In Mark 10:18, Jesus responds to a man who has just called Him “Good Teacher” by saying, “And Jesus said to him, ‘Why do you call Me good? No one is good except God alone.’”
At first glance, this question may seem puzzling. Why would Jesus challenge someone for calling Him “good”? Was He denying His own goodness or divinity? A closer look reveals that Jesus’ question is deeply theological and intentionally provocative, it forces the man, and by extension all readers, to think carefully about who Jesus truly is and what “goodness” really means.
Setting the Scene: The Rich Young Ruler
The encounter occurs as a man runs up to Jesus, kneels before Him, and asks, “Good Teacher, what shall I do to inherit eternal life?” (Mark 10:17). His question seems sincere, but his approach already reveals a misunderstanding. He assumes eternal life can be earned through doing, through moral effort or religious performance.
Jesus’ response, “Why do you call Me good?” is not a denial of His own goodness, but a probing question that exposes the man’s shallow understanding of both goodness and God.
“No One Is Good Except God Alone”
When Jesus says, “No one is good except God alone,” He affirms a foundational truth of Scripture: true goodness belongs to God by nature. Human beings, by contrast, fall short of divine perfection. The psalmist writes, “There is no one who does good, not even one” (Psalm 14:3).
Jesus’ words echo this reality. If only God is truly good, then calling Jesus “good” carries profound implications. Either the man is using “good” in a casual, human sense, or he is unknowingly acknowledging Jesus’ divine identity. Jesus challenges him to consider which it is.
Jesus’ Question as a Revelation of Identity
Far from rejecting the title “good,” Jesus uses it to draw attention to His divine nature. Throughout the Gospel of Mark, Jesus reveals His authority in ways only God possesses, He forgives sins (Mark 2:5–7), commands the wind and sea (Mark 4:39–41), and gives life (Mark 5:41–42). By asking, “Why do you call Me good?” Jesus leads the man to recognize that if He truly is good in the absolute sense, then He must be more than a mere teacher, He must be God incarnate.
In this way, the question invites reflection: Do you understand who I am? It presses the listener to move beyond polite titles toward genuine recognition of Jesus’ divine goodness.
The Moral Challenge
Jesus’ question also exposes the man’s misplaced confidence in his own goodness. When Jesus recites the commandments, the man claims, “Teacher, I have kept all these things from my youth up” (Mark 10:20). Yet Jesus’ next instruction, “Go and sell all you possess and give to the poor… and come, follow Me” (Mark 10:21), reveals the man’s heart. His unwillingness to part with his wealth shows that he falls short of the very goodness he assumed he had.
Thus, Jesus’ question not only highlights divine goodness but also humbles human pride. It teaches that moral achievement cannot earn salvation; only a relationship with the truly Good One, God Himself in Christ, can bring eternal life.
Conclusion: Recognizing the Truly Good One
When Jesus asks, “Why do you call Me good?” He is not denying His goodness but directing attention to its source. True goodness flows from God alone, and Jesus, being one with the Father, fully embodies that goodness.
The question becomes an invitation: to see beyond moral labels, to confront our own insufficiency, and to recognize Jesus not merely as a good teacher, but as the Good Shepherd (John 10:11), the Son of God who alone can grant eternal life.
In calling Jesus “good,” the man unknowingly spoke the truth. The tragedy is that he did not stay long enough to understand what that goodness really meant.





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