Wednesday in the Fourth Week of Ordinary Time, February 4, 2026
Mark 6, 1-6
Jesus departed from there and came to his native place, accompanied by his disciples. When the sabbath came he began to teach in the synagogue, and many who heard him were astonished. They said, “Where did this man get all this? What kind of wisdom has been given him? What mighty deeds are wrought by his hands! Is he not the carpenter, the son of Mary, and the brother of James and Joseph and Judas and Simon? And are not his sisters here with us?” And they took offense at him. Jesus said to them, “A prophet is not without honor except in his native place and among his own kin and in his own house.” So he was not able to perform any mighty deed there, apart from curing a few sick people by laying his hands on them. He was amazed at their lack of faith.
Of all the places where Jesus might be rejected, Nazareth is the most painful — and the most revealing. This is not a city of enemies or skeptics. It is home. These are the people who watched him grow, who knew his hands before they healed the sick, who heard his voice before it spoke with authority in the synagogue. They are not scandalized by ignorance, but by familiarity.
At first, everything seems promising. They are astonished. They recognize wisdom. They even acknowledge mighty deeds. And yet astonishment curdles into resistance. Their questions slide from wonder into dismissal: Where did this man get all this? Not, Who has given it to him? but, How dare it come from him? The problem is not what Jesus says or does, but who he is to them. Or rather, who they think he is.
“Is he not the carpenter?” The word is meant to anchor him firmly in place, to pin him to a workbench and a family line. A carpenter does not speak like this. A neighbor’s son does not bear divine authority. Nazareth is willing to be impressed — but not converted. They want amazement without surrender, admiration without obedience.
There is something profoundly human here. We are often most resistant to God when he comes to us through what is ordinary, familiar, or close. We expect revelation to arrive with spectacle, distance, or novelty. But God delights in choosing the known, the local, the unremarkable. Nazareth’s tragedy is not that it lacks evidence, but that it cannot see past its own categories. They know Jesus too well — or think they do.
Mark tells us that “they took offense at him.” Literally, they were scandalized. Jesus becomes a stumbling stone not because he contradicts Scripture, but because he fulfills it too near to home. A Messiah from elsewhere might have been acceptable. A prophet who grew up down the street is intolerable.
Jesus’ response is sober, not angry. He names the pattern: a prophet is without honor among his own. There is no bitterness here — only clarity. And yet the most startling line follows: “He was not able to perform any mighty deed there.” This is not a limitation of power, but a revelation of how God chooses to work. Grace does not force itself. Faith is not a mere prerequisite; it is a place of welcome. Where hearts close, even divine generosity refrains.
Still, the mercy remains. He lays his hands on a few sick people and heals them. Even in rejection, Jesus does not withdraw entirely. He gives what can be received. But the abundance that might have been — the transformation of a town, the flowering of faith — never comes to pass. Nazareth is left not with nothing, but with less than it was offered.
The final note is haunting: He was amazed at their lack of faith. In the Gospels, Jesus is amazed only twice — once by extraordinary faith, and once by its absence. That absence is not ignorance; it is refusal. It is the quiet decision to remain unchanged.
This passage invites us to ask uncomfortable questions. Have we grown too familiar with Jesus? Do we reduce him to what we already know, to what fits neatly within our experience? Do we prefer a Christ who inspires but does not unsettle, who teaches but does not demand?
Nazareth reminds us that proximity to holiness is no guarantee of openness to grace. The carpenter still speaks with divine authority. The hands that once shaped wood still shape souls. The question is not whether Jesus is capable of mighty deeds—but whether we are willing to let them happen in us.