1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16

Jesus Is Rejected at Nazareth

(Matthew 13.53-58; Luke 4.16-30)

The Teaching of the Ancestors

(Matthew 15.1-9)

Jesus Feeds Four Thousand People

(Matthew 15.32-39)

Jesus Teaches about Divorce

(Matthew 19.1-12; Luke 16.18)

The Triumphant Entry into Jerusalem

(Matthew 21.1-11; Luke 19.28-40; John 12.12-19)

The Parable of the Tenants in the Vineyard

(Matthew 21.33-46; Luke 20.9-19)

Jesus Speaks of the Destruction of the Temple

(Matthew 24.1, 2; Luke 21.5, 6)

The Plot against Jesus

(Matthew 26.1-5; Luke 22.1, 2; John 11.45-53)

Jesus before Pilate

(Matthew 27.1, 2, 11-14; Luke 23.1-5; John 18.28-38)

The Resurrection

(Matthew 28.1-8; Luke 24.1-12; John 20.1-10)

1 Jesus left that place and went back to his hometown, followed by his disciples.

The Transfiguration

(Matthew 17.1-13; Luke 9.28-36)

2 On the Sabbath he began to teach in the synagogue. Many people were there; and when they heard him, they were all amazed. “Where did he get all this?” they asked. “What wisdom is this that has been given him? How does he perform miracles?

Troubles and Persecutions

(Matthew 24.3-14; Luke 21.7-19)

Jesus Is Anointed at Bethany

(Matthew 26.6-13; John 12.1-8)

3 Isn't he the carpenter, the son of Mary, and the brother of James, Joseph, Judas, and Simon? Aren't his sisters living here?” And so they rejected him. 4 Jesus said to them, “Prophets are respected everywhere except in their own hometown and by their relatives and their family.” 5 He was not able to perform any miracles there, except that he placed his hands on a few sick people and healed them.

Jesus Is Sentenced to Death

(Matthew 27.15-26; Luke 23.13-25; John 18.39—19.16)

6 He was greatly surprised, because the people did not have faith. Then Jesus went to the villages around there, teaching the people.

Jesus Sends Out the Twelve Disciples

(Matthew 10.5-15; Luke 9.1-6)

7 He called the twelve disciples together and sent them out two by two. He gave them authority over the evil spirits 8 and ordered them, “Don't take anything with you on the trip except a walking stick—no bread, no beggar's bag, no money in your pockets.

AN OLD ENDING TO THE GOSPEL

Jesus Appears to Mary Magdalene

(Matthew 28.9, 10; John 20.11-18)

9 Wear sandals, but don't carry an extra shirt.”

Judas Agrees to Betray Jesus

(Matthew 26.14-16; Luke 22.3-6)

10 He also told them, “Wherever you are welcomed, stay in the same house until you leave that place.

The Pharisees Ask for a Miracle

(Matthew 16.1-4)

11 If you come to a town where people do not welcome you or will not listen to you, leave it and shake the dust off your feet. That will be a warning to them!”

Jesus Curses the Fig Tree

(Matthew 21.18, 19)

Jesus Eats the Passover Meal with His Disciples

(Matthew 26.17-25; Luke 22.7-14, 21-23; John 13.21-30)

Jesus Appears to Two Followers

(Luke 24.13-35)

12 So they went out and preached that people should turn away from their sins.

Jesus Blesses Little Children

(Matthew 19.13-15; Luke 18.15-17)

The Question about Paying Taxes

(Matthew 22.15-22; Luke 20.20-26)

13 They drove out many demons, and rubbed olive oil on many sick people and healed them.

The Death of John the Baptist

(Matthew 14.1-12; Luke 9.7-9)

The Things That Make a Person Unclean

(Matthew 15.10-20)

The Yeast of the Pharisees and of Herod

(Matthew 16.5-12)

Jesus Heals a Boy with an Evil Spirit

(Matthew 17.14-21; Luke 9.37-43a)

The Awful Horror

(Matthew 24.15-28; Luke 21.20-24)

Jesus Appears to the Eleven

(Matthew 28.16-20; Luke 24.36-49; John 20.19-23; Acts 1.6-8)

14 Now King Herod heard about all this, because Jesus' reputation had spread everywhere. Some people were saying, “John the Baptist has come back to life! That is why he has this power to perform miracles.”

Jesus Goes to the Temple

(Matthew 21.12-17; Luke 19.45-48; John 2.13-22)

15 Others, however, said, “He is Elijah.” Others said, “He is a prophet, like one of the prophets of long ago.”

The Soldiers Make Fun of Jesus

(Matthew 27.27-31; John 19.2, 3)

16 When Herod heard it, he said, “He is John the Baptist! I had his head cut off, but he has come back to life!”

The Rich Man

(Matthew 19.16-30; Luke 18.18-30)

17 Herod himself had ordered John's arrest, and he had him tied up and put in prison. Herod did this because of Herodias, whom he had married, even though she was the wife of his brother Philip.

The Question about Rising from Death

(Matthew 22.23-33; Luke 20.27-40)

18 John the Baptist kept telling Herod, “It isn't right for you to marry your brother's wife!”

Jesus Is Taken Up to Heaven

(Luke 24.50-53; Acts 1.9-11)

19 So Herodias held a grudge against John and wanted to kill him, but she could not because of Herod.

The Lesson from the Fig Tree

(Matthew 21.20-22)

20 Herod was afraid of John because he knew that John was a good and holy man, and so he kept him safe. He liked to listen to him, even though he became greatly disturbed every time he heard him.

Jesus Is Crucified

(Matthew 27.32-44; Luke 23.26-43; John 19.17-27)

ANOTHER OLD ENDING

21 Finally Herodias got her chance. It was on Herod's birthday, when he gave a feast for all the top government officials, the military chiefs, and the leading citizens of Galilee.

Jesus Heals a Blind Man at Bethsaida

The Lord's Supper

(Matthew 26.26-30; Luke 22.14-20; 1 Corinthians 11.23-25)

22 The daughter of Herodias came in and danced, and pleased Herod and his guests. So the king said to the girl, “What would you like to have? I will give you anything you want.” 23 With many vows he said to her, “I swear that I will give you anything you ask for, even as much as half my kingdom!”

A Woman's Faith

(Matthew 15.21-28)

The Coming of the Son of Man

(Matthew 24.29-31; Luke 21.25-28)

24 So the girl went out and asked her mother, “What shall I ask for?” “The head of John the Baptist,” she answered. 25 The girl hurried back at once to the king and demanded, “I want you to give me here and now the head of John the Baptist on a plate!” 26 This made the king very sad, but he could not refuse her because of the vows he had made in front of all his guests.

Peter's Declaration about Jesus

(Matthew 16.13-20; Luke 9.18-21)

The Question about Jesus' Authority

(Matthew 21.23-27; Luke 20.1-8)

Jesus Predicts Peter's Denial

(Matthew 26.31-35; Luke 22.31-34; John 13.36-38)

27 So he sent off a guard at once with orders to bring John's head. The guard left, went to the prison, and cut John's head off; *

The Great Commandment

(Matthew 22.34-40; Luke 10.25-28)

The Lesson of the Fig Tree

(Matthew 24.32-35; Luke 21.29-33)

28 then he brought it on a plate and gave it to the girl, who gave it to her mother. 29 When John's disciples heard about this, they came and got his body, and buried it.

Jesus Feeds Five Thousand

(Matthew 14.13-21; Luke 9.10-17; John 6.1-14)

Jesus Speaks Again about His Death

(Matthew 17.22, 23; Luke 9.43b-45)

30 The apostles returned and met with Jesus, and told him all they had done and taught.

Jesus Heals a Deaf-Mute

Jesus Speaks about His Suffering and Death

(Matthew 16.21-28; Luke 9.22-27)

31 There were so many people coming and going that Jesus and his disciples didn't even have time to eat. So he said to them, “Let us go off by ourselves to some place where we will be alone and you can rest a while.”

Jesus Speaks a Third Time about His Death

(Matthew 20.17-19; Luke 18.31-34)

No One Knows the Day or Hour

(Matthew 24.36-44)

Jesus Prays in Gethsemane

(Matthew 26.36-46; Luke 22.39-46)

32 So they started out in a boat by themselves to a lonely place.

Who Is the Greatest?

(Matthew 18.1-5; Luke 9.46-48)

The Death of Jesus

(Matthew 27.45-56; Luke 23.44-49; John 19.28-30)

33 Many people, however, saw them leave and knew at once who they were; so they went from all the towns and ran ahead by land and arrived at the place ahead of Jesus and his disciples. 34 When Jesus got out of the boat, he saw this large crowd, and his heart was filled with pity for them, because they were like sheep without a shepherd. So he began to teach them many things.

The Request of James and John

(Matthew 20.20-28)

The Question about the Messiah

(Matthew 22.41-46; Luke 20.41-44)

35 When it was getting late, his disciples came to him and said, “It is already very late, and this is a lonely place. 36 Send the people away, and let them go to the nearby farms and villages in order to buy themselves something to eat.” 37 “You yourselves give them something to eat,” Jesus answered. They asked, “Do you want us to go and spend two hundred silver coins on bread in order to feed them?”

Whoever Is Not against Us Is for Us

(Luke 9.49, 50)

Jesus Warns against the Teachers of the Law

(Matthew 23.1-36; Luke 20.45-47)

38 So Jesus asked them, “How much bread do you have? Go and see.” When they found out, they told him, “Five loaves and also two fish.” 39 Jesus then told his disciples to make all the people divide into groups and sit down on the green grass. * 40 So the people sat down in rows, in groups of a hundred and groups of fifty.

The Widow's Offering

(Luke 21.1-4)

41 Then Jesus took the five loaves and the two fish, looked up to heaven, and gave thanks to God. He broke the loaves and gave them to his disciples to distribute to the people. He also divided the two fish among them all.

Temptations to Sin

(Matthew 18.6-9; Luke 17.1, 2)

The Burial of Jesus

(Matthew 27.57-61; Luke 23.50-56; John 19.38-42)

42 Everyone ate and had enough.

The Arrest of Jesus

(Matthew 26.47-56; Luke 22.47-53; John 18.3-12)

43 Then the disciples took up twelve baskets full of what was left of the bread and the fish. 44 The number of men who were fed was five thousand.

Jesus Walks on the Water

(Matthew 14.22-33; John 6.15-21)

45 At once Jesus made his disciples get into the boat and go ahead of him to Bethsaida, on the other side of the lake, while he sent the crowd away.

Jesus Heals Blind Bartimaeus

(Matthew 20.29-34; Luke 18.35-43)

46 After saying good-bye to the people, he went away to a hill to pray. 47 When evening came, the boat was in the middle of the lake, while Jesus was alone on land. 48 He saw that his disciples were straining at the oars, because they were rowing against the wind; so sometime between three and six o'clock in the morning, he came to them, walking on the water. He was going to pass them by, 49 but they saw him walking on the water. “It's a ghost!” they thought, and screamed. 50 They were all terrified when they saw him. Jesus spoke to them at once, “Courage!” he said. “It is I. Don't be afraid!” 51 Then he got into the boat with them, and the wind died down. The disciples were completely amazed, 52 because they had not understood the real meaning of the feeding of the five thousand; their minds could not grasp it.

Jesus Heals the Sick in Gennesaret

(Matthew 14.34-36)

Jesus before the Council

(Matthew 26.57-68; Luke 22.54, 55, 63-71; John 18.13, 14, 19-24)

53 They crossed the lake and came to land at Gennesaret, where they tied up the boat. 54 As they left the boat, people recognized Jesus at once. 55 So they ran throughout the whole region; and wherever they heard he was, they brought to him the sick lying on their mats. 56 And everywhere Jesus went, to villages, towns, or farms, people would take their sick to the marketplaces and beg him to let the sick at least touch the edge of his cloak. And all who touched it were made well.

Jesus Is Rejected at Nazareth

(Matthew 13.53-58; Luke 4.16-30)

The Teaching of the Ancestors

(Matthew 15.1-9)

Jesus Feeds Four Thousand People

(Matthew 15.32-39)

Jesus Teaches about Divorce

(Matthew 19.1-12; Luke 16.18)

The Triumphant Entry into Jerusalem

(Matthew 21.1-11; Luke 19.28-40; John 12.12-19)

The Parable of the Tenants in the Vineyard

(Matthew 21.33-46; Luke 20.9-19)

Jesus Speaks of the Destruction of the Temple

(Matthew 24.1, 2; Luke 21.5, 6)

The Plot against Jesus

(Matthew 26.1-5; Luke 22.1, 2; John 11.45-53)

Jesus before Pilate

(Matthew 27.1, 2, 11-14; Luke 23.1-5; John 18.28-38)

The Resurrection

(Matthew 28.1-8; Luke 24.1-12; John 20.1-10)

1 Some Pharisees and teachers of the Law who had come from Jerusalem gathered around Jesus.

The Transfiguration

(Matthew 17.1-13; Luke 9.28-36)

2 They noticed that some of his disciples were eating their food with hands that were ritually unclean—that is, they had not washed them in the way the Pharisees said people should. (

Troubles and Persecutions

(Matthew 24.3-14; Luke 21.7-19)

Jesus Is Anointed at Bethany

(Matthew 26.6-13; John 12.1-8)

3 For the Pharisees, as well as the rest of the Jews, follow the teaching they received from their ancestors: they do not eat unless they wash their hands in the proper way; 4 nor do they eat anything that comes from the market unless they wash it first. And they follow many other rules which they have received, such as the proper way to wash cups, pots, copper bowls, and beds.) 5 So the Pharisees and the teachers of the Law asked Jesus, “Why is it that your disciples do not follow the teaching handed down by our ancestors, but instead eat with ritually unclean hands?”

Jesus Is Sentenced to Death

(Matthew 27.15-26; Luke 23.13-25; John 18.39—19.16)

6 Jesus answered them, “How right Isaiah was when he prophesied about you! You are hypocrites, just as he wrote:
‘These people, says God, honor me with their words,
but their heart is really far away from me.

Jesus Sends Out the Twelve Disciples

(Matthew 10.5-15; Luke 9.1-6)

7 It is no use for them to worship me,
because they teach human rules
as though they were my laws!’
8 “You put aside God's command and obey human teachings.”

AN OLD ENDING TO THE GOSPEL

Jesus Appears to Mary Magdalene

(Matthew 28.9, 10; John 20.11-18)

9 And Jesus continued, “You have a clever way of rejecting God's law in order to uphold your own teaching.

Judas Agrees to Betray Jesus

(Matthew 26.14-16; Luke 22.3-6)

10 For Moses commanded, ‘Respect your father and your mother,’ and, ‘If you curse your father or your mother, you are to be put to death.’

The Pharisees Ask for a Miracle

(Matthew 16.1-4)

11 But you teach that if people have something they could use to help their father or mother, but say, ‘This is Corban’ (which means, it belongs to God),

Jesus Curses the Fig Tree

(Matthew 21.18, 19)

Jesus Eats the Passover Meal with His Disciples

(Matthew 26.17-25; Luke 22.7-14, 21-23; John 13.21-30)

Jesus Appears to Two Followers

(Luke 24.13-35)

12 they are excused from helping their father or mother.

Jesus Blesses Little Children

(Matthew 19.13-15; Luke 18.15-17)

The Question about Paying Taxes

(Matthew 22.15-22; Luke 20.20-26)

13 In this way the teaching you pass on to others cancels out the word of God. And there are many other things like this that you do.”

The Death of John the Baptist

(Matthew 14.1-12; Luke 9.7-9)

The Things That Make a Person Unclean

(Matthew 15.10-20)

The Yeast of the Pharisees and of Herod

(Matthew 16.5-12)

Jesus Heals a Boy with an Evil Spirit

(Matthew 17.14-21; Luke 9.37-43a)

The Awful Horror

(Matthew 24.15-28; Luke 21.20-24)

Jesus Appears to the Eleven

(Matthew 28.16-20; Luke 24.36-49; John 20.19-23; Acts 1.6-8)

14 Then Jesus called the crowd to him once more and said to them, “Listen to me, all of you, and understand.

Jesus Goes to the Temple

(Matthew 21.12-17; Luke 19.45-48; John 2.13-22)

15 There is nothing that goes into you from the outside which can make you ritually unclean. Rather, it is what comes out of you that makes you unclean.”

The Rich Man

(Matthew 19.16-30; Luke 18.18-30)

17 When he left the crowd and went into the house, his disciples asked him to explain this saying.

The Question about Rising from Death

(Matthew 22.23-33; Luke 20.27-40)

18 “You are no more intelligent than the others,” Jesus said to them. “Don't you understand? Nothing that goes into you from the outside can really make you unclean,

Jesus Is Taken Up to Heaven

(Luke 24.50-53; Acts 1.9-11)

19 because it does not go into your heart but into your stomach and then goes on out of the body.” (In saying this, Jesus declared that all foods are fit to be eaten.)

The Lesson from the Fig Tree

(Matthew 21.20-22)

20 And he went on to say, “It is what comes out of you that makes you unclean.

Jesus Is Crucified

(Matthew 27.32-44; Luke 23.26-43; John 19.17-27)

ANOTHER OLD ENDING

21 For from the inside, from your heart, come the evil ideas which lead you to do immoral things, to rob, kill,

Jesus Heals a Blind Man at Bethsaida

The Lord's Supper

(Matthew 26.26-30; Luke 22.14-20; 1 Corinthians 11.23-25)

22 commit adultery, be greedy, and do all sorts of evil things; deceit, indecency, jealousy, slander, pride, and folly— 23 all these evil things come from inside you and make you unclean.”

A Woman's Faith

(Matthew 15.21-28)

The Coming of the Son of Man

(Matthew 24.29-31; Luke 21.25-28)

24 Then Jesus left and went away to the territory near the city of Tyre. He went into a house and did not want anyone to know he was there, but he could not stay hidden. 25 A woman, whose daughter had an evil spirit in her, heard about Jesus and came to him at once and fell at his feet. 26 The woman was a Gentile, born in the region of Phoenicia in Syria. She begged Jesus to drive the demon out of her daughter.

Peter's Declaration about Jesus

(Matthew 16.13-20; Luke 9.18-21)

The Question about Jesus' Authority

(Matthew 21.23-27; Luke 20.1-8)

Jesus Predicts Peter's Denial

(Matthew 26.31-35; Luke 22.31-34; John 13.36-38)

27 But Jesus answered, “Let us first feed the children. It isn't right to take the children's food and throw it to the dogs.” *

The Great Commandment

(Matthew 22.34-40; Luke 10.25-28)

The Lesson of the Fig Tree

(Matthew 24.32-35; Luke 21.29-33)

28 “Sir,” she answered, “even the dogs under the table eat the children's leftovers!” 29 So Jesus said to her, “Because of that answer, go back home, where you will find that the demon has gone out of your daughter!”

Jesus Feeds Five Thousand

(Matthew 14.13-21; Luke 9.10-17; John 6.1-14)

Jesus Speaks Again about His Death

(Matthew 17.22, 23; Luke 9.43b-45)

30 She went home and found her child lying on the bed; the demon had indeed gone out of her.

Jesus Heals a Deaf-Mute

Jesus Speaks about His Suffering and Death

(Matthew 16.21-28; Luke 9.22-27)

31 Jesus then left the neighborhood of Tyre and went on through Sidon to Lake Galilee, going by way of the territory of the Ten Towns.

Jesus Speaks a Third Time about His Death

(Matthew 20.17-19; Luke 18.31-34)

No One Knows the Day or Hour

(Matthew 24.36-44)

Jesus Prays in Gethsemane

(Matthew 26.36-46; Luke 22.39-46)

32 Some people brought him a man who was deaf and could hardly speak, and they begged Jesus to place his hands on him.

Who Is the Greatest?

(Matthew 18.1-5; Luke 9.46-48)

The Death of Jesus

(Matthew 27.45-56; Luke 23.44-49; John 19.28-30)

33 So Jesus took him off alone, away from the crowd, put his fingers in the man's ears, spat, and touched the man's tongue. 34 Then Jesus looked up to heaven, gave a deep groan, and said to the man, “Ephphatha,”which means, “Open up!”

The Request of James and John

(Matthew 20.20-28)

The Question about the Messiah

(Matthew 22.41-46; Luke 20.41-44)

35 At once the man was able to hear, his speech impediment was removed, and he began to talk without any trouble. 36 Then Jesus ordered the people not to speak of it to anyone; but the more he ordered them not to, the more they told it. 37 And all who heard were completely amazed. “How well he does everything!” they exclaimed. “He even causes the deaf to hear and the dumb to speak!”

Jesus Is Rejected at Nazareth

(Matthew 13.53-58; Luke 4.16-30)

The Teaching of the Ancestors

(Matthew 15.1-9)

Jesus Feeds Four Thousand People

(Matthew 15.32-39)

Jesus Teaches about Divorce

(Matthew 19.1-12; Luke 16.18)

The Triumphant Entry into Jerusalem

(Matthew 21.1-11; Luke 19.28-40; John 12.12-19)

The Parable of the Tenants in the Vineyard

(Matthew 21.33-46; Luke 20.9-19)

Jesus Speaks of the Destruction of the Temple

(Matthew 24.1, 2; Luke 21.5, 6)

The Plot against Jesus

(Matthew 26.1-5; Luke 22.1, 2; John 11.45-53)

Jesus before Pilate

(Matthew 27.1, 2, 11-14; Luke 23.1-5; John 18.28-38)

The Resurrection

(Matthew 28.1-8; Luke 24.1-12; John 20.1-10)

1 Not long afterward another large crowd came together. When the people had nothing left to eat, Jesus called the disciples to him and said,

The Transfiguration

(Matthew 17.1-13; Luke 9.28-36)

2 “I feel sorry for these people, because they have been with me for three days and now have nothing to eat.

Troubles and Persecutions

(Matthew 24.3-14; Luke 21.7-19)

Jesus Is Anointed at Bethany

(Matthew 26.6-13; John 12.1-8)

3 If I send them home without feeding them, they will faint as they go, because some of them have come a long way.” 4 His disciples asked him, “Where in this desert can anyone find enough food to feed all these people?” 5 “How much bread do you have?” Jesus asked. “Seven loaves,” they answered.

Jesus Is Sentenced to Death

(Matthew 27.15-26; Luke 23.13-25; John 18.39—19.16)

6 He ordered the crowd to sit down on the ground. Then he took the seven loaves, gave thanks to God, broke them, and gave them to his disciples to distribute to the crowd; and the disciples did so.

Jesus Sends Out the Twelve Disciples

(Matthew 10.5-15; Luke 9.1-6)

7 They also had a few small fish. Jesus gave thanks for these and told the disciples to distribute them too. 8 -9 Everybody ate and had enough—there were about four thousand people. Then the disciples took up seven baskets full of pieces left over. Jesus sent the people away

Judas Agrees to Betray Jesus

(Matthew 26.14-16; Luke 22.3-6)

10 and at once got into a boat with his disciples and went to the district of Dalmanutha.

The Pharisees Ask for a Miracle

(Matthew 16.1-4)

11 Some Pharisees came to Jesus and started to argue with him. They wanted to trap him, so they asked him to perform a miracle to show that God approved of him.

Jesus Curses the Fig Tree

(Matthew 21.18, 19)

Jesus Eats the Passover Meal with His Disciples

(Matthew 26.17-25; Luke 22.7-14, 21-23; John 13.21-30)

Jesus Appears to Two Followers

(Luke 24.13-35)

12 But Jesus gave a deep groan and said, “Why do the people of this day ask for a miracle? No, I tell you! No such proof will be given to these people!”

Jesus Blesses Little Children

(Matthew 19.13-15; Luke 18.15-17)

The Question about Paying Taxes

(Matthew 22.15-22; Luke 20.20-26)

13 He left them, got back into the boat, and started across to the other side of the lake.

The Death of John the Baptist

(Matthew 14.1-12; Luke 9.7-9)

The Things That Make a Person Unclean

(Matthew 15.10-20)

The Yeast of the Pharisees and of Herod

(Matthew 16.5-12)

Jesus Heals a Boy with an Evil Spirit

(Matthew 17.14-21; Luke 9.37-43a)

The Awful Horror

(Matthew 24.15-28; Luke 21.20-24)

Jesus Appears to the Eleven

(Matthew 28.16-20; Luke 24.36-49; John 20.19-23; Acts 1.6-8)

14 The disciples had forgotten to bring enough bread and had only one loaf with them in the boat.

Jesus Goes to the Temple

(Matthew 21.12-17; Luke 19.45-48; John 2.13-22)

15 “Take care,” Jesus warned them, “and be on your guard against the yeast of the Pharisees and the yeast of Herod.”

The Soldiers Make Fun of Jesus

(Matthew 27.27-31; John 19.2, 3)

16 They started discussing among themselves: “He says this because we don't have any bread.”

The Rich Man

(Matthew 19.16-30; Luke 18.18-30)

17 Jesus knew what they were saying, so he asked them, “Why are you discussing about not having any bread? Don't you know or understand yet? Are your minds so dull?

The Question about Rising from Death

(Matthew 22.23-33; Luke 20.27-40)

18 You have eyes—can't you see? You have ears—can't you hear? Don't you remember

Jesus Is Taken Up to Heaven

(Luke 24.50-53; Acts 1.9-11)

19 when I broke the five loaves for the five thousand people? How many baskets full of leftover pieces did you take up?” “Twelve,” they answered.

The Lesson from the Fig Tree

(Matthew 21.20-22)

20 “And when I broke the seven loaves for the four thousand people,” asked Jesus, “how many baskets full of leftover pieces did you take up?” “Seven,” they answered.

Jesus Is Crucified

(Matthew 27.32-44; Luke 23.26-43; John 19.17-27)

ANOTHER OLD ENDING

21 “And you still don't understand?” he asked them.

Jesus Heals a Blind Man at Bethsaida

The Lord's Supper

(Matthew 26.26-30; Luke 22.14-20; 1 Corinthians 11.23-25)

22 They came to Bethsaida, where some people brought a blind man to Jesus and begged him to touch him. 23 Jesus took the blind man by the hand and led him out of the village. After spitting on the man's eyes, Jesus placed his hands on him and asked him, “Can you see anything?”

A Woman's Faith

(Matthew 15.21-28)

The Coming of the Son of Man

(Matthew 24.29-31; Luke 21.25-28)

24 The man looked up and said, “Yes, I can see people, but they look like trees walking around.” 25 Jesus again placed his hands on the man's eyes. This time the man looked intently, his eyesight returned, and he saw everything clearly. 26 Jesus then sent him home with the order, “Don't go back into the village.”

Peter's Declaration about Jesus

(Matthew 16.13-20; Luke 9.18-21)

The Question about Jesus' Authority

(Matthew 21.23-27; Luke 20.1-8)

Jesus Predicts Peter's Denial

(Matthew 26.31-35; Luke 22.31-34; John 13.36-38)

27 Then Jesus and his disciples went away to the villages near Caesarea Philippi. On the way he asked them, “Tell me, who do people say I am?” *

The Great Commandment

(Matthew 22.34-40; Luke 10.25-28)

The Lesson of the Fig Tree

(Matthew 24.32-35; Luke 21.29-33)

28 “Some say that you are John the Baptist,” they answered; “others say that you are Elijah, while others say that you are one of the prophets.” 29 “What about you?” he asked them. “Who do you say I am?” Peter answered, “You are the Messiah.”

Jesus Feeds Five Thousand

(Matthew 14.13-21; Luke 9.10-17; John 6.1-14)

Jesus Speaks Again about His Death

(Matthew 17.22, 23; Luke 9.43b-45)

30 Then Jesus ordered them, “Do not tell anyone about me.”

Jesus Heals a Deaf-Mute

Jesus Speaks about His Suffering and Death

(Matthew 16.21-28; Luke 9.22-27)

31 Then Jesus began to teach his disciples: “The Son of Man must suffer much and be rejected by the elders, the chief priests, and the teachers of the Law. He will be put to death, but three days later he will rise to life.”

Jesus Speaks a Third Time about His Death

(Matthew 20.17-19; Luke 18.31-34)

No One Knows the Day or Hour

(Matthew 24.36-44)

Jesus Prays in Gethsemane

(Matthew 26.36-46; Luke 22.39-46)

32 He made this very clear to them. So Peter took him aside and began to rebuke him.

Who Is the Greatest?

(Matthew 18.1-5; Luke 9.46-48)

The Death of Jesus

(Matthew 27.45-56; Luke 23.44-49; John 19.28-30)

33 But Jesus turned around, looked at his disciples, and rebuked Peter. “Get away from me, Satan,” he said. “Your thoughts don't come from God but from human nature!” 34 Then Jesus called the crowd and his disciples to him. “If any of you want to come with me,” he told them, “you must forget yourself, carry your cross, and follow me.

The Request of James and John

(Matthew 20.20-28)

The Question about the Messiah

(Matthew 22.41-46; Luke 20.41-44)

35 For if you want to save your own life, you will lose it; but if you lose your life for me and for the gospel, you will save it. 36 Do you gain anything if you win the whole world but lose your life? Of course not! 37 There is nothing you can give to regain your life.

Whoever Is Not against Us Is for Us

(Luke 9.49, 50)

Jesus Warns against the Teachers of the Law

(Matthew 23.1-36; Luke 20.45-47)

38 If you are ashamed of me and of my teaching in this godless and wicked day, then the Son of Man will be ashamed of you when he comes in the glory of his Father with the holy angels.”

Jesus Is Rejected at Nazareth

(Matthew 13.53-58; Luke 4.16-30)

The Teaching of the Ancestors

(Matthew 15.1-9)

Jesus Feeds Four Thousand People

(Matthew 15.32-39)

Jesus Teaches about Divorce

(Matthew 19.1-12; Luke 16.18)

The Triumphant Entry into Jerusalem

(Matthew 21.1-11; Luke 19.28-40; John 12.12-19)

The Parable of the Tenants in the Vineyard

(Matthew 21.33-46; Luke 20.9-19)

Jesus Speaks of the Destruction of the Temple

(Matthew 24.1, 2; Luke 21.5, 6)

The Plot against Jesus

(Matthew 26.1-5; Luke 22.1, 2; John 11.45-53)

Jesus before Pilate

(Matthew 27.1, 2, 11-14; Luke 23.1-5; John 18.28-38)

The Resurrection

(Matthew 28.1-8; Luke 24.1-12; John 20.1-10)

1 And he went on to say, “I tell you, there are some here who will not die until they have seen the Kingdom of God come with power.”

The Transfiguration

(Matthew 17.1-13; Luke 9.28-36)

2 Six days later Jesus took with him Peter, James, and John, and led them up a high mountain, where they were alone. As they looked on, a change came over Jesus,

Troubles and Persecutions

(Matthew 24.3-14; Luke 21.7-19)

Jesus Is Anointed at Bethany

(Matthew 26.6-13; John 12.1-8)

3 and his clothes became shining white—whiter than anyone in the world could wash them. 4 Then the three disciples saw Elijah and Moses talking with Jesus. 5 Peter spoke up and said to Jesus, “Teacher, how good it is that we are here! We will make three tents, one for you, one for Moses, and one for Elijah.”

Jesus Is Sentenced to Death

(Matthew 27.15-26; Luke 23.13-25; John 18.39—19.16)

6 He and the others were so frightened that he did not know what to say.

Jesus Sends Out the Twelve Disciples

(Matthew 10.5-15; Luke 9.1-6)

7 Then a cloud appeared and covered them with its shadow, and a voice came from the cloud, “This is my own dear Son—listen to him!” 8 They took a quick look around but did not see anyone else; only Jesus was with them.

AN OLD ENDING TO THE GOSPEL

Jesus Appears to Mary Magdalene

(Matthew 28.9, 10; John 20.11-18)

9 As they came down the mountain, Jesus ordered them, “Don't tell anyone what you have seen, until the Son of Man has risen from death.”

Judas Agrees to Betray Jesus

(Matthew 26.14-16; Luke 22.3-6)

10 They obeyed his order, but among themselves they started discussing the matter, “What does this ‘rising from death’ mean?”

The Pharisees Ask for a Miracle

(Matthew 16.1-4)

11 And they asked Jesus, “Why do the teachers of the Law say that Elijah has to come first?”

Jesus Curses the Fig Tree

(Matthew 21.18, 19)

Jesus Eats the Passover Meal with His Disciples

(Matthew 26.17-25; Luke 22.7-14, 21-23; John 13.21-30)

Jesus Appears to Two Followers

(Luke 24.13-35)

12 His answer was, “Elijah is indeed coming first in order to get everything ready. Yet why do the Scriptures say that the Son of Man will suffer much and be rejected?

Jesus Blesses Little Children

(Matthew 19.13-15; Luke 18.15-17)

The Question about Paying Taxes

(Matthew 22.15-22; Luke 20.20-26)

13 I tell you, however, that Elijah has already come and that people treated him just as they pleased, as the Scriptures say about him.”

The Death of John the Baptist

(Matthew 14.1-12; Luke 9.7-9)

The Things That Make a Person Unclean

(Matthew 15.10-20)

The Yeast of the Pharisees and of Herod

(Matthew 16.5-12)

Jesus Heals a Boy with an Evil Spirit

(Matthew 17.14-21; Luke 9.37-43a)

The Awful Horror

(Matthew 24.15-28; Luke 21.20-24)

Jesus Appears to the Eleven

(Matthew 28.16-20; Luke 24.36-49; John 20.19-23; Acts 1.6-8)

14 When they joined the rest of the disciples, they saw a large crowd around them and some teachers of the Law arguing with them.

Jesus Goes to the Temple

(Matthew 21.12-17; Luke 19.45-48; John 2.13-22)

15 When the people saw Jesus, they were greatly surprised, and ran to him and greeted him.

The Soldiers Make Fun of Jesus

(Matthew 27.27-31; John 19.2, 3)

16 Jesus asked his disciples, “What are you arguing with them about?”

The Rich Man

(Matthew 19.16-30; Luke 18.18-30)

17 A man in the crowd answered, “Teacher, I brought my son to you, because he has an evil spirit in him and cannot talk.

The Question about Rising from Death

(Matthew 22.23-33; Luke 20.27-40)

18 Whenever the spirit attacks him, it throws him to the ground, and he foams at the mouth, grits his teeth, and becomes stiff all over. I asked your disciples to drive the spirit out, but they could not.”

Jesus Is Taken Up to Heaven

(Luke 24.50-53; Acts 1.9-11)

19 Jesus said to them, “How unbelieving you people are! How long must I stay with you? How long do I have to put up with you? Bring the boy to me!”

The Lesson from the Fig Tree

(Matthew 21.20-22)

20 They brought him to Jesus. As soon as the spirit saw Jesus, it threw the boy into a fit, so that he fell on the ground and rolled around, foaming at the mouth.

Jesus Is Crucified

(Matthew 27.32-44; Luke 23.26-43; John 19.17-27)

ANOTHER OLD ENDING

21 “How long has he been like this?” Jesus asked the father. “Ever since he was a child,” he replied.

Jesus Heals a Blind Man at Bethsaida

The Lord's Supper

(Matthew 26.26-30; Luke 22.14-20; 1 Corinthians 11.23-25)

22 “Many times the evil spirit has tried to kill him by throwing him in the fire and into water. Have pity on us and help us, if you possibly can!” 23 “Yes,” said Jesus, “if you yourself can! Everything is possible for the person who has faith.”

A Woman's Faith

(Matthew 15.21-28)

The Coming of the Son of Man

(Matthew 24.29-31; Luke 21.25-28)

24 The father at once cried out, “I do have faith, but not enough. Help me have more!” 25 Jesus noticed that the crowd was closing in on them, so he gave a command to the evil spirit. “Deaf and dumb spirit,” he said, “I order you to come out of the boy and never go into him again!” 26 The spirit screamed, threw the boy into a bad fit, and came out. The boy looked like a corpse, and everyone said, “He is dead!”

Peter's Declaration about Jesus

(Matthew 16.13-20; Luke 9.18-21)

The Question about Jesus' Authority

(Matthew 21.23-27; Luke 20.1-8)

Jesus Predicts Peter's Denial

(Matthew 26.31-35; Luke 22.31-34; John 13.36-38)

27 But Jesus took the boy by the hand and helped him rise, and he stood up. *

The Great Commandment

(Matthew 22.34-40; Luke 10.25-28)

The Lesson of the Fig Tree

(Matthew 24.32-35; Luke 21.29-33)

28 After Jesus had gone indoors, his disciples asked him privately, “Why couldn't we drive the spirit out?” 29 “Only prayer can drive this kind out,” answered Jesus; “nothing else can.”

Jesus Feeds Five Thousand

(Matthew 14.13-21; Luke 9.10-17; John 6.1-14)

Jesus Speaks Again about His Death

(Matthew 17.22, 23; Luke 9.43b-45)

30 Jesus and his disciples left that place and went on through Galilee. Jesus did not want anyone to know where he was,

Jesus Heals a Deaf-Mute

Jesus Speaks about His Suffering and Death

(Matthew 16.21-28; Luke 9.22-27)

31 because he was teaching his disciples: “The Son of Man will be handed over to those who will kill him. Three days later, however, he will rise to life.”

Jesus Speaks a Third Time about His Death

(Matthew 20.17-19; Luke 18.31-34)

No One Knows the Day or Hour

(Matthew 24.36-44)

Jesus Prays in Gethsemane

(Matthew 26.36-46; Luke 22.39-46)

32 But they did not understand what this teaching meant, and they were afraid to ask him.

Who Is the Greatest?

(Matthew 18.1-5; Luke 9.46-48)

The Death of Jesus

(Matthew 27.45-56; Luke 23.44-49; John 19.28-30)

33 They came to Capernaum, and after going indoors Jesus asked his disciples, “What were you arguing about on the road?” 34 But they would not answer him, because on the road they had been arguing among themselves about who was the greatest.

The Request of James and John

(Matthew 20.20-28)

The Question about the Messiah

(Matthew 22.41-46; Luke 20.41-44)

35 Jesus sat down, called the twelve disciples, and said to them, “Whoever wants to be first must place himself last of all and be the servant of all.” 36 Then he took a child and had him stand in front of them. He put his arms around him and said to them, 37 “Whoever welcomes in my name one of these children, welcomes me; and whoever welcomes me, welcomes not only me but also the one who sent me.”

Whoever Is Not against Us Is for Us

(Luke 9.49, 50)

Jesus Warns against the Teachers of the Law

(Matthew 23.1-36; Luke 20.45-47)

38 John said to him, “Teacher, we saw a man who was driving out demons in your name, and we told him to stop, because he doesn't belong to our group.” 39 “Do not try to stop him,” Jesus told them, “because no one who performs a miracle in my name will be able soon afterward to say evil things about me. * 40 For whoever is not against us is for us.

The Widow's Offering

(Luke 21.1-4)

41 I assure you that anyone who gives you a drink of water because you belong to me will certainly receive a reward.

Temptations to Sin

(Matthew 18.6-9; Luke 17.1, 2)

The Burial of Jesus

(Matthew 27.57-61; Luke 23.50-56; John 19.38-42)

42 “If anyone should cause one of these little ones to lose faith in me, it would be better for that person to have a large millstone tied around the neck and be thrown into the sea.

The Arrest of Jesus

(Matthew 26.47-56; Luke 22.47-53; John 18.3-12)

43 So if your hand makes you lose your faith, cut it off It is better for you to enter life without a hand than to keep both hands and go off to hell, to the fire that never goes out.

Jesus Walks on the Water

(Matthew 14.22-33; John 6.15-21)

45 And if your foot makes you lose your faith, cut it off It is better for you to enter life without a foot than to keep both feet and be thrown into hell. 47 And if your eye makes you lose your faith, take it out! It is better for you to enter the Kingdom of God with only one eye than to keep both eyes and be thrown into hell. 48 There ‘the worms that eat them never die, and the fire that burns them is never put out.’ 49 “Everyone will be purified by fire as a sacrifice is purified by salt. 50 “Salt is good; but if it loses its saltiness, how can you make it salty again? “Have the salt of friendship among yourselves, and live in peace with one another.”

Jesus Is Rejected at Nazareth

(Matthew 13.53-58; Luke 4.16-30)

The Teaching of the Ancestors

(Matthew 15.1-9)

Jesus Feeds Four Thousand People

(Matthew 15.32-39)

Jesus Teaches about Divorce

(Matthew 19.1-12; Luke 16.18)

The Triumphant Entry into Jerusalem

(Matthew 21.1-11; Luke 19.28-40; John 12.12-19)

The Parable of the Tenants in the Vineyard

(Matthew 21.33-46; Luke 20.9-19)

Jesus Speaks of the Destruction of the Temple

(Matthew 24.1, 2; Luke 21.5, 6)

The Plot against Jesus

(Matthew 26.1-5; Luke 22.1, 2; John 11.45-53)

Jesus before Pilate

(Matthew 27.1, 2, 11-14; Luke 23.1-5; John 18.28-38)

The Resurrection

(Matthew 28.1-8; Luke 24.1-12; John 20.1-10)

1 Then Jesus left that place, went to the province of Judea, and crossed the Jordan River. Crowds came flocking to him again, and he taught them, as he always did.

The Transfiguration

(Matthew 17.1-13; Luke 9.28-36)

2 Some Pharisees came to him and tried to trap him. “Tell us,” they asked, “does our Law allow a man to divorce his wife?”

Troubles and Persecutions

(Matthew 24.3-14; Luke 21.7-19)

Jesus Is Anointed at Bethany

(Matthew 26.6-13; John 12.1-8)

3 Jesus answered with a question, “What law did Moses give you?” 4 Their answer was, “Moses gave permission for a man to write a divorce notice and send his wife away.” 5 Jesus said to them, “Moses wrote this law for you because you are so hard to teach.

Jesus Is Sentenced to Death

(Matthew 27.15-26; Luke 23.13-25; John 18.39—19.16)

6 But in the beginning, at the time of creation, ‘God made them male and female,’ as the scripture says.

Jesus Sends Out the Twelve Disciples

(Matthew 10.5-15; Luke 9.1-6)

7 ‘And for this reason a man will leave his father and mother and unite with his wife, 8 and the two will become one.’ So they are no longer two, but one.

AN OLD ENDING TO THE GOSPEL

Jesus Appears to Mary Magdalene

(Matthew 28.9, 10; John 20.11-18)

9 No human being must separate, then, what God has joined together.”

Judas Agrees to Betray Jesus

(Matthew 26.14-16; Luke 22.3-6)

10 When they went back into the house, the disciples asked Jesus about this matter.

The Pharisees Ask for a Miracle

(Matthew 16.1-4)

11 He said to them, “A man who divorces his wife and marries another woman commits adultery against his wife.

Jesus Curses the Fig Tree

(Matthew 21.18, 19)

Jesus Eats the Passover Meal with His Disciples

(Matthew 26.17-25; Luke 22.7-14, 21-23; John 13.21-30)

Jesus Appears to Two Followers

(Luke 24.13-35)

12 In the same way, a woman who divorces her husband and marries another man commits adultery.”

Jesus Blesses Little Children

(Matthew 19.13-15; Luke 18.15-17)

The Question about Paying Taxes

(Matthew 22.15-22; Luke 20.20-26)

13 Some people brought children to Jesus for him to place his hands on them, but the disciples scolded the people.

The Death of John the Baptist

(Matthew 14.1-12; Luke 9.7-9)

The Things That Make a Person Unclean

(Matthew 15.10-20)

The Yeast of the Pharisees and of Herod

(Matthew 16.5-12)

Jesus Heals a Boy with an Evil Spirit

(Matthew 17.14-21; Luke 9.37-43a)

The Awful Horror

(Matthew 24.15-28; Luke 21.20-24)

Jesus Appears to the Eleven

(Matthew 28.16-20; Luke 24.36-49; John 20.19-23; Acts 1.6-8)

14 When Jesus noticed this, he was angry and said to his disciples, “Let the children come to me, and do not stop them, because the Kingdom of God belongs to such as these.

Jesus Goes to the Temple

(Matthew 21.12-17; Luke 19.45-48; John 2.13-22)

15 I assure you that whoever does not receive the Kingdom of God like a child will never enter it.”

The Soldiers Make Fun of Jesus

(Matthew 27.27-31; John 19.2, 3)

16 Then he took the children in his arms, placed his hands on each of them, and blessed them.

The Rich Man

(Matthew 19.16-30; Luke 18.18-30)

17 As Jesus was starting on his way again, a man ran up, knelt before him, and asked him, “Good Teacher, what must I do to receive eternal life?”

The Question about Rising from Death

(Matthew 22.23-33; Luke 20.27-40)

18 “Why do you call me good?” Jesus asked him. “No one is good except God alone.

Jesus Is Taken Up to Heaven

(Luke 24.50-53; Acts 1.9-11)

19 You know the commandments: ‘Do not commit murder; do not commit adultery; do not steal; do not accuse anyone falsely; do not cheat; respect your father and your mother.’”

The Lesson from the Fig Tree

(Matthew 21.20-22)

20 “Teacher,” the man said, “ever since I was young, I have obeyed all these commandments.”

Jesus Is Crucified

(Matthew 27.32-44; Luke 23.26-43; John 19.17-27)

ANOTHER OLD ENDING

21 Jesus looked straight at him with love and said, “You need only one thing. Go and sell all you have and give the money to the poor, and you will have riches in heaven; then come and follow me.”

Jesus Heals a Blind Man at Bethsaida

The Lord's Supper

(Matthew 26.26-30; Luke 22.14-20; 1 Corinthians 11.23-25)

22 When the man heard this, gloom spread over his face, and he went away sad, because he was very rich. 23 Jesus looked around at his disciples and said to them, “How hard it will be for rich people to enter the Kingdom of God!”

A Woman's Faith

(Matthew 15.21-28)

The Coming of the Son of Man

(Matthew 24.29-31; Luke 21.25-28)

24 The disciples were shocked at these words, but Jesus went on to say, “My children, how hard it is to enter the Kingdom of God! 25 It is much harder for a rich person to enter the Kingdom of God than for a camel to go through the eye of a needle.” 26 At this the disciples were completely amazed and asked one another, “Who, then, can be saved?”

Peter's Declaration about Jesus

(Matthew 16.13-20; Luke 9.18-21)

The Question about Jesus' Authority

(Matthew 21.23-27; Luke 20.1-8)

Jesus Predicts Peter's Denial

(Matthew 26.31-35; Luke 22.31-34; John 13.36-38)

27 Jesus looked straight at them and answered, “This is impossible for human beings but not for God; everything is possible for God.” *

The Great Commandment

(Matthew 22.34-40; Luke 10.25-28)

The Lesson of the Fig Tree

(Matthew 24.32-35; Luke 21.29-33)

28 Then Peter spoke up, “Look, we have left everything and followed you.” 29 “Yes,” Jesus said to them, “and I tell you that those who leave home or brothers or sisters or mother or father or children or fields for me and for the gospel,

Jesus Feeds Five Thousand

(Matthew 14.13-21; Luke 9.10-17; John 6.1-14)

Jesus Speaks Again about His Death

(Matthew 17.22, 23; Luke 9.43b-45)

30 will receive much more in this present age. They will receive a hundred times more houses, brothers, sisters, mothers, children, and fields—and persecutions as well; and in the age to come they will receive eternal life.

Jesus Heals a Deaf-Mute

Jesus Speaks about His Suffering and Death

(Matthew 16.21-28; Luke 9.22-27)

31 But many who are now first will be last, and many who are now last will be first.”

Jesus Speaks a Third Time about His Death

(Matthew 20.17-19; Luke 18.31-34)

No One Knows the Day or Hour

(Matthew 24.36-44)

Jesus Prays in Gethsemane

(Matthew 26.36-46; Luke 22.39-46)

32 Jesus and his disciples were now on the road going up to Jerusalem. Jesus was going ahead of the disciples, who were filled with alarm; the people who followed behind were afraid. Once again Jesus took the twelve disciples aside and spoke of the things that were going to happen to him.

Who Is the Greatest?

(Matthew 18.1-5; Luke 9.46-48)

The Death of Jesus

(Matthew 27.45-56; Luke 23.44-49; John 19.28-30)

33 “Listen,” he told them, “we are going up to Jerusalem where the Son of Man will be handed over to the chief priests and the teachers of the Law. They will condemn him to death and then hand him over to the Gentiles, 34 who will make fun of him, spit on him, whip him, and kill him; but three days later he will rise to life.”

The Request of James and John

(Matthew 20.20-28)

The Question about the Messiah

(Matthew 22.41-46; Luke 20.41-44)

35 Then James and John, the sons of Zebedee, came to Jesus. “Teacher,” they said, “there is something we want you to do for us.” 36 “What is it?” Jesus asked them. 37 They answered, “When you sit on your throne in your glorious Kingdom, we want you to let us sit with you, one at your right and one at your left.”

Whoever Is Not against Us Is for Us

(Luke 9.49, 50)

Jesus Warns against the Teachers of the Law

(Matthew 23.1-36; Luke 20.45-47)

38 Jesus said to them, “You don't know what you are asking for. Can you drink the cup of suffering that I must drink? Can you be baptized in the way I must be baptized?” 39 “We can,” they answered. Jesus said to them, “You will indeed drink the cup I must drink and be baptized in the way I must be baptized. * 40 But I do not have the right to choose who will sit at my right and my left. It is God who will give these places to those for whom he has prepared them.”

The Widow's Offering

(Luke 21.1-4)

41 When the other ten disciples heard about it, they became angry with James and John.

Temptations to Sin

(Matthew 18.6-9; Luke 17.1, 2)

The Burial of Jesus

(Matthew 27.57-61; Luke 23.50-56; John 19.38-42)

42 So Jesus called them all together to him and said, “You know that those who are considered rulers of the heathen have power over them, and the leaders have complete authority.

The Arrest of Jesus

(Matthew 26.47-56; Luke 22.47-53; John 18.3-12)

43 This, however, is not the way it is among you. If one of you wants to be great, you must be the servant of the rest; 44 and if one of you wants to be first, you must be the slave of all.

Jesus Walks on the Water

(Matthew 14.22-33; John 6.15-21)

45 For even the Son of Man did not come to be served; he came to serve and to give his life to redeem many people.”

Jesus Heals Blind Bartimaeus

(Matthew 20.29-34; Luke 18.35-43)

46 They came to Jericho, and as Jesus was leaving with his disciples and a large crowd, a blind beggar named Bartimaeus son of Timaeus was sitting by the road. 47 When he heard that it was Jesus of Nazareth, he began to shout, “Jesus! Son of David! Have mercy on me!” 48 Many of the people scolded him and told him to be quiet. But he shouted even more loudly, “Son of David, have mercy on me!” 49 Jesus stopped and said, “Call him.” So they called the blind man. “Cheer up!” they said. “Get up, he is calling you.” 50 So he threw off his cloak, jumped up, and came to Jesus. 51 “What do you want me to do for you?” Jesus asked him. “Teacher,” the blind man answered, “I want to see again.” 52 “Go,” Jesus told him, “your faith has made you well.” At once he was able to see and followed Jesus on the road.

Jesus Is Rejected at Nazareth

(Matthew 13.53-58; Luke 4.16-30)

The Teaching of the Ancestors

(Matthew 15.1-9)

Jesus Feeds Four Thousand People

(Matthew 15.32-39)

Jesus Teaches about Divorce

(Matthew 19.1-12; Luke 16.18)

The Triumphant Entry into Jerusalem

(Matthew 21.1-11; Luke 19.28-40; John 12.12-19)

The Parable of the Tenants in the Vineyard

(Matthew 21.33-46; Luke 20.9-19)

Jesus Speaks of the Destruction of the Temple

(Matthew 24.1, 2; Luke 21.5, 6)

The Plot against Jesus

(Matthew 26.1-5; Luke 22.1, 2; John 11.45-53)

Jesus before Pilate

(Matthew 27.1, 2, 11-14; Luke 23.1-5; John 18.28-38)

The Resurrection

(Matthew 28.1-8; Luke 24.1-12; John 20.1-10)

1 As they approached Jerusalem, near the towns of Bethphage and Bethany, they came to the Mount of Olives. Jesus sent two of his disciples on ahead

The Transfiguration

(Matthew 17.1-13; Luke 9.28-36)

2 with these instructions: “Go to the village there ahead of you. As soon as you get there, you will find a colt tied up that has never been ridden. Untie it and bring it here.

Troubles and Persecutions

(Matthew 24.3-14; Luke 21.7-19)

Jesus Is Anointed at Bethany

(Matthew 26.6-13; John 12.1-8)

3 And if someone asks you why you are doing that, say that the Master needs it and will send it back at once.” 4 So they went and found a colt out in the street, tied to the door of a house. As they were untying it, 5 some of the bystanders asked them, “What are you doing, untying that colt?”

Jesus Is Sentenced to Death

(Matthew 27.15-26; Luke 23.13-25; John 18.39—19.16)

6 They answered just as Jesus had told them, and the crowd let them go.

Jesus Sends Out the Twelve Disciples

(Matthew 10.5-15; Luke 9.1-6)

7 They brought the colt to Jesus, threw their cloaks over the animal, and Jesus got on. 8 Many people spread their cloaks on the road, while others cut branches in the field and spread them on the road.

AN OLD ENDING TO THE GOSPEL

Jesus Appears to Mary Magdalene

(Matthew 28.9, 10; John 20.11-18)

9 The people who were in front and those who followed behind began to shout, “Praise God! God bless him who comes in the name of the Lord!

Judas Agrees to Betray Jesus

(Matthew 26.14-16; Luke 22.3-6)

10 God bless the coming kingdom of King David, our father! Praise be to God!”

The Pharisees Ask for a Miracle

(Matthew 16.1-4)

11 Jesus entered Jerusalem, went into the Temple, and looked around at everything. But since it was already late in the day, he went out to Bethany with the twelve disciples.

Jesus Curses the Fig Tree

(Matthew 21.18, 19)

Jesus Eats the Passover Meal with His Disciples

(Matthew 26.17-25; Luke 22.7-14, 21-23; John 13.21-30)

Jesus Appears to Two Followers

(Luke 24.13-35)

12 The next day, as they were coming back from Bethany, Jesus was hungry.

Jesus Blesses Little Children

(Matthew 19.13-15; Luke 18.15-17)

The Question about Paying Taxes

(Matthew 22.15-22; Luke 20.20-26)

13 He saw in the distance a fig tree covered with leaves, so he went to see if he could find any figs on it. But when he came to it, he found only leaves, because it was not the right time for figs.

The Death of John the Baptist

(Matthew 14.1-12; Luke 9.7-9)

The Things That Make a Person Unclean

(Matthew 15.10-20)

The Yeast of the Pharisees and of Herod

(Matthew 16.5-12)

Jesus Heals a Boy with an Evil Spirit

(Matthew 17.14-21; Luke 9.37-43a)

The Awful Horror

(Matthew 24.15-28; Luke 21.20-24)

Jesus Appears to the Eleven

(Matthew 28.16-20; Luke 24.36-49; John 20.19-23; Acts 1.6-8)

14 Jesus said to the fig tree, “No one shall ever eat figs from you again!” And his disciples heard him.

Jesus Goes to the Temple

(Matthew 21.12-17; Luke 19.45-48; John 2.13-22)

15 When they arrived in Jerusalem, Jesus went to the Temple and began to drive out all those who were buying and selling. He overturned the tables of the moneychangers and the stools of those who sold pigeons,

The Soldiers Make Fun of Jesus

(Matthew 27.27-31; John 19.2, 3)

16 and he would not let anyone carry anything through the Temple courtyards.

The Rich Man

(Matthew 19.16-30; Luke 18.18-30)

17 He then taught the people: “It is written in the Scriptures that God said, ‘My Temple will be called a house of prayer for the people of all nations.’ But you have turned it into a hideout for thieves!”

The Question about Rising from Death

(Matthew 22.23-33; Luke 20.27-40)

18 The chief priests and the teachers of the Law heard of this, so they began looking for some way to kill Jesus. They were afraid of him, because the whole crowd was amazed at his teaching.

Jesus Is Taken Up to Heaven

(Luke 24.50-53; Acts 1.9-11)

19 When evening came, Jesus and his disciples left the city.

The Lesson from the Fig Tree

(Matthew 21.20-22)

20 Early next morning, as they walked along the road, they saw the fig tree. It was dead all the way down to its roots.

Jesus Is Crucified

(Matthew 27.32-44; Luke 23.26-43; John 19.17-27)

ANOTHER OLD ENDING

21 Peter remembered what had happened and said to Jesus, “Look, Teacher, the fig tree you cursed has died!”

Jesus Heals a Blind Man at Bethsaida

The Lord's Supper

(Matthew 26.26-30; Luke 22.14-20; 1 Corinthians 11.23-25)

22 Jesus answered them, “Have faith in God. 23 I assure you that whoever tells this hill to get up and throw itself in the sea and does not doubt in his heart, but believes that what he says will happen, it will be done for him.

A Woman's Faith

(Matthew 15.21-28)

The Coming of the Son of Man

(Matthew 24.29-31; Luke 21.25-28)

24 For this reason I tell you: When you pray and ask for something, believe that you have received it, and you will be given whatever you ask for. 25 And when you stand and pray, forgive anything you may have against anyone, so that your Father in heaven will forgive the wrongs you have done.”

Peter's Declaration about Jesus

(Matthew 16.13-20; Luke 9.18-21)

The Question about Jesus' Authority

(Matthew 21.23-27; Luke 20.1-8)

Jesus Predicts Peter's Denial

(Matthew 26.31-35; Luke 22.31-34; John 13.36-38)

27 They arrived once again in Jerusalem. As Jesus was walking in the Temple, the chief priests, the teachers of the Law, and the elders came to him *

The Great Commandment

(Matthew 22.34-40; Luke 10.25-28)

The Lesson of the Fig Tree

(Matthew 24.32-35; Luke 21.29-33)

28 and asked him, “What right do you have to do these things? Who gave you such right?” 29 Jesus answered them, “I will ask you just one question, and if you give me an answer, I will tell you what right I have to do these things.

Jesus Feeds Five Thousand

(Matthew 14.13-21; Luke 9.10-17; John 6.1-14)

Jesus Speaks Again about His Death

(Matthew 17.22, 23; Luke 9.43b-45)

30 Tell me, where did John's right to baptize come from: was it from God or from human beings?”

Jesus Heals a Deaf-Mute

Jesus Speaks about His Suffering and Death

(Matthew 16.21-28; Luke 9.22-27)

31 They started to argue among themselves: “What shall we say? If we answer, ‘From God,’ he will say, ‘Why, then, did you not believe John?’

Jesus Speaks a Third Time about His Death

(Matthew 20.17-19; Luke 18.31-34)

No One Knows the Day or Hour

(Matthew 24.36-44)

Jesus Prays in Gethsemane

(Matthew 26.36-46; Luke 22.39-46)

32 But if we say, ‘From human beings...’” (They were afraid of the people, because everyone was convinced that John had been a prophet.)

Who Is the Greatest?

(Matthew 18.1-5; Luke 9.46-48)

The Death of Jesus

(Matthew 27.45-56; Luke 23.44-49; John 19.28-30)

33 So their answer to Jesus was, “We don't know.” Jesus said to them, “Neither will I tell you, then, by what right I do these things.”

Jesus Is Rejected at Nazareth

(Matthew 13.53-58; Luke 4.16-30)

The Teaching of the Ancestors

(Matthew 15.1-9)

Jesus Feeds Four Thousand People

(Matthew 15.32-39)

Jesus Teaches about Divorce

(Matthew 19.1-12; Luke 16.18)

The Triumphant Entry into Jerusalem

(Matthew 21.1-11; Luke 19.28-40; John 12.12-19)

The Parable of the Tenants in the Vineyard

(Matthew 21.33-46; Luke 20.9-19)

Jesus Speaks of the Destruction of the Temple

(Matthew 24.1, 2; Luke 21.5, 6)

The Plot against Jesus

(Matthew 26.1-5; Luke 22.1, 2; John 11.45-53)

Jesus before Pilate

(Matthew 27.1, 2, 11-14; Luke 23.1-5; John 18.28-38)

The Resurrection

(Matthew 28.1-8; Luke 24.1-12; John 20.1-10)

1 Then Jesus spoke to them in parables: “Once there was a man who planted a vineyard, put a fence around it, dug a hole for the wine press, and built a watchtower. Then he rented the vineyard to tenants and left home on a trip.

The Transfiguration

(Matthew 17.1-13; Luke 9.28-36)

2 When the time came to gather the grapes, he sent a slave to the tenants to receive from them his share of the harvest.

Troubles and Persecutions

(Matthew 24.3-14; Luke 21.7-19)

Jesus Is Anointed at Bethany

(Matthew 26.6-13; John 12.1-8)

3 The tenants grabbed the slave, beat him, and sent him back without a thing. 4 Then the owner sent another slave; the tenants beat him over the head and treated him shamefully. 5 The owner sent another slave, and they killed him; and they treated many others the same way, beating some and killing others.

Jesus Is Sentenced to Death

(Matthew 27.15-26; Luke 23.13-25; John 18.39—19.16)

6 The only one left to send was the man's own dear son. Last of all, then, he sent his son to the tenants. ‘I am sure they will respect my son,’ he said.

Jesus Sends Out the Twelve Disciples

(Matthew 10.5-15; Luke 9.1-6)

7 But those tenants said to one another, ‘This is the owner's son. Come on, let's kill him, and his property will be ours!’ 8 So they grabbed the son and killed him and threw his body out of the vineyard.

AN OLD ENDING TO THE GOSPEL

Jesus Appears to Mary Magdalene

(Matthew 28.9, 10; John 20.11-18)

9 “What, then, will the owner of the vineyard do?” asked Jesus. “He will come and kill those tenants and turn the vineyard over to others.

Judas Agrees to Betray Jesus

(Matthew 26.14-16; Luke 22.3-6)

10 Surely you have read this scripture?
‘The stone which the builders rejected as worthless
turned out to be the most important of all.

The Pharisees Ask for a Miracle

(Matthew 16.1-4)

11 This was done by the Lord;
what a wonderful sight it is!’”

Jesus Curses the Fig Tree

(Matthew 21.18, 19)

Jesus Eats the Passover Meal with His Disciples

(Matthew 26.17-25; Luke 22.7-14, 21-23; John 13.21-30)

Jesus Appears to Two Followers

(Luke 24.13-35)

12 The Jewish leaders tried to arrest Jesus, because they knew that he had told this parable against them. But they were afraid of the crowd, so they left him and went away.

Jesus Blesses Little Children

(Matthew 19.13-15; Luke 18.15-17)

The Question about Paying Taxes

(Matthew 22.15-22; Luke 20.20-26)

13 Some Pharisees and some members of Herod's party were sent to Jesus to trap him with questions.

The Death of John the Baptist

(Matthew 14.1-12; Luke 9.7-9)

The Things That Make a Person Unclean

(Matthew 15.10-20)

The Yeast of the Pharisees and of Herod

(Matthew 16.5-12)

Jesus Heals a Boy with an Evil Spirit

(Matthew 17.14-21; Luke 9.37-43a)

The Awful Horror

(Matthew 24.15-28; Luke 21.20-24)

Jesus Appears to the Eleven

(Matthew 28.16-20; Luke 24.36-49; John 20.19-23; Acts 1.6-8)

14 They came to him and said, “Teacher, we know that you tell the truth, without worrying about what people think. You pay no attention to anyone's status, but teach the truth about God's will for people. Tell us, is it against our Law to pay taxes to the Roman Emperor? Should we pay them or not?”

Jesus Goes to the Temple

(Matthew 21.12-17; Luke 19.45-48; John 2.13-22)

15 But Jesus saw through their trick and answered, “Why are you trying to trap me? Bring a silver coin, and let me see it.”

The Soldiers Make Fun of Jesus

(Matthew 27.27-31; John 19.2, 3)

16 They brought him one, and he asked, “Whose face and name are these?” “The Emperor's,” they answered.

The Rich Man

(Matthew 19.16-30; Luke 18.18-30)

17 So Jesus said, “Well, then, pay to the Emperor what belongs to the Emperor, and pay to God what belongs to God.” And they were amazed at Jesus.

The Question about Rising from Death

(Matthew 22.23-33; Luke 20.27-40)

18 Then some Sadducees, who say that people will not rise from death, came to Jesus and said,

Jesus Is Taken Up to Heaven

(Luke 24.50-53; Acts 1.9-11)

19 “Teacher, Moses wrote this law for us: ‘If a man dies and leaves a wife but no children, that man's brother must marry the widow so that they can have children who will be considered the dead man's children.’

The Lesson from the Fig Tree

(Matthew 21.20-22)

20 Once there were seven brothers; the oldest got married and died without having children.

Jesus Is Crucified

(Matthew 27.32-44; Luke 23.26-43; John 19.17-27)

ANOTHER OLD ENDING

21 Then the second one married the woman, and he also died without having children. The same thing happened to the third brother,

Jesus Heals a Blind Man at Bethsaida

The Lord's Supper

(Matthew 26.26-30; Luke 22.14-20; 1 Corinthians 11.23-25)

22 and then to the rest: all seven brothers married the woman and died without having children. Last of all, the woman died. 23 Now, when all the dead rise to life on the day of resurrection, whose wife will she be? All seven of them had married her.”

A Woman's Faith

(Matthew 15.21-28)

The Coming of the Son of Man

(Matthew 24.29-31; Luke 21.25-28)

24 Jesus answered them, “How wrong you are! And do you know why? It is because you don't know the Scriptures or God's power. 25 For when the dead rise to life, they will be like the angels in heaven and will not marry. 26 Now, as for the dead being raised: haven't you ever read in the Book of Moses the passage about the burning bush? There it is written that God said to Moses, ‘I am the God of Abraham, the God of Isaac, and the God of Jacob.’

Peter's Declaration about Jesus

(Matthew 16.13-20; Luke 9.18-21)

The Question about Jesus' Authority

(Matthew 21.23-27; Luke 20.1-8)

Jesus Predicts Peter's Denial

(Matthew 26.31-35; Luke 22.31-34; John 13.36-38)

27 He is the God of the living, not of the dead. You are completely wrong!” *

The Great Commandment

(Matthew 22.34-40; Luke 10.25-28)

The Lesson of the Fig Tree

(Matthew 24.32-35; Luke 21.29-33)

28 A teacher of the Law was there who heard the discussion. He saw that Jesus had given the Sadducees a good answer, so he came to him with a question: “Which commandment is the most important of all?” 29 Jesus replied, “The most important one is this: ‘Listen, Israel! The Lord our God is the only Lord.

Jesus Feeds Five Thousand

(Matthew 14.13-21; Luke 9.10-17; John 6.1-14)

Jesus Speaks Again about His Death

(Matthew 17.22, 23; Luke 9.43b-45)

30 Love the Lord your God with all your heart, with all your soul, with all your mind, and with all your strength.’

Jesus Heals a Deaf-Mute

Jesus Speaks about His Suffering and Death

(Matthew 16.21-28; Luke 9.22-27)

31 The second most important commandment is this: ‘Love your neighbor as you love yourself.’ There is no other commandment more important than these two.”

Jesus Speaks a Third Time about His Death

(Matthew 20.17-19; Luke 18.31-34)

No One Knows the Day or Hour

(Matthew 24.36-44)

Jesus Prays in Gethsemane

(Matthew 26.36-46; Luke 22.39-46)

32 The teacher of the Law said to Jesus, “Well done, Teacher! It is true, as you say, that only the Lord is God and that there is no other god but he.

Who Is the Greatest?

(Matthew 18.1-5; Luke 9.46-48)

The Death of Jesus

(Matthew 27.45-56; Luke 23.44-49; John 19.28-30)

33 And you must love God with all your heart and with all your mind and with all your strength; and you must love your neighbor as you love yourself. It is more important to obey these two commandments than to offer on the altar animals and other sacrifices to God.” 34 Jesus noticed how wise his answer was, and so he told him, “You are not far from the Kingdom of God.” After this nobody dared to ask Jesus any more questions.

The Request of James and John

(Matthew 20.20-28)

The Question about the Messiah

(Matthew 22.41-46; Luke 20.41-44)

35 As Jesus was teaching in the Temple, he asked the question, “How can the teachers of the Law say that the Messiah will be the descendant of David? 36 The Holy Spirit inspired David to say:
‘The Lord said to my Lord:
Sit here at my right side
until I put your enemies under your feet.’
37 David himself called him ‘Lord’; so how can the Messiah be David's descendant?” A large crowd was listening to Jesus gladly.

Whoever Is Not against Us Is for Us

(Luke 9.49, 50)

Jesus Warns against the Teachers of the Law

(Matthew 23.1-36; Luke 20.45-47)

38 As he taught them, he said, “Watch out for the teachers of the Law, who like to walk around in their long robes and be greeted with respect in the marketplace, 39 who choose the reserved seats in the synagogues and the best places at feasts. * 40 They take advantage of widows and rob them of their homes, and then make a show of saying long prayers. Their punishment will be all the worse!”

The Widow's Offering

(Luke 21.1-4)

41 As Jesus sat near the Temple treasury, he watched the people as they dropped in their money. Many rich men dropped in a lot of money;

Temptations to Sin

(Matthew 18.6-9; Luke 17.1, 2)

The Burial of Jesus

(Matthew 27.57-61; Luke 23.50-56; John 19.38-42)

42 then a poor widow came along and dropped in two little copper coins, worth about a penny.

The Arrest of Jesus

(Matthew 26.47-56; Luke 22.47-53; John 18.3-12)

43 He called his disciples together and said to them, “I tell you that this poor widow put more in the offering box than all the others. 44 For the others put in what they had to spare of their riches; but she, poor as she is, put in all she had—she gave all she had to live on.”

Jesus Is Rejected at Nazareth

(Matthew 13.53-58; Luke 4.16-30)

The Teaching of the Ancestors

(Matthew 15.1-9)

Jesus Feeds Four Thousand People

(Matthew 15.32-39)

Jesus Teaches about Divorce

(Matthew 19.1-12; Luke 16.18)

The Triumphant Entry into Jerusalem

(Matthew 21.1-11; Luke 19.28-40; John 12.12-19)

The Parable of the Tenants in the Vineyard

(Matthew 21.33-46; Luke 20.9-19)

Jesus Speaks of the Destruction of the Temple

(Matthew 24.1, 2; Luke 21.5, 6)

The Plot against Jesus

(Matthew 26.1-5; Luke 22.1, 2; John 11.45-53)

Jesus before Pilate

(Matthew 27.1, 2, 11-14; Luke 23.1-5; John 18.28-38)

The Resurrection

(Matthew 28.1-8; Luke 24.1-12; John 20.1-10)

1 As Jesus was leaving the Temple, one of his disciples said, “Look, Teacher! What wonderful stones and buildings!”

The Transfiguration

(Matthew 17.1-13; Luke 9.28-36)

2 Jesus answered, “You see these great buildings? Not a single stone here will be left in its place; every one of them will be thrown down.”

Troubles and Persecutions

(Matthew 24.3-14; Luke 21.7-19)

Jesus Is Anointed at Bethany

(Matthew 26.6-13; John 12.1-8)

3 Jesus was sitting on the Mount of Olives, across from the Temple, when Peter, James, John, and Andrew came to him in private. 4 “Tell us when this will be,” they said, “and tell us what will happen to show that the time has come for all these things to take place.” 5 Jesus said to them, “Watch out, and don't let anyone fool you.

Jesus Is Sentenced to Death

(Matthew 27.15-26; Luke 23.13-25; John 18.39—19.16)

6 Many men, claiming to speak for me, will come and say, ‘I am he!’ and they will fool many people.

Jesus Sends Out the Twelve Disciples

(Matthew 10.5-15; Luke 9.1-6)

7 And don't be troubled when you hear the noise of battles close by and news of battles far away. Such things must happen, but they do not mean that the end has come. 8 Countries will fight each other; kingdoms will attack one another. There will be earthquakes everywhere, and there will be famines. These things are like the first pains of childbirth.

AN OLD ENDING TO THE GOSPEL

Jesus Appears to Mary Magdalene

(Matthew 28.9, 10; John 20.11-18)

9 “You yourselves must watch out. You will be arrested and taken to court. You will be beaten in the synagogues; you will stand before rulers and kings for my sake to tell them the Good News.

Judas Agrees to Betray Jesus

(Matthew 26.14-16; Luke 22.3-6)

10 But before the end comes, the gospel must be preached to all peoples.

The Pharisees Ask for a Miracle

(Matthew 16.1-4)

11 And when you are arrested and taken to court, do not worry ahead of time about what you are going to say; when the time comes, say whatever is then given to you. For the words you speak will not be yours; they will come from the Holy Spirit.

Jesus Curses the Fig Tree

(Matthew 21.18, 19)

Jesus Eats the Passover Meal with His Disciples

(Matthew 26.17-25; Luke 22.7-14, 21-23; John 13.21-30)

Jesus Appears to Two Followers

(Luke 24.13-35)

12 Men will hand over their own brothers to be put to death, and fathers will do the same to their children. Children will turn against their parents and have them put to death.

Jesus Blesses Little Children

(Matthew 19.13-15; Luke 18.15-17)

The Question about Paying Taxes

(Matthew 22.15-22; Luke 20.20-26)

13 Everyone will hate you because of me. But whoever holds out to the end will be saved.

The Death of John the Baptist

(Matthew 14.1-12; Luke 9.7-9)

The Things That Make a Person Unclean

(Matthew 15.10-20)

The Yeast of the Pharisees and of Herod

(Matthew 16.5-12)

Jesus Heals a Boy with an Evil Spirit

(Matthew 17.14-21; Luke 9.37-43a)

The Awful Horror

(Matthew 24.15-28; Luke 21.20-24)

Jesus Appears to the Eleven

(Matthew 28.16-20; Luke 24.36-49; John 20.19-23; Acts 1.6-8)

14 “You will see ‘The Awful Horror’ standing in the place where he should not be.” (Note to the reader: understand what this means!) “Then those who are in Judea must run away to the hills.

Jesus Goes to the Temple

(Matthew 21.12-17; Luke 19.45-48; John 2.13-22)

15 Someone who is on the roof of a house must not lose time by going down into the house to get anything to take along.

The Soldiers Make Fun of Jesus

(Matthew 27.27-31; John 19.2, 3)

16 Someone who is in the field must not go back to the house for a cloak.

The Rich Man

(Matthew 19.16-30; Luke 18.18-30)

17 How terrible it will be in those days for women who are pregnant and for mothers with little babies!

The Question about Rising from Death

(Matthew 22.23-33; Luke 20.27-40)

18 Pray to God that these things will not happen in the winter!

Jesus Is Taken Up to Heaven

(Luke 24.50-53; Acts 1.9-11)

19 For the trouble of those days will be far worse than any the world has ever known from the very beginning when God created the world until the present time. Nor will there ever be anything like it again.

The Lesson from the Fig Tree

(Matthew 21.20-22)

20 But the Lord has reduced the number of those days; if he had not, nobody would survive. For the sake of his chosen people, however, he has reduced those days.

Jesus Is Crucified

(Matthew 27.32-44; Luke 23.26-43; John 19.17-27)

ANOTHER OLD ENDING

21 “Then, if anyone says to you, ‘Look, here is the Messiah!’ or, ‘Look, there he is!’—do not believe it.

Jesus Heals a Blind Man at Bethsaida

The Lord's Supper

(Matthew 26.26-30; Luke 22.14-20; 1 Corinthians 11.23-25)

22 For false Messiahs and false prophets will appear. They will perform miracles and wonders in order to deceive even God's chosen people, if possible. 23 Be on your guard! I have told you everything ahead of time.

A Woman's Faith

(Matthew 15.21-28)

The Coming of the Son of Man

(Matthew 24.29-31; Luke 21.25-28)

24 “In the days after that time of trouble the sun will grow dark, the moon will no longer shine, 25 the stars will fall from heaven, and the powers in space will be driven from their courses. 26 Then the Son of Man will appear, coming in the clouds with great power and glory.

Peter's Declaration about Jesus

(Matthew 16.13-20; Luke 9.18-21)

The Question about Jesus' Authority

(Matthew 21.23-27; Luke 20.1-8)

Jesus Predicts Peter's Denial

(Matthew 26.31-35; Luke 22.31-34; John 13.36-38)

27 He will send the angels out to the four corners of the earth to gather God's chosen people from one end of the world to the other. *

The Great Commandment

(Matthew 22.34-40; Luke 10.25-28)

The Lesson of the Fig Tree

(Matthew 24.32-35; Luke 21.29-33)

28 “Let the fig tree teach you a lesson. When its branches become green and tender and it starts putting out leaves, you know that summer is near. 29 In the same way, when you see these things happening, you will know that the time is near, ready to begin.

Jesus Feeds Five Thousand

(Matthew 14.13-21; Luke 9.10-17; John 6.1-14)

Jesus Speaks Again about His Death

(Matthew 17.22, 23; Luke 9.43b-45)

30 Remember that all these things will happen before the people now living have all died.

Jesus Heals a Deaf-Mute

Jesus Speaks about His Suffering and Death

(Matthew 16.21-28; Luke 9.22-27)

31 Heaven and earth will pass away, but my words will never pass away.

Jesus Speaks a Third Time about His Death

(Matthew 20.17-19; Luke 18.31-34)

No One Knows the Day or Hour

(Matthew 24.36-44)

Jesus Prays in Gethsemane

(Matthew 26.36-46; Luke 22.39-46)

32 “No one knows, however, when that day or hour will come—neither the angels in heaven, nor the Son; only the Father knows.

Who Is the Greatest?

(Matthew 18.1-5; Luke 9.46-48)

The Death of Jesus

(Matthew 27.45-56; Luke 23.44-49; John 19.28-30)

33 Be on watch, be alert, for you do not know when the time will come. 34 It will be like a man who goes away from home on a trip and leaves his servants in charge, after giving to each one his own work to do and after telling the doorkeeper to keep watch.

The Request of James and John

(Matthew 20.20-28)

The Question about the Messiah

(Matthew 22.41-46; Luke 20.41-44)

35 Watch, then, because you do not know when the master of the house is coming—it might be in the evening or at midnight or before dawn or at sunrise. 36 If he comes suddenly, he must not find you asleep. 37 What I say to you, then, I say to all: Watch!”

Jesus Is Rejected at Nazareth

(Matthew 13.53-58; Luke 4.16-30)

The Teaching of the Ancestors

(Matthew 15.1-9)

Jesus Feeds Four Thousand People

(Matthew 15.32-39)

Jesus Teaches about Divorce

(Matthew 19.1-12; Luke 16.18)

The Triumphant Entry into Jerusalem

(Matthew 21.1-11; Luke 19.28-40; John 12.12-19)

The Parable of the Tenants in the Vineyard

(Matthew 21.33-46; Luke 20.9-19)

Jesus Speaks of the Destruction of the Temple

(Matthew 24.1, 2; Luke 21.5, 6)

The Plot against Jesus

(Matthew 26.1-5; Luke 22.1, 2; John 11.45-53)

Jesus before Pilate

(Matthew 27.1, 2, 11-14; Luke 23.1-5; John 18.28-38)

The Resurrection

(Matthew 28.1-8; Luke 24.1-12; John 20.1-10)

1 It was now two days before the Festival of Passover and Unleavened Bread. The chief priests and the teachers of the Law were looking for a way to arrest Jesus secretly and put him to death.

The Transfiguration

(Matthew 17.1-13; Luke 9.28-36)

2 “We must not do it during the festival,” they said, “or the people might riot.”

Troubles and Persecutions

(Matthew 24.3-14; Luke 21.7-19)

Jesus Is Anointed at Bethany

(Matthew 26.6-13; John 12.1-8)

3 Jesus was in Bethany at the house of Simon, a man who had suffered from a dreaded skin disease. While Jesus was eating, a woman came in with an alabaster jar full of a very expensive perfume made of pure nard. She broke the jar and poured the perfume on Jesus' head. 4 Some of the people there became angry and said to one another, “What was the use of wasting the perfume? 5 It could have been sold for more than three hundred silver coins and the money given to the poor!” And they criticized her harshly.

Jesus Is Sentenced to Death

(Matthew 27.15-26; Luke 23.13-25; John 18.39—19.16)

6 But Jesus said, “Leave her alone! Why are you bothering her? She has done a fine and beautiful thing for me.

Jesus Sends Out the Twelve Disciples

(Matthew 10.5-15; Luke 9.1-6)

7 You will always have poor people with you, and any time you want to, you can help them. But you will not always have me. 8 She did what she could; she poured perfume on my body to prepare it ahead of time for burial.

AN OLD ENDING TO THE GOSPEL

Jesus Appears to Mary Magdalene

(Matthew 28.9, 10; John 20.11-18)

9 Now, I assure you that wherever the gospel is preached all over the world, what she has done will be told in memory of her.”

Judas Agrees to Betray Jesus

(Matthew 26.14-16; Luke 22.3-6)

10 Then Judas Iscariot, one of the twelve disciples, went off to the chief priests in order to betray Jesus to them.

The Pharisees Ask for a Miracle

(Matthew 16.1-4)

11 They were pleased to hear what he had to say, and promised to give him money. So Judas started looking for a good chance to hand Jesus over to them.

Jesus Curses the Fig Tree

(Matthew 21.18, 19)

Jesus Eats the Passover Meal with His Disciples

(Matthew 26.17-25; Luke 22.7-14, 21-23; John 13.21-30)

Jesus Appears to Two Followers

(Luke 24.13-35)

12 On the first day of the Festival of Unleavened Bread, the day the lambs for the Passover meal were killed, Jesus' disciples asked him, “Where do you want us to go and get the Passover meal ready for you?”

Jesus Blesses Little Children

(Matthew 19.13-15; Luke 18.15-17)

The Question about Paying Taxes

(Matthew 22.15-22; Luke 20.20-26)

13 Then Jesus sent two of them with these instructions: “Go into the city, and a man carrying a jar of water will meet you. Follow him

The Death of John the Baptist

(Matthew 14.1-12; Luke 9.7-9)

The Things That Make a Person Unclean

(Matthew 15.10-20)

The Yeast of the Pharisees and of Herod

(Matthew 16.5-12)

Jesus Heals a Boy with an Evil Spirit

(Matthew 17.14-21; Luke 9.37-43a)

The Awful Horror

(Matthew 24.15-28; Luke 21.20-24)

Jesus Appears to the Eleven

(Matthew 28.16-20; Luke 24.36-49; John 20.19-23; Acts 1.6-8)

14 to the house he enters, and say to the owner of the house: ‘The Teacher says, Where is the room where my disciples and I will eat the Passover meal?’

Jesus Goes to the Temple

(Matthew 21.12-17; Luke 19.45-48; John 2.13-22)

15 Then he will show you a large upstairs room, fixed up and furnished, where you will get everything ready for us.”

The Soldiers Make Fun of Jesus

(Matthew 27.27-31; John 19.2, 3)

16 The disciples left, went to the city, and found everything just as Jesus had told them; and they prepared the Passover meal.

The Rich Man

(Matthew 19.16-30; Luke 18.18-30)

17 When it was evening, Jesus came with the twelve disciples.

The Question about Rising from Death

(Matthew 22.23-33; Luke 20.27-40)

18 While they were at the table eating, Jesus said, “I tell you that one of you will betray me—one who is eating with me.”

Jesus Is Taken Up to Heaven

(Luke 24.50-53; Acts 1.9-11)

19 The disciples were upset and began to ask him, one after the other, “Surely you don't mean me, do you?”

The Lesson from the Fig Tree

(Matthew 21.20-22)

20 Jesus answered, “It will be one of you twelve, one who dips his bread in the dish with me.

Jesus Is Crucified

(Matthew 27.32-44; Luke 23.26-43; John 19.17-27)

ANOTHER OLD ENDING

21 The Son of Man will die as the Scriptures say he will; but how terrible for that man who will betray the Son of Man! It would have been better for that man if he had never been born!”

Jesus Heals a Blind Man at Bethsaida

The Lord's Supper

(Matthew 26.26-30; Luke 22.14-20; 1 Corinthians 11.23-25)

22 While they were eating, Jesus took a piece of bread, gave a prayer of thanks, broke it, and gave it to his disciples. “Take it,” he said, “this is my body.” 23 Then he took a cup, gave thanks to God, and handed it to them; and they all drank from it.

A Woman's Faith

(Matthew 15.21-28)

The Coming of the Son of Man

(Matthew 24.29-31; Luke 21.25-28)

24 Jesus said, “This is my blood which is poured out for many, my blood which seals God's covenant. 25 I tell you, I will never again drink this wine until the day I drink the new wine in the Kingdom of God.” 26 Then they sang a hymn and went out to the Mount of Olives.

Peter's Declaration about Jesus

(Matthew 16.13-20; Luke 9.18-21)

The Question about Jesus' Authority

(Matthew 21.23-27; Luke 20.1-8)

Jesus Predicts Peter's Denial

(Matthew 26.31-35; Luke 22.31-34; John 13.36-38)

27 Jesus said to them, “All of you will run away and leave me, for the scripture says, ‘God will kill the shepherd, and the sheep will all be scattered.’ *

The Great Commandment

(Matthew 22.34-40; Luke 10.25-28)

The Lesson of the Fig Tree

(Matthew 24.32-35; Luke 21.29-33)

28 But after I am raised to life, I will go to Galilee ahead of you.” 29 Peter answered, “I will never leave you, even though all the rest do!”

Jesus Feeds Five Thousand

(Matthew 14.13-21; Luke 9.10-17; John 6.1-14)

Jesus Speaks Again about His Death

(Matthew 17.22, 23; Luke 9.43b-45)

30 Jesus said to Peter, “I tell you that before the rooster crows two times tonight, you will say three times that you do not know me.”

Jesus Heals a Deaf-Mute

Jesus Speaks about His Suffering and Death

(Matthew 16.21-28; Luke 9.22-27)

31 Peter answered even more strongly, “I will never say that, even if I have to die with you!” And all the other disciples said the same thing.

Jesus Speaks a Third Time about His Death

(Matthew 20.17-19; Luke 18.31-34)

No One Knows the Day or Hour

(Matthew 24.36-44)

Jesus Prays in Gethsemane

(Matthew 26.36-46; Luke 22.39-46)

32 They came to a place called Gethsemane, and Jesus said to his disciples, “Sit here while I pray.”

Who Is the Greatest?

(Matthew 18.1-5; Luke 9.46-48)

The Death of Jesus

(Matthew 27.45-56; Luke 23.44-49; John 19.28-30)

33 He took Peter, James, and John with him. Distress and anguish came over him, 34 and he said to them, “The sorrow in my heart is so great that it almost crushes me. Stay here and keep watch.”

The Request of James and John

(Matthew 20.20-28)

The Question about the Messiah

(Matthew 22.41-46; Luke 20.41-44)

35 He went a little farther on, threw himself on the ground, and prayed that, if possible, he might not have to go through that time of suffering. 36 “Father,” he prayed, “my Father! All things are possible for you. Take this cup of suffering away from me. Yet not what I want, but what you want.” 37 Then he returned and found the three disciples asleep. He said to Peter, “Simon, are you asleep? Weren't you able to stay awake for even one hour?”

Whoever Is Not against Us Is for Us

(Luke 9.49, 50)

Jesus Warns against the Teachers of the Law

(Matthew 23.1-36; Luke 20.45-47)

38 And he said to them, “Keep watch, and pray that you will not fall into temptation. The spirit is willing, but the flesh is weak.” 39 He went away once more and prayed, saying the same words. * 40 Then he came back to the disciples and found them asleep; they could not keep their eyes open. And they did not know what to say to him.

The Widow's Offering

(Luke 21.1-4)

41 When he came back the third time, he said to them, “Are you still sleeping and resting? Enough! The hour has come! Look, the Son of Man is now being handed over to the power of sinners.

Temptations to Sin

(Matthew 18.6-9; Luke 17.1, 2)

The Burial of Jesus

(Matthew 27.57-61; Luke 23.50-56; John 19.38-42)

42 Get up, let us go. Look, here is the man who is betraying me!”

The Arrest of Jesus

(Matthew 26.47-56; Luke 22.47-53; John 18.3-12)

43 Jesus was still speaking when Judas, one of the twelve disciples, arrived. With him was a crowd armed with swords and clubs and sent by the chief priests, the teachers of the Law, and the elders. 44 The traitor had given the crowd a signal: “The man I kiss is the one you want. Arrest him and take him away under guard.”

Jesus Walks on the Water

(Matthew 14.22-33; John 6.15-21)

45 As soon as Judas arrived, he went up to Jesus and said, “Teacher!” and kissed him.

Jesus Heals Blind Bartimaeus

(Matthew 20.29-34; Luke 18.35-43)

46 So they arrested Jesus and held him tight. 47 But one of those standing there drew his sword and struck at the High Priest's slave, cutting off his ear. 48 Then Jesus spoke up and said to them, “Did you have to come with swords and clubs to capture me, as though I were an outlaw? 49 Day after day I was with you teaching in the Temple, and you did not arrest me. But the Scriptures must come true.” 50 Then all the disciples left him and ran away. 51 A certain young man, dressed only in a linen cloth, was following Jesus. They tried to arrest him, 52 but he ran away naked, leaving the cloth behind.

Jesus Heals the Sick in Gennesaret

(Matthew 14.34-36)

Jesus before the Council

(Matthew 26.57-68; Luke 22.54, 55, 63-71; John 18.13, 14, 19-24)

53 Then Jesus was taken to the High Priest's house, where all the chief priests, the elders, and the teachers of the Law were gathering. 54 Peter followed from a distance and went into the courtyard of the High Priest's house. There he sat down with the guards, keeping himself warm by the fire. 55 The chief priests and the whole Council tried to find some evidence against Jesus in order to put him to death, but they could not find any. 56 Many witnesses told lies against Jesus, but their stories did not agree. 57 Then some men stood up and told this lie against Jesus: 58 “We heard him say, ‘I will tear down this Temple which men have made, and after three days I will build one that is not made by men.’” 59 Not even they, however, could make their stories agree. 60 The High Priest stood up in front of them all and questioned Jesus, “Have you no answer to the accusation they bring against you?” 61 But Jesus kept quiet and would not say a word. Again the High Priest questioned him, “Are you the Messiah, the Son of the Blessed God?” 62 “I am,” answered Jesus, “and you will all see the Son of Man seated at the right side of the Almighty and coming with the clouds of heaven!” 63 The High Priest tore his robes and said, “We don't need any more witnesses! 64 You heard his blasphemy. What is your decision?” They all voted against him: he was guilty and should be put to death. 65 Some of them began to spit on Jesus, and they blindfolded him and hit him. “Guess who hit you!” they said. And the guards took him and slapped him.

Peter Denies Jesus

(Matthew 26.69-75; Luke 22.56-62; John 18.15-18, 25-27)

66 Peter was still down in the courtyard when one of the High Priest's servant women came by. 67 When she saw Peter warming himself, she looked straight at him and said, “You, too, were with Jesus of Nazareth.” 68 But he denied it. “I don't know...I don't understand what you are talking about,” he answered, and went out into the passageway. Just then a rooster crowed. * 69 The servant woman saw him there and began to repeat to the bystanders, “He is one of them!” 70 But Peter denied it again. A little while later the bystanders accused Peter again, “You can't deny that you are one of them, because you, too, are from Galilee.” 71 Then Peter said, “I swear that I am telling the truth! May God punish me if I am not! I do not know the man you are talking about!” 72 Just then a rooster crowed a second time, and Peter remembered how Jesus had said to him, “Before the rooster crows two times, you will say three times that you do not know me.” And he broke down and cried.

Jesus Is Rejected at Nazareth

(Matthew 13.53-58; Luke 4.16-30)

The Teaching of the Ancestors

(Matthew 15.1-9)

Jesus Feeds Four Thousand People

(Matthew 15.32-39)

Jesus Teaches about Divorce

(Matthew 19.1-12; Luke 16.18)

The Triumphant Entry into Jerusalem

(Matthew 21.1-11; Luke 19.28-40; John 12.12-19)

The Parable of the Tenants in the Vineyard

(Matthew 21.33-46; Luke 20.9-19)

Jesus Speaks of the Destruction of the Temple

(Matthew 24.1, 2; Luke 21.5, 6)

The Plot against Jesus

(Matthew 26.1-5; Luke 22.1, 2; John 11.45-53)

Jesus before Pilate

(Matthew 27.1, 2, 11-14; Luke 23.1-5; John 18.28-38)

The Resurrection

(Matthew 28.1-8; Luke 24.1-12; John 20.1-10)

1 Early in the morning the chief priests met hurriedly with the elders, the teachers of the Law, and the whole Council, and made their plans. They put Jesus in chains, led him away, and handed him over to Pilate.

The Transfiguration

(Matthew 17.1-13; Luke 9.28-36)

2 Pilate questioned him, “Are you the king of the Jews?” Jesus answered, “So you say.”

Troubles and Persecutions

(Matthew 24.3-14; Luke 21.7-19)

Jesus Is Anointed at Bethany

(Matthew 26.6-13; John 12.1-8)

3 The chief priests were accusing Jesus of many things, 4 so Pilate questioned him again, “Aren't you going to answer? Listen to all their accusations!” 5 Again Jesus refused to say a word, and Pilate was amazed.

Jesus Is Sentenced to Death

(Matthew 27.15-26; Luke 23.13-25; John 18.39—19.16)

6 At every Passover Festival Pilate was in the habit of setting free any one prisoner the people asked for.

Jesus Sends Out the Twelve Disciples

(Matthew 10.5-15; Luke 9.1-6)

7 At that time a man named Barabbas was in prison with the rebels who had committed murder in the riot. 8 When the crowd gathered and began to ask Pilate for the usual favor,

AN OLD ENDING TO THE GOSPEL

Jesus Appears to Mary Magdalene

(Matthew 28.9, 10; John 20.11-18)

9 he asked them, “Do you want me to set free for you the king of the Jews?”

Judas Agrees to Betray Jesus

(Matthew 26.14-16; Luke 22.3-6)

10 He knew very well that the chief priests had handed Jesus over to him because they were jealous.

The Pharisees Ask for a Miracle

(Matthew 16.1-4)

11 But the chief priests stirred up the crowd to ask, instead, that Pilate set Barabbas free for them.

Jesus Curses the Fig Tree

(Matthew 21.18, 19)

Jesus Eats the Passover Meal with His Disciples

(Matthew 26.17-25; Luke 22.7-14, 21-23; John 13.21-30)

Jesus Appears to Two Followers

(Luke 24.13-35)

12 Pilate spoke again to the crowd, “What, then, do you want me to do with the one you call the king of the Jews?”

Jesus Blesses Little Children

(Matthew 19.13-15; Luke 18.15-17)

The Question about Paying Taxes

(Matthew 22.15-22; Luke 20.20-26)

13 They shouted back, “Crucify him!”

The Death of John the Baptist

(Matthew 14.1-12; Luke 9.7-9)

The Things That Make a Person Unclean

(Matthew 15.10-20)

The Yeast of the Pharisees and of Herod

(Matthew 16.5-12)

Jesus Heals a Boy with an Evil Spirit

(Matthew 17.14-21; Luke 9.37-43a)

The Awful Horror

(Matthew 24.15-28; Luke 21.20-24)

Jesus Appears to the Eleven

(Matthew 28.16-20; Luke 24.36-49; John 20.19-23; Acts 1.6-8)

14 “But what crime has he committed?” Pilate asked. They shouted all the louder, “Crucify him!”

Jesus Goes to the Temple

(Matthew 21.12-17; Luke 19.45-48; John 2.13-22)

15 Pilate wanted to please the crowd, so he set Barabbas free for them. Then he had Jesus whipped and handed him over to be crucified.

The Soldiers Make Fun of Jesus

(Matthew 27.27-31; John 19.2, 3)

16 The soldiers took Jesus inside to the courtyard of the governor's palace and called together the rest of the company.

The Rich Man

(Matthew 19.16-30; Luke 18.18-30)

17 They put a purple robe on Jesus, made a crown out of thorny branches, and put it on his head.

The Question about Rising from Death

(Matthew 22.23-33; Luke 20.27-40)

18 Then they began to salute him: “Long live the King of the Jews!”

Jesus Is Taken Up to Heaven

(Luke 24.50-53; Acts 1.9-11)

19 They beat him over the head with a stick, spat on him, fell on their knees, and bowed down to him.

The Lesson from the Fig Tree

(Matthew 21.20-22)

20 When they had finished making fun of him, they took off the purple robe and put his own clothes back on him. Then they led him out to crucify him.

Jesus Is Crucified

(Matthew 27.32-44; Luke 23.26-43; John 19.17-27)

ANOTHER OLD ENDING

21 On the way they met a man named Simon, who was coming into the city from the country, and the soldiers forced him to carry Jesus' cross. (Simon was from Cyrene and was the father of Alexander and Rufus.)

Jesus Heals a Blind Man at Bethsaida

The Lord's Supper

(Matthew 26.26-30; Luke 22.14-20; 1 Corinthians 11.23-25)

22 They took Jesus to a place called Golgotha, which means “The Place of the Skull.” 23 There they tried to give him wine mixed with a drug called myrrh, but Jesus would not drink it.

A Woman's Faith

(Matthew 15.21-28)

The Coming of the Son of Man

(Matthew 24.29-31; Luke 21.25-28)

24 Then they crucified him and divided his clothes among themselves, throwing dice to see who would get which piece of clothing. 25 It was nine o'clock in the morning when they crucified him. 26 The notice of the accusation against him said: “The King of the Jews.”

Peter's Declaration about Jesus

(Matthew 16.13-20; Luke 9.18-21)

The Question about Jesus' Authority

(Matthew 21.23-27; Luke 20.1-8)

Jesus Predicts Peter's Denial

(Matthew 26.31-35; Luke 22.31-34; John 13.36-38)

27 They also crucified two bandits with Jesus, one on his right and the other on his left. * 29 People passing by shook their heads and hurled insults at Jesus: “Aha! You were going to tear down the Temple and build it back up in three days!

Jesus Feeds Five Thousand

(Matthew 14.13-21; Luke 9.10-17; John 6.1-14)

Jesus Speaks Again about His Death

(Matthew 17.22, 23; Luke 9.43b-45)

30 Now come down from the cross and save yourself”

Jesus Heals a Deaf-Mute

Jesus Speaks about His Suffering and Death

(Matthew 16.21-28; Luke 9.22-27)

31 In the same way the chief priests and the teachers of the Law made fun of Jesus, saying to one another, “He saved others, but he cannot save himself

Jesus Speaks a Third Time about His Death

(Matthew 20.17-19; Luke 18.31-34)

No One Knows the Day or Hour

(Matthew 24.36-44)

Jesus Prays in Gethsemane

(Matthew 26.36-46; Luke 22.39-46)

32 Let us see the Messiah, the king of Israel, come down from the cross now, and we will believe in him!” And the two who were crucified with Jesus insulted him also.

Who Is the Greatest?

(Matthew 18.1-5; Luke 9.46-48)

The Death of Jesus

(Matthew 27.45-56; Luke 23.44-49; John 19.28-30)

33 At noon the whole country was covered with darkness, which lasted for three hours. 34 At three o'clock Jesus cried out with a loud shout, “Eloi, Eloi, lema sabachthani?”which means, “My God, my God, why did you abandon me?”

The Request of James and John

(Matthew 20.20-28)

The Question about the Messiah

(Matthew 22.41-46; Luke 20.41-44)

35 Some of the people there heard him and said, “Listen, he is calling for Elijah!” 36 One of them ran up with a sponge, soaked it in cheap wine, and put it on the end of a stick. Then he held it up to Jesus' lips and said, “Wait! Let us see if Elijah is coming to bring him down from the cross!” 37 With a loud cry Jesus died.

Whoever Is Not against Us Is for Us

(Luke 9.49, 50)

Jesus Warns against the Teachers of the Law

(Matthew 23.1-36; Luke 20.45-47)

38 The curtain hanging in the Temple was torn in two, from top to bottom. 39 The army officer who was standing there in front of the cross saw how Jesus had died. “This man was really the Son of God!” he said. * 40 Some women were there, looking on from a distance. Among them were Mary Magdalene, Mary the mother of the younger James and of Joseph, and Salome.

The Widow's Offering

(Luke 21.1-4)

41 They had followed Jesus while he was in Galilee and had helped him. Many other women who had come to Jerusalem with him were there also.

Temptations to Sin

(Matthew 18.6-9; Luke 17.1, 2)

The Burial of Jesus

(Matthew 27.57-61; Luke 23.50-56; John 19.38-42)

42 -43 It was toward evening when Joseph of Arimathea arrived. He was a respected member of the Council, who was waiting for the coming of the Kingdom of God. It was Preparation day (that is, the day before the Sabbath), so Joseph went boldly into the presence of Pilate and asked him for the body of Jesus. 44 Pilate was surprised to hear that Jesus was already dead. He called the army officer and asked him if Jesus had been dead a long time.

Jesus Walks on the Water

(Matthew 14.22-33; John 6.15-21)

45 After hearing the officer's report, Pilate told Joseph he could have the body.

Jesus Heals Blind Bartimaeus

(Matthew 20.29-34; Luke 18.35-43)

46 Joseph bought a linen sheet, took the body down, wrapped it in the sheet, and placed it in a tomb which had been dug out of solid rock. Then he rolled a large stone across the entrance to the tomb. 47 Mary Magdalene and Mary the mother of Joseph were watching and saw where the body of Jesus was placed.

Jesus Is Rejected at Nazareth

(Matthew 13.53-58; Luke 4.16-30)

The Teaching of the Ancestors

(Matthew 15.1-9)

Jesus Feeds Four Thousand People

(Matthew 15.32-39)

Jesus Teaches about Divorce

(Matthew 19.1-12; Luke 16.18)

The Triumphant Entry into Jerusalem

(Matthew 21.1-11; Luke 19.28-40; John 12.12-19)

The Parable of the Tenants in the Vineyard

(Matthew 21.33-46; Luke 20.9-19)

Jesus Speaks of the Destruction of the Temple

(Matthew 24.1, 2; Luke 21.5, 6)

The Plot against Jesus

(Matthew 26.1-5; Luke 22.1, 2; John 11.45-53)

Jesus before Pilate

(Matthew 27.1, 2, 11-14; Luke 23.1-5; John 18.28-38)

The Resurrection

(Matthew 28.1-8; Luke 24.1-12; John 20.1-10)

1 After the Sabbath was over, Mary Magdalene, Mary the mother of James, and Salome bought spices to go and anoint the body of Jesus.

The Transfiguration

(Matthew 17.1-13; Luke 9.28-36)

2 Very early on Sunday morning, at sunrise, they went to the tomb.

Troubles and Persecutions

(Matthew 24.3-14; Luke 21.7-19)

Jesus Is Anointed at Bethany

(Matthew 26.6-13; John 12.1-8)

3 -4 On the way they said to one another, “Who will roll away the stone for us from the entrance to the tomb?” (It was a very large stone.) Then they looked up and saw that the stone had already been rolled back. 5 So they entered the tomb, where they saw a young man sitting at the right, wearing a white robe—and they were alarmed.

Jesus Is Sentenced to Death

(Matthew 27.15-26; Luke 23.13-25; John 18.39—19.16)

6 “Don't be alarmed,” he said. “I know you are looking for Jesus of Nazareth, who was crucified. He is not here—he has been raised! Look, here is the place where he was placed.

Jesus Sends Out the Twelve Disciples

(Matthew 10.5-15; Luke 9.1-6)

7 Now go and give this message to his disciples, including Peter: ‘He is going to Galilee ahead of you; there you will see him, just as he told you.’” 8 So they went out and ran from the tomb, distressed and terrified. They said nothing to anyone, because they were afraid. [

AN OLD ENDING TO THE GOSPEL

Jesus Appears to Mary Magdalene

(Matthew 28.9, 10; John 20.11-18)

9 After Jesus rose from death early on Sunday, he appeared first to Mary Magdalene, from whom he had driven out seven demons.

Judas Agrees to Betray Jesus

(Matthew 26.14-16; Luke 22.3-6)

10 She went and told his companions. They were mourning and crying;

The Pharisees Ask for a Miracle

(Matthew 16.1-4)

11 and when they heard her say that Jesus was alive and that she had seen him, they did not believe her.

Jesus Curses the Fig Tree

(Matthew 21.18, 19)

Jesus Eats the Passover Meal with His Disciples

(Matthew 26.17-25; Luke 22.7-14, 21-23; John 13.21-30)

Jesus Appears to Two Followers

(Luke 24.13-35)

12 After this, Jesus appeared in a different manner to two of them while they were on their way to the country.

Jesus Blesses Little Children

(Matthew 19.13-15; Luke 18.15-17)

The Question about Paying Taxes

(Matthew 22.15-22; Luke 20.20-26)

13 They returned and told the others, but these would not believe it.

The Death of John the Baptist

(Matthew 14.1-12; Luke 9.7-9)

The Things That Make a Person Unclean

(Matthew 15.10-20)

The Yeast of the Pharisees and of Herod

(Matthew 16.5-12)

Jesus Heals a Boy with an Evil Spirit

(Matthew 17.14-21; Luke 9.37-43a)

The Awful Horror

(Matthew 24.15-28; Luke 21.20-24)

Jesus Appears to the Eleven

(Matthew 28.16-20; Luke 24.36-49; John 20.19-23; Acts 1.6-8)

14 Last of all, Jesus appeared to the eleven disciples as they were eating. He scolded them, because they did not have faith and because they were too stubborn to believe those who had seen him alive.

Jesus Goes to the Temple

(Matthew 21.12-17; Luke 19.45-48; John 2.13-22)

15 He said to them, “Go throughout the whole world and preach the gospel to all people.

The Soldiers Make Fun of Jesus

(Matthew 27.27-31; John 19.2, 3)

16 Whoever believes and is baptized will be saved; whoever does not believe will be condemned.

The Rich Man

(Matthew 19.16-30; Luke 18.18-30)

17 Believers will be given the power to perform miracles: they will drive out demons in my name; they will speak in strange tongues;

The Question about Rising from Death

(Matthew 22.23-33; Luke 20.27-40)

18 if they pick up snakes or drink any poison, they will not be harmed; they will place their hands on sick people, and these will get well.”

Jesus Is Taken Up to Heaven

(Luke 24.50-53; Acts 1.9-11)

19 After the Lord Jesus had talked with them, he was taken up to heaven and sat at the right side of God.

The Lesson from the Fig Tree

(Matthew 21.20-22)

20 The disciples went and preached everywhere, and the Lord worked with them and proved that their preaching was true by the miracles that were performed.] [9The women went to Peter and his friends and gave them a brief account of all they had been told. 10After this, Jesus himself sent out through his disciples from the east to the west the sacred and everliving message of eternal salvation.]