger of Reading Ourselves Into the Story"}]},{"type":"paragraph","content":[{"type":"text","text":"Here’s where I need to be blunt. I grew up hearing this story preached mainly as comfort for my storms. “Whatever waves you’re facing, Jesus can calm them.” And yes, there’s some truth in that. But that’s not what Mark is doing.This is where we’ve trained ourselves to read Scripture the wrong way. We rush straight to application. “How does this help me get through my week?” I’ve done it. You’ve done it. And when we do, we flatten the text.Mark isn’t writing about my storms or yours. He’s writing to confront us with the disciples’ terror: “Who then is this?”That’s the real problem — we’ve made the Bible about us. And when it doesn’t deliver quick comfort, we set it aside. But Mark won’t let us off easy. He presses us into the fear, into the shock, into the realization that Jesus doesn’t fit in our categories. He’s not safe. He’s Lord."}]},{"type":"paragraph","content":[{"type":"hardBreak"}]},{"type":"heading","attrs":{"level":2},"content":[{"type":"text","text":"Bringing It Home"}]},{"type":"paragraph","content":[{"type":"text","text":"- We pray like them: “God, don’t You care?” as if His calm means indifference.- We misread His silence. Sleep in the stern is not neglect — it’s authority.- We fear the wrong thing. The storm outside looks bigger than the Lord beside us.The storm leaves us with the same question the disciples whispered in awe and fear: Who then is this? Until we answer that, our faith will keep capsizing when the waves rise."}]}]}

Share

Acts 17:11

Become a Berean

“They received the message with great eagerness and examined the Scriptures every day.”

The goal isn't to follow a teacher — it's to read the Word yourself, in context, with the tools to understand what it actually says. Everything here is free. Start where you are.

Pick a SeriesVerse-by-verse through a book of the BibleListen In172 episodes — study while you drive or walkStudy ToolDeeper tools for personal study

No sign-up. No subscription. No agenda. Just the Word.

More in This Series

Ep.1
Introduction to the this study in Mark
Welcome to Studies in the Gospel of Mark, from The Berean Post. I’m Dwaine, and this is my journey — not chasing applause, not repeating clichés, but opening Scripture as the first readers heard it: raw, disruptive, and demanding a response.Each episode we’ll walk through Mark’s
Ep.2
— The Gospel According to Mark: Background & Distinctives
In this episode of Studies in the Gospel of Mark, we step back to look at the unique shape and voice of Mark’s Gospel. Who was John Mark? Why does this Gospel read so urgently compared to Matthew, Luke, or John? And what would the first readers — especially in a Roman context — h
Ep.3
Ep. Mark 1:1 The Beginning of the Gospel
In the very first verse of the Gospel of Mark, we encounter a profound proclamation: "The beginning of the gospel of Jesus Christ, the Son of God." This simple yet powerful line sets the stage for a revolutionary narrative. Understanding the Greek words used in this passage, especially "beginning" and "gospel," reveals insights that connect to the greater biblical panorama, including the opening chapters of John and Genesis.
← All episodes in The Gospel of Mark