When it comes to the story of Jesus entering Jerusalem for the last time to meet his death by crucifixion, most biblical scholars spend pages of print discussing the timing of the events. Especially confusing is the chronological relationship of the Last Supper with the Passover meal and whether the two are pictured as separate or identical meals.
But rather than rehashing all the arguments revolving around that rather complicated issue, I would like to spend a little time zeroing in on the events immediately preceding that Last Supper Jesus had with his closest followers. If you recall, both Mark's and Luke's accounts closely follow one another in describing Jesus' instructions to Peter and John for them to enter the city where they would meet a man carrying a water pitcher. They are told to follow him to the guest chamber already prepared for the meal. By contrast, Matthew only tells them to meet “such-and-such man” and follow him, and John omits the episode entirely.
Some of the controversies regarding these parallel passages are given below with comment by various scholars weighing in on these issues:
Was Jesus speaking prophetically or had he made prior arrangements with the owner of the house?
In terms of the arrangements regarding the man who was assigned to show the two apostles the location of the proper house, Geldenhuys feels that Jesus “had probably arranged with him that at a given time during the morning before the Passover he should be with a pitcher of water at a certain near the portal where his disciples would enter the city...”
Marshall concludes that “it is a moot point whether he is simply giving directions in terms of a previously-made secret arrangement with the owner of the room or is acting with supernatural knowledge and authority.”
Craddock is also of two minds regarding this issue: “In view of that [i.e. possible threats on Jesus' life], one could easily read Jesus' instructions to Peter and John as intriguing prearrangements, as shadowy moves in a mystery novel...And there is no reason not to think in terms of Jesus' having made plans for observing the Passover. However, both here and at 19:28-34 Luke probably wants the reader to think in terms of Jesus' prophetic knowledge.”
We get the same sort of dual understanding from Fitzmyer, who says. “Jesus' foreknowledge is evident...But cf. Matt 26:18: 'Go into the city to so-and-so,' which clearly implies prearrangement on the part of Jesus.”
Anderson adds, “It was quite usual for pilgrims to plan ahead for a room for the Passover. But the title the teacher (cf. [Mark] 5:36), correctly rendered as a proper name in RSV, and the somewhat unexpected possessive in the phrase my guest room, suggest that the one involved here is far more than an ordinary pilgrim
Who was the man with the pitcher?
Hendricksen: “According to Zahn this man was John Mark's father, then still alive. See Mark 14:51,52; Acts 12:12.” Grosheide also calls attention to this possibility, but does not necessarily endorse it. Hendricksen goes on to say: “His – as well as my – position is: we do not know. This holds also with respect to the theory that the man carrying the pitcher was John Mark himself. All such embellishments are nothing but speculation.”
My own suspicion is that John Mark was in fact that man the two apostles were sent to meet. In Mark 14:51-52, we run across a small incident not recorded in any of the other gospel accounts of a young follower running away from the authorities while leaving his clothing behind. The main question is not why the other evangelists ignore this event, but why Mark bothered to include it at all. At this point, I admit that I am not entirely alone in suggesting that the obvious solution is that the young man was in fact Mark himself. Also in favor of this embarrassing incident being autobiographical are the following factors:
The upper room location for the Last Supper appears to have been chosen in advance with secrecy at the house of John Mark's mother.
It is probable that it is also the house where the Last Supper was held.with secrecy in mind.
Whoever followed Jesus and the apostles to the Garden had to have done so by trailing them from that house.
When the apostles returned to Jerusalem waiting for the risen Jesus, we know that they were staying in secrecy at the house of John Mark's mother.
Thus, Mark records this highly embarrassing fact regarding his ignoble departure as an act of partial atonement for his actions. And as to what this has to do with the man with the pitcher, if indeed carrying a pitcher was women's work (see next section below), then that might be another autobiographical note Mark includes which also shows him in a rather embarrassing situation. Thus, these two incidents could be said to bracket the whole section starting with the preparations for the Passover right through to Jesus' arrest in the garden.
Was it unusual for a man to be carrying a water pitcher?
Geldenhuys quotes Major as stating “In the East it is women who bear pitchers of water; men carry water-skins.” Thus, it is reasoned, there would be no difficulty at all for the two apostles to identify the man they were looking for. Lane concurs with this opinion completely.
Fitzmyer is not quite as convinced and just says, “That may well have been a task for a woman in first-century Palestine. See Gen 24:11; John 4:7.”
Lastly, there is the more skeptical opinion of Marcus: “This suggestion [regarding only women carrying water jugs] goes back to Lagrange, who lived in Jerusalem at the turn of the twentieth century, and thus based on nothing more than his observation of Palestinian habits in his own day...It is true that in the OT carrying water is sometimes described as women's work (Gen 24:11-12, Exod 2:16, 1 Sam 9:11), but there are also OT passages that speak of men carrying water (e.g. Deut 29:10-11, Josh 9:21-27)...Jeremias suggests that the man in our story is either a domestic servant or a water seller. The theory that the disciples follow the man because they see him engaged in an unusual activity is also belied by the circumstance that it is he who approaches them...”
I have a story from my own life that may or may not have any bearing on this issue. Growing up in Southern California, I knew that one of the last thing a guy wanted to do was to take an umbrella with him even if it was already pouring down rain. If you did so, you would forever be labeled as a sissy. Then I moved to Oregon where it rains, or at least drizzles, most of the year. I was shocked when I started to walk around campus and saw men who looked like they must have been linemen on our football team carrying around huge black umbrellas. And so I joined the crowd.
But then we had four Cambodian men who were on campus as part of an exchange program. They all gleefully went to the Co-op and brought the most brightly colored women's umbrellas they could find and paraded around with them proudly, not realizing that they were standing out like sore thumbs. So how one dresses or carries around may speak volumes in one culture while not even being noticed in another one. Our ignorance regarding customs at Jesus' time requires that we be a little less definite in our pronouncements about things we do not completely understand.
Why was it necessary to employ such secrecy?
Marshall says, “The story itself suggests that Jesus made arrangements to hold the meal secretly, possibly in order to avoid arrest before he had completed what he intended to do; he is presented in the Gospels as being in control of the situation.”
“A sufficient reason for resorting to a means of recognition which would require no exchange of words in the street may be found in the determined search for Jesus and the issuance of a warrant for his arrest implied in John 11:57...It may be assumed that the owner of the house was a man of courage who had determined to shelter the 'heretic' Galilean and his outlawed company of followers.” (Lane)
Ellis suggests another possible reason for the secrecy: “The instructions are intended to avoid detection by the religious authorities. Perhaps this is because Jesus is already under threat of arrest or, less likely, because he is preparing to observe Passover at an illegal time.”
Are there any literary similarities between this event and others in the Bible?
Pao and Schnabel discuss and reject Boismard's suggested possibility that there are purposeful echoes of the incident in I Samuel 10 here since in that earlier episode the prophet Samuel gives Saul a sign that God will be with him. It reads in part “There as you come to the town, you will meet a band of prophets...[one] carrying a skin of wine...”
“The story is similar in pattern to that of the preparations for the entry to Jerusalem ([Lk] 19:22-35), and in both cases it is probable that the historical basis lies in a previous arrangement. (Marshall)