The ministry of Christ: Jesus could no longer enter a town openly but stayed outside in lonely places. Mark 1:45
The Gospel of Mark is the shortest gospel about the life of the Lord, and it is a gospel centered on the ministry of Jesus; there are no details about the birth and the childhood of Jesus, and the gospel begins with the preaching of John the Baptist and the baptism of Jesus.
The Gospel of Mark relates that this spiritual ministry began in the region of Galilee, where his family resided, and it was there that he called his disciples and began to perform his first miracles and proclaim the good news, that is, the Kingdom of God, the empire or dominion of the divine perfections.
And the Gospel of Mark says something very remarkable about Jesus: his fame spread rapidly in the region, although people did not know if he was a prophet, the expected Messiah, or simply a person who, for various reasons, had achieved notoriety. And this was a problem that Jesus had to deal with, for example, when he had to present himself publicly, by saying that he was simply a "son of man".
The Gospel of Mark recounts the first miracles of Christ's ministry: the healing of a possessed person, the healing of Simon's mother-in-law, who had a fever, and the healing of a leper, with whom a curious event occurred.
The Gospel of Mark recounts that a leper approached Christ and asked to be healed, and the Lord freed him from the disease, asked him not to tell anyone what had happened, and commanded him to fulfill the prescriptions of Moses: "Show yourself to the priest and offer the sacrifices that Moses commanded for your cleansing, as a testimony to them" Mark 1:44. But it so happened that Jesus' request was counterproductive, and the gospel tells the fact in this way: "He went out and began to talk freely, spreading the news. As a result, Jesus could no longer enter a town openly but stayed outside in lonely places. Yet the people still came to him from everywhere" Mark 1:45.
From this event, a large crowd began to follow Jesus, and with this came his first public teachings, with the parables of the sower and the lamp. Although for ordinary people miracles were simply extraordinary events, in Jesus' ministry, these miracles of the Lord had a special meaning: to manifest the Kingdom of God among men, a kingdom rejected by many but accepted by others.

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