Add parallel Print Page Options

给四千人吃饱的神迹(A)

那些日子,又有一大群人聚集,他们没有甚么东西吃。耶稣叫门徒来,对他们说: “我怜悯这一群人,因为他们和我在一起已经有三天,没有甚么吃的了。 如果我叫他们散开,饿着肚子回家去,他们会在路上晕倒,因为有人是从很远的地方来的。” 门徒回答:“在这旷野地方,从哪里能找食物叫这些人吃饱呢?” 他问他们:“你们有多少饼?”他们说:“七个。” 耶稣吩咐群众坐在地上;拿起那七个饼,祝谢了,擘开递给门徒,叫他们摆开;门徒就摆在众人面前, 他们还有几条小鱼,耶稣祝了福,就吩咐把这些也摆开。 众人都吃了,并吃饱了。他们把剩下的零碎收拾起来,装满了七个大篮子。 当时人数约有四千。耶稣解散了群众, 10 就立刻和门徒上了船,来到大玛努他地区。

求耶稣显神迹(B)

11 法利赛人出来,跟耶稣辩论;他们想试探他,求他显个从天上来的神迹。 12 耶稣灵里深深地叹息,说:“这世代为甚么总是寻求神迹?我实在告诉你们,决不会有神迹显给这个世代的!” 13 于是他离开他们,又上船往对岸去了。

提防法利赛人和希律的酵(C)

14 门徒忘了带饼,船上除了一个饼,身边没有别的了。 15 耶稣嘱咐他们说:“你们要小心,提防法利赛人的酵和希律的酵!” 16 门徒彼此议论说:“这是因为我们没有饼吧?” 17 耶稣知道了,就说:“为甚么议论没有饼这件事呢?你们还不知道,还不明白吗?你们的心还是这么迟钝吗? 18 你们有眼不能看,有耳不能听吗?你们不记得吗? 19 我擘开那五个饼给五千人吃,你们收拾的零碎装满了几个篮子呢?”他们说:“十二个。” 20 “那七个饼分给四千人吃,你们收拾的零碎装满了几个大篮子呢?”他们说:“七个。” 21 耶稣说:“你们还不明白吗?”

治好伯赛大瞎眼的人

22 后来他们到了伯赛大,有人带了一个瞎眼的人到他跟前,求耶稣摸他。 23 耶稣拉着他的手,领他到村外,吐唾沫在他的眼睛上,又用双手按在他的身上,问他:“你看见甚么没有?” 24 他往上一看,说:“我看见人了!看见他们好象树走来走去。” 25 于是耶稣再按手在他的眼睛上,他定睛一看,就复原了,样样都看得清楚了。 26 耶稣叫他回家去,说:“连这村子你也不要进去。”

彼得承认耶稣是基督(D)

27 耶稣和门徒出去,要到该撒利亚.腓立比附近的村庄。在路上他问门徒说:“人说我是谁?” 28 他们回答:“有人说是施洗的约翰;有人说是以利亚;还有人说是先知里的一位。” 29 他又问他们说:“那么你们呢?你们说我是谁?”彼得回答:“你就是基督。” 30 耶稣郑重地嘱咐他们,不要把他的事告诉人。

耶稣预言受难及复活(E)

31 于是他教导他们,人子必须受许多苦,被长老、祭司长和经学家弃绝、杀害,三天后复活。 32 耶稣坦白地说了这话,彼得就把他拉到一边,责怪他。 33 耶稣转过身来,望着门徒,斥责彼得说:“撒但,退到我后面去!因为你不思念 神的事,只思念人的事。” 34 于是把众人和门徒都叫过来,对他们说:“如果有人愿意跟从我,就应当舍己,背起他的十字架来跟从我。 35 凡是想救自己生命的,必丧掉生命;但为我和福音牺牲生命的,必救了生命。 36 人就是赚得全世界,却赔上自己的生命,有甚么好处呢? 37 人还能用甚么换回自己的生命呢? 38 在淫乱罪恶的世代,凡把我和我的道当作可耻的,人子在他父的荣耀里,和圣天使一起降临的时候,也必把他当作可耻的。”

A Meal for Four Thousand

1-3 At about this same time he again found himself with a hungry crowd on his hands. He called his disciples together and said, “This crowd is breaking my heart. They have stuck with me for three days, and now they have nothing to eat. If I send them home hungry, they’ll faint along the way—some of them have come a long distance.”

His disciples responded, “What do you expect us to do about it? Buy food out here in the desert?”

He asked, “How much bread do you have?”

“Seven loaves,” they said.

6-10 So Jesus told the crowd to sit down on the ground. After giving thanks, he took the seven bread loaves, broke them into pieces, and gave them to his disciples so they could hand them out to the crowd. They also had a few fish. He pronounced a blessing over the fish and told his disciples to hand them out as well. The crowd ate its fill. Seven sacks of leftovers were collected. There were well over four thousand at the meal. Then he sent them home. He himself went straight to the boat with his disciples and set out for Dalmanoutha.

11-12 When they arrived, the Pharisees came out and started in on him, badgering him to prove himself, pushing him up against the wall. Provoked, he said, “Why does this generation clamor for miraculous guarantees? If I have anything to say about it, you’ll not get so much as a hint of a guarantee.”

Contaminating Yeast

13-15 He then left them, got back in the boat, and headed for the other side. But the disciples forgot to pack a lunch. Except for a single loaf of bread, there wasn’t a crumb in the boat. Jesus warned, “Be very careful. Keep a sharp eye out for the contaminating yeast of Pharisees and the followers of Herod.”

16-19 Meanwhile, the disciples were finding fault with each other because they had forgotten to bring bread. Jesus overheard and said, “Why are you fussing because you forgot bread? Don’t you see the point of all this? Don’t you get it at all? Remember the five loaves I broke for the five thousand? How many baskets of leftovers did you pick up?”

They said, “Twelve.”

20 “And the seven loaves for the four thousand—how many bags full of leftovers did you get?”

“Seven.”

21 He said, “Do you still not get it?”

22-23 They arrived at Bethsaida. Some people brought a sightless man and begged Jesus to give him a healing touch. Taking him by the hand, he led him out of the village. He put spit in the man’s eyes, laid hands on him, and asked, “Do you see anything?”

24-26 He looked up. “I see men. They look like walking trees.” So Jesus laid hands on his eyes again. The man looked hard and realized that he had recovered perfect sight, saw everything in bright, twenty-twenty focus. Jesus sent him straight home, telling him, “Don’t enter the village.”

The Messiah

27 Jesus and his disciples headed out for the villages around Caesarea Philippi. As they walked, he asked, “Who do the people say I am?”

28 “Some say ‘John the Baptizer,’” they said. “Others say ‘Elijah.’ Still others say ‘one of the prophets.’”

29 He then asked, “And you—what are you saying about me? Who am I?”

Peter gave the answer: “You are the Christ, the Messiah.”

30-32 Jesus warned them to keep it quiet, not to breathe a word of it to anyone. He then began explaining things to them: “It is necessary that the Son of Man proceed to an ordeal of suffering, be tried and found guilty by the elders, high priests, and religion scholars, be killed, and after three days rise up alive.” He said this simply and clearly so they couldn’t miss it.

32-33 But Peter grabbed him in protest. Turning and seeing his disciples wavering, wondering what to believe, Jesus confronted Peter. “Peter, get out of my way! Satan, get lost! You have no idea how God works.”

34-37 Calling the crowd to join his disciples, he said, “Anyone who intends to come with me has to let me lead. You’re not in the driver’s seat; I am. Don’t run from suffering; embrace it. Follow me and I’ll show you how. Self-help is no help at all. Self-sacrifice is the way, my way, to saving yourself, your true self. What good would it do to get everything you want and lose you, the real you? What could you ever trade your soul for?

38 “If any of you are embarrassed over me and the way I’m leading you when you get around your fickle and unfocused friends, know that you’ll be an even greater embarrassment to the Son of Man when he arrives in all the splendor of God, his Father, with an army of the holy angels.”