23 - The Struggle To Understand Who Jesus Is (Mark 8:27-33)
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The Struggle To Understand Who Jesus Is
(Mark 8:27-33)
I. INTRODUCTION
Hello there! I’m Dr. David Wolfe, one of the pastors at Bensenville Bible Church. If this is your first visit, we want you to know that we are a church where pretty much everybody knows your name. We also want you to know that we hold to the Bible as being true. The COVID pandemic has indeed disrupted our worship gatherings, but not dampened our faith. In the midst of disparities, our faith continues to grow strong.
Our study today is in Mark’s Gospel, chap 8:27-33. It is important that we understand Mark’s central message. He places it before us in the opening v1, chap 1: The beginning of the gospel of Jesus, the Messiah, the Son of God”. We don’t want to ignore the words beginning and Gospel. That word ‘beginning’ points to a time at which something starts, referencing the idea of newness.[i] The word Gospel comes from the Gk word evangelos. In classical Gk an evangelos was one who brought a message of triumphant, whether it be victory in war, a great political accomplishment, or stunning personal achievement, to a given community.[ii] So when we use the word Gospel, we’re talking about ‘good news’.
Mark wants us to understand that something new has come, and its ‘good news.’ In a day of depressing headlines and uncertainty all around us I think all of us would like to hear a little good news. As Anne Murray’s song goes,
Just once,
how I'd like to see the headline say
Not much to print today
can't find nothing bad to say.[iii]
As Followers of Jesus, when we use the word “Gospel”, we are referring to the “good news”. The good news is about how we can have peace with God, power for living, and avoidance of a really bad eternal consequence. The good news is that when Jesus died, He took our penalty for sin so that we might have peace with God through faith in Christ alone. What better news could there be than captured in the hymn by Fanny Crosby : “The vilest offender who truly believes, that moment from Jesus a pardon receives?”[iv]. In the verses before us, Mark focuses in on two questions which swirl around Who is Jesus.
Let’s take a moment to ask God to give insight and understanding as to the person of Jesus. “Heavenly Father, thank you for this time you’ve given us to open your Word. Open our eyes and mind so that we might see Jesus clearly. Thank you for the clarity, encouragement and hope Your Word brings. In Jesus’ Name, Amen.”
II. BACTSTORY: THE ULTIMATE QUESTION
Let’s open our Bibles to Mark’s Gospel, chap 8, vs27-33. I have chosen to call our study, The Struggle To Understand Who Jesus Is. It’s the ultimate trauma, not only for the disciples of Jesus, but also for us in the 21st century. The event we are looking at is so significant that it is also captured by Matthew (16:13-19) and by Luke (9:18-20).
The ultimate traumatic question before the disciples and us is the question, Who is Jesus?
- Some answer it as Martin Scorsese did in the movie The Last Temptation of Christ, Jesus was just a man.
- Others answer the question as the Scottish comedian Billy Connolly, “I can’t believe in Christianity, but I think Jesus was a wonderful man. He was a great religious teacher” like Buddha or Gandhi, etc.
- Then there are those who answer somewhat similar to Bono of U2--the secular response to the Christian story always goes like this: he was a great prophet, obviously a very interesting guy. But actually Christ doesn’t allow you that. He doesn’t let you off that hook. Jesus says ‘I am God incarnate’. So what you are left with is either Jesus was who he said he was, or a complete nutcase. I’m not joking here – the idea that the entire course of civilization for over half the globe could have its fate changed and turned upside down by a nutcase, for me that’s farfetched.”[v]
C.S. Lewis points out for us that we all must make our choice as to Jesus. Either He was, and is, the Son of God, or else a madman or something worse. You can shut him up for a fool, you can spit at him and kill him as a demon; or you can fall at his feet and call him Lord and God. But let us not come with any patronizing nonsense about His being a great human teacher. He has not left that open to us. He did not intend to.[vi]
Who is Jesus? That is the question we all must answer. If we answer wrongly, there will be no peace with God and we will experience the horror of His anger, which cumulates in the pits of Hell alongside Satan and his demonic angels.
III. THE STRUGGLE TO BELIEVE
Let’s take a closer look at vs27-33. In these verses the disciples are caught in a traumatic emotional roller coaster. Peter seems to take the brunt of the drama, but all the disciples were in for the ride. In v29 Peter declares boldly to Jesus’, You are the Messiah, the Son of the Living God (Matt 16:19), but in v33 he is soundly rebuked by Jesus, Get behind Me, Satan, you are not setting your mind on God’s interests, but man’s. One moment Peter is on the mountain top, the next moment he is in the pits.
We pick up the story in v27, Jesus went out, along with His disciples, to the villages of Caesarea Philippi; and on the way He questioned His disciples, saying to them, “Who do people say that I am?” Jesus is now moving out of Jewish territory, heading north. We can safely assume that He is taking His disciples ultimately to what we know as the Mt of Transfiguration in chap 9
A. Two Questions
Somewhere around Caesarea Philippi Jesus sat down with His disciples and asked them two questions:
1. First, Who do people say that I am?
The disciples responded in v28.
- Some people think you are John the Baptist. Now remember, Herod had John the Baptist killed, and the gossip of the day was that Jesus was John the Baptist reincarnated.
- The disciples continued: Some people think you are Elijah; and still others think you are a resurrected prophet of the Old Testament, or at least on the level of the Old Testament prophets.
What is surprising is, that in capturing the community scuttlebutt, nothing was mentioned about Jesus possibly being the Messiah, especially since the demons recognized Him and openly proclaimed it (1:24; 3:11, 5:7).[vii]
2. Second Question, Who do you say that I am?
V29, Jesus changed the question and ask His disciples directly, But who do you say that I am?
My imagination tells me that they didn’t answer as quickly as they probably did with the first question. There was a dead moment, then Peter blurts out, You are the Christ, ie., You are the Messiah! It was a great response. And in Matthews account Jesus gives Peter tremendous affirmation for his answer:
17 “Blessed are you, Simon Barjona, because flesh and blood did not reveal this to you, but My Father who is in heaven. 18“I also say to you that you are Peter, and upon this rock I will build My church; and the gates of Hades will not overpower it. 19“I will give you the keys of the kingdom of heaven; and whatever you bind on earth shall have been bound in heaven, and whatever you loose on earth shall have been loosed in heaven.” (Matt 16:17–19 (NASB95))
3. Two things are noteworthy here.
a. First, notice Peter did not say, You are Jesus Christ, as if Jesus had a first and middle name such as I do., or even as a first and last name.
This is important for us to understand. As Kent Hughs points out for us, “Jesus” is God’s Son’s name, while “Christ” is His title. “Christ” is the Gk rendering of the Old Testament title “Messiah”, meaning “Anointed One.” So Peter identifies Jesus as the foretold Messiah, the coming Anointed One.[viii]
b. Second, notice that Peter did not come up with this on his own.
Jesus tells him straight up, flesh and blood did not reveal this to you, but My Father who is in heaven (Matt 16:17). Peter and the disciples could not take any credit for this great theological insight. As clearly stated in the other gospels, they believed only because the Father had drawn them (John 6:44), that Jesus had revealed Himself to them (Matt. 11:27), and that Holy Spirit had opened their eyes to the truth (1 Cor. 2:10–14; 2 Cor. 3:15–18).[ix] In other words, unless God initiated the insight, there was no insight.
2. In vs30-31 Jesus responds to Peter’s confession.
a. First, v30, Jesus warned them, that would be the 12 disciples, to tell no one about Him. He didn’t say to them, ‘well guys, keep a lid on it’. The Gk word warned (epitimao) is very strong. It carries the idea of strong admonishment, even to the point of threatening them.[x] As will be seen shortly, the reason behind the admonition is that Peter and disciple team didn’t grasp what had just been proclaimed.
They did not have a clear picture of the work of the Messiah. They were still caught up with a military Messiah. So it would have been premature for them to start broadcasting ‘good news’ when they did not fully understand what they were talking about. Besides that, the foundation of the ‘good news’ had not yet happened.
b. And second, V31, Jesus, following Peter’s confession, begins fleshing out for them the basis of His gospel—He began to teach them that the Son of Man must suffer many things and be rejected by the elders and the chief priests and the scribes, and be killed, and after three days rise again.
Make a note of this, “He began to teach them that the Son of Man must suffer”. Up until now Jesus had never talked to them about suffering. It is not until Peter’s confession that He is the Christ, ie., Messiah, that Jesus begins to tell them about His upcoming suffering, rejection, and death. He is not trying to get them to understand that He is the Messiah; He is trying to get them to understand what kind of Messiah He is.
Edmond Hiebert points out for us that all their lives the disciples had thought of Messiah in terms of irresistible conquest. Now they are being presented with an idea that staggered them mentally, emotionally, and most of all spiritually.[xi] . They were now being told clearly the foundational pillars of the Gospel, the impending reality of Isaiah 53. This was all new to them, throwing them a Messiah curveball. It’s a huge moment.
In V32a, Mark tells us that Jesus was stating the matter plainly. That is, Jesus hid nothing from them. He tells them straight out, v31, the Son of Man must suffer, be rejected, and die. Don’t miss how staggering those words were to them, and even to us. Jesus smashed all of their Messiah concepts. Before He triumphs, He must suffer to the point of death. Don’t gloss over those words. They are filled with intentionality. To take back what is His, Jesus must be subjected to suffering and must be killed, (now get this) . . . He must suffer and be killed
- because it was the Father’s will (John 3:16; Rom. 8:32),
- because of His own promise (Ps. 40:7),
- because it was prophesied (Isa. 53), and
- because the law demanded it—for the wages of sin is death (Rom 3:23, Gen. 2:17; Rom. 5:12–21; 2 Cor. 5:21).[xii]
But notice the last phrase of v31, after three days rise again. The idea of suffering and death created such trauma, the disciples missed the final pillar of the Gospel of Jesus Christ, His resurrection. This is a huge moment. The shock of Jesus telling them straight out that He would die shattered their Messianic hopes. The pillar of Messianic thought of the day was pulled right out from under them.
B. Peter’s Rebuke
That brings us to vs32-33, 32. . . So Peter took Him aside and began to rebuke Him. Appalled by Jesus’ comments, Peter confronts Jesus to the point of rebuking Him. The language here is rough. You can feel the tension. As Kent Hughs states it, it’s not as if Peter pulled Jesus aside, put his arm around Him and whispered in His ear, “I believe you are the Messiah, but you’ve got your information all wrong! You’ve got to stop this or you’ll lose all your credibility.”[xiii]
The word rebuke is harsh and commanding. It’s the same word used when Jesus rebuked the demons (1:25; 9:25). Peter is totally overwhelmed by Jesus’ words of suffering, rejecting, and death. So he thinks he needs to do some serious theological correcting. 33But Jesus, turning around and seeing His disciples (meaning they were all thinking pretty much the same stuff as Peter), Jesus rebuked Peter back with these powerful words, “Get behind Me, Satan; for you are not setting your mind on God’s interests, but man’s.” ‘Like a cat on a mouse’ Jesus turns on Peter. His rebuke was pointed. There was steel in His voice. His eyes like fire. The words cut into Peter’s soul—Get behind Me, Satan; for you are not setting your mind on God’s interests, but man’s.
In Matthew’s account Jesus’ closing words were powerfully pointed, You are a stumbling block to Me (Matt 16:23). In a moment of emotional bungling, Peter grabbed for authority that was not his to have. Jesus comes back with an authority of steel, Get behind Me Satan!!! John MacArthur notes, If Peter had been shocked by Jesus’ earlier words about Himself regarding His coming suffering, rejection, and death, he must have been utterly shaken by what Jesus said to him.[xiv] You know what is scary, to quote Jesus, in that moment Peter had become the very voice of Satan.[xv]
IV. TRUTHS THAT SHAPE OUR LIVES
Let’s pause here and reflect on what Mark captured for us. What he captures in these verses is meant to help us clarify our understanding of Jesus’ identity, and His purpose in coming. You might be thinking to yourself that although this was an interesting story and somewhat fascinating, what in the world does this have to do with you and me? The reality is, it has everything to do with you and me. Let me give us 3 thoughts to chew on.
A. First, it is paramount that we have a clear understanding of what Mark calls in chap 1, v1, the beginning of the gospel of Jesus Christ, the Son of God.
That’s the point of v30, after confessing Jesus as the Messiah, He tells them to tell no one. We live in a time and a culture in which we are surrounded with people just like the disciples in Mark 8 . . . fascinated by Jesus as a great moral teacher, and captivated by the things said of Him. Yet, they do not know Him, nor do they see Him clearly. Like the disciples and the crowds in the Gospels, many of us today have created our own picture of Jesus. As a result, we fail to see that we cannot inherit the promises of Jesus without trusting in His full work of suffering, death on the cross, and His resurrection.
That’s the backdrop to what Paul says in Philippians 3:8–11 (NASB95) He wanted to see Jesus clearly, 8I count all things to be loss in view of the surpassing value of knowing Christ Jesus my Lord, for whom I have suffered the loss of all things, and count them but rubbish so that I may gain Christ, 9and may be found in Him, not having a righteousness of my own derived from the Law, but that which is through faith in Christ, the righteousness which comes from God on the basis of faith, 10that I may know Him and the power of His resurrection and the fellowship of His sufferings, being conformed to His death; 11in order that I may attain to the resurrection from the dead.
Instead of trusting in Jesus as our Messiah, we trust in thousands of personal experiences. Instead of trusting wholly and completely in the atoning, finished work of Jesus on the cross, we see Him from afar, acknowledging the great things He has done, yet never personally trusting in His death as the all sufficient means by which we must be saved. The disciples saw Jesus, but they did not see Him clearly; so we see Jesus, but we do not see Him clearly either.[xvi]
There is no doubt that Peter’s rebuke was presumptuous. It certainly revealed that Peter had the wrong idea of what Jesus’ Messiahship was/is, and equally showed that he had wrong ideas of his own importance and understanding. He had overstepped the line between disciple and compatriot. He had to be shown that while he was beginning to have a glimmer of understanding (‘you are the Messiah’) it was not much more than that. As the Blind Man who lived in Bethsaida, he still ‘saw men as trees walking’ (Mark 8:24).
If we are ever to grasp the gospel of Jesus Christ, we have to start at the beginning, grasping the truth of every chapter and verse in order to answer life’s ultimate question: Who do we say Jesus is? Without grappling with the beginning there is no meaningful answer.
B. Second, it is possible to think we have great insight on truth, only to be a voice of Satan.
Vs32-33 Peter became rather suddenly the unwitting voice of demonic thought. Rodney Cooper points out for us that while Peter was not “possessed” by Satan, he was used as an instrument of Satan, even though he seemly had Jesus’ best interests in mind.[xvii]
Listen carefully. Peter’s words were dangerous in the extreme. They went against the whole purposes of God, and had to be shown for what they were. Jesus had to be stern with him. God’s ways are not man’s ways and Peter, and the disciples, and us must not presume to know the mind of God until we fully absorbed the words of Jesus. His words were the truth and the disciple team (including us) must never forget it. What Jesus was saying in a most uncompromising fashion was that Peter had become a voice of Satan through a combination of self-conceit and worldly wisdom. He must ‘get behind Him’.
The words carry an important lesson for us. How easily we can become a sucker of Satan. Great privilege is dangerous.
Nothing is more important for us who seek to know God than to refuse to allow ourselves to be influenced by our own excessive ideas as to the ways of God. We must beware, lest after we have preached to others we ourselves become disapproved (1 Corinthians 9:27). There is only one safeguard against this. And that is to immerse ourselves thoroughly into the whole counsel of God’s Word.
C. Third, If we do not see Jesus clearly, we do not see Jesus at all
The failure of the disciples is that they did not see Jesus clearly. As a result, they struggled with what it meant to trust and follow Jesus. Could it be that some of you listening, like the disciples, have created your own picture of Jesus, that although nice, does not really pursue after God. If your Jesus is an Aladdin’s Genie whom you use to make you feel good, then your heart is in bondage to self and sin, not subject to Jesus as Lord. You actually are following the Jesus Satan tried to establish, not the Jesus sent by the Father. The Jesus sent by the Father was delivered up on account of our sins and was raised so that we could be right with God (Rom. 4:25). Jesus said, I have come that you might have life. How sad it would be to embrace a wrong picture of Jesus in life, and die and spend eternity separated from Him!
I beg you, on Jesus’ behalf, trust His death on the cross alone as the payment for your sins and submit to Him as the Lord of your life. Trust His death and embrace His life. Make sure that you not only see Jesus, but that you see him clearly. And that my friends is absolutely true …
Let’s close in prayer …
Father, we ask that You open our eyes as You opened the eyes of Peter, not only to see our Lord Jesus as King among men, ruler of the events of history, director of all the affairs of life, calmer of the storms and healer of the hurts of life; but also that You will help us begin to understand that He Himself is in the hurts, in the disappointments, in the disasters, that He is leading us on, setting us free from our shackles--"self-sufficiency" and "self-reliance", desire to be exalted, to be made much of -- that Jesus wants to set us free. Open our eyes that we might see Him as He is. We pray that you will continue to do this, in His name, Amen.
Well, as you go this week, remember . . . Followers of Jesus without the cross have no hope, but a shabby, slimy substitute. The Follower of Jesus is consumed in wanting to see Jesus clearly. So I close with this question: “Do you see Jesus clearly?”
And Don’t forget … In the midst of the swirling difficulties, God’s is in the swirl with you. Looking forward to meeting up with you again at next week’s posting.
[i] https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/beginning
[ii] Cf. J. Hampton Keathley, What is the Gospel? https://bible.org/article/what-gospel
[iii] Cf., Anne Murry, A Little Good News
[iv] Fanny Crosby, To God Be The Glory
[v] Who Is Jesus? (From Alpha Course)? https://cslewisthoughts.wordpress.com/2017/04/ 24/ who-is-jesus-from-alpha-course-script/
[vi] C.S. Lewis, https://www.azquotes.com/quote/477153
[vii] Walter W. Wessel, “Mark,” in The Expositor’s Bible Commentary: Matthew, Mark, Luke, ed. Frank E. Gaebelein, vol. 8 (Grand Rapids, MI: Zondervan Publishing House, 1984), 693.
[viii] R. Kent Hughes, Mark: Jesus, Servant and Savior, vol. 1, Preaching the Word (Westchester, IL: Crossway Books, 1989), 200.
[ix] John MacArthur, Mark 1–8, MacArthur New Testament Commentary (Chicago, IL: Moody Publishers, 2015), 416–417.
[x] https://www.preceptaustin.org/mark-8-commentary#8:30
[xi] Ibid. 1 Corinthians 2:10 tells us that this insight came through the Holy Spirit who had opened their eyes to this great truth.
[xii] William Hendriksen and Simon J. Kistemaker, Exposition of the Gospel According to Mark, vol. 10, New Testament Commentary (Grand Rapids: Baker Book House, 1953–2001), 327.
[xiii] R. Kent Hughes, Mark: Jesus, Servant and Savior, vol. 1, Preaching the Word (Westchester, IL: Crossway Books, 1989), 201.
[xiv] John MacArthur, Mark 1–8, MacArthur New Testament Commentary (Chicago, IL: Moody Publishers, 2015), 420.
[xv] Luke 4:13 (NASB95) 13When the devil had finished every temptation, he left Him until an opportune time.
[xvi] J. Josh Smith, Seeing Jesus clearly: A Sermon From Mark 8:22-23, Southwestern Journal of Theology, Vol 53, Spring 2011, https://preachingsource.com/journal/seeing-jesus-clearly-a-sermon-from-mark-8-22-33/
[xvii] Rodney L. Cooper, Mark, vol. 2, Holman New Testament Commentary (Nashville, TN: Broadman & Holman Publishers, 2000), 136.
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