Mary, Mother of Mark
Mary, Mother of Mark
Sister to Barnabas (KJV, Col 4:10), or rather aunt, since anepsios means “cousin,” not commonly “sister’s son. (See MARK.) As Barnabas gave up his lands, so she her house at Jerusalem for the use of the church. Peter’s resorting there immediately upon his release (Act 12:12) shows her tried steadfastness and implies a bond of intimacy with her; so that he calls Mark his “son” (1Pe 5:13). The house was one of the church’s worship rooms (Act 2:46; Act 20:8, compare Act 4:24; Act 4:31); “there many were gathered together praying” for Peter’s deliverance, and God “heard, while they were yet speaking” (Isa 65:24). Mark doubtless derived some of the straightforward, decided character which appears in his Gospel from her influence. His attachment to her was probably one cause of his return to Jerusalem from Perga (Act 13:13).
Fuente: Fausset’s Bible Dictionary
Mary, Mother of Mark
Ma’ry, Mother of Mark. Col 4:10. Mary, mother of Mark, was sister to Barnabas. Act 4:36; Act 12:15. She was among the earliest disciples, and lived at Jerusalem. She gave up her house to be used as one of the chief places of meeting. The fact that Peter went to that house on his release from prison indicates that there was some special intimacy, Act 12:12, between them.
(There is a tradition that the place of meeting of the disciples, and hence, Mary’s house, was on the upper slope of Zion, and that it was here that the Holy Ghost came upon the disciples with tongues of flame on the Day of Pentecost. — Editor).