The People's New Testament, B.W. Johnson, [1891], at sacred-texts.com
As he went forth out of the temple. This whole discourse is reported most fully by Matthew, chapter 24, on which see notes. Compare Luke 21:5-38. I only notice here what is peculiar to Mark.
Peter and James . . . asked him privately. Matthew says "the disciples came to him privately," but does not name them. "Privately" probably means apart from the multitude. The destruction of the temple had been publicly foretold (Mat 23:38; Mat 24:2).
Take heed to yourselves. In Matthew's report persecution is foretold, but the injunctions of Mar 13:9-11, or rather given in Mat 10:18-20, on which see notes.
Take heed. Not to escape persecution, but to be ready for it.
They shall deliver you to councils. Jewish courts. Besides the great national council, the Sanhedrim, each principal town had a smaller council, or local Sanhedrim.
In the synagogues ye shall be beaten. In every Jewish synagogue there were three magistrates authorized to inflict certain punishments, scourging being one. The number of stripes could not exceed forty (Deu 25:3); hence they always stopped at thirty-nine.
Governors and kings. Roman officials, such as Felix, Festus, Gallio, King Agrippa and Nero.
Pray ye that your flight be not in the winter. Mat 24:20 adds, "neither on the Sabbath day." The reasons for these monitions to the Jerusalem church are given in the notes on Matthew. The sign given by the Lord for the flight, the environment of the city by the Romans, and the panic that caused their sudden withdrawal, occurred on Tuesday, in October. Hence the flight was neither in the winter, nor on the Sabbath day.
This generation shall not pass. See notes on Mat 24:34.
Of that day . . . knoweth no one, . . . neither the Son. When the Son was on earth in the flesh, he voluntarily subjected himself to limitations, among them ignorance of the hour when he would return again to judgment. If he voluntarily knew not, what folly of theologians to fix upon the time.
Watch. Observe in this chapter the emphasis given to Christ's exhortation, "Watch!" Matthew tells us how the Lord sought to impress these lessons of watchfulness and faithfulness still more deeply by the parables of the "Ten Virgins" (Mat 25:1-13), and the "Talents" (Mat. 25:14-30), and closed all with a picture of the awful day when the Son of man should separate all nations from one another, as the shepherd divideth his sheep from the goats (Mat. 25:31-46).