Mark 8:27-30 · Peters’ Confession of Christ
Preconceived Ideas
Mark 8:27-38
Sermon
by Brett Blair
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Could you believe what the news reported this week? [Pause here] You ask, what news report are you talking about preacher: The one that said $87 billion dollars is an admission of the presidents failed policy in Iraq, or the one that said $87 billion shows the presidents serious resolve in finishing what he started in Iraq? Or the report that said the United Nations is now being asked to come in and clean up our mess, or the one that said the United Nations is being asked to participate because the world should be involved in this process; we are trying not to “Go it alone.”

How the news is reported depends not so much on the events as it does the preconceived ideas of the reporter. Rev. Thomas Tyndale came to understand this firsthand when he received a phone call from Attica State Prison in upper New York. A riot had taken place and rebelling prisoners were now in control of Cell Block D taking a number of guards hostage. Rev. Tyndale was requested to sit on a Board designed to start bargaining negotiations between the prisoners and the authorities, negotiations quickly broke down, the result is history. Police stormed the prison and when the smoke cleared 41 dead bodies, both guards and prisoners, lay scattered across the courtyard in the worst prison disaster in the history of the United States. In his book on this tragic incident Tyndale discusses reasons why negotiations broke down: “Everyone came with their own preconceived idea about the situation, all of which proved wrong,” wrote the minister. “No one fully understood the great gulf which existed between the guards and the prisoners.”

Wrong preconceived ideas. That pretty well sums up the situation as Jesus came on the scene as Messiah. Everyone had his own idea just who the Messiah was and how he would bring about this Kingdom. The problem is that no one really understood the real Jesus.

But hasn’t this always been a perennial problem. In the parable of the prodigal son the real tragedy of the story was not the open rebellion of’ the younger son or the jealous envy of the elder brother. The real tragedy was that neither one of them really understood the father. This was certainly one of the problems of the one talent man in the parable of the talents. He went to the master and said: “I knew you were a hard man reaping where you did not sow.” He just didn’t understand the master.

As it was then so it is now. So few understood Jesus; so few understand him today. Why is this? The answer? Wrong preconceived ideas.

I

First, take a look with me at the preconceived ideas of the first century Jew. As Jesus walks to Caesarea Philippi with his disciples he is curious. What has his time with the disciples brought about in their understanding of who he is? He asks them, Who do the people say I am?” Some immediately responded to Jesus’ question by saying: “Some say you are John the Baptist.” Now, why would they say that? Well, it was John the Baptist, you recall, who preached a message of repentance and preparing the way for the coming of the Messiah. It was John who formed a group of disciples around him, several of whom were now the disciples of Jesus. Therefore, the messages of both John and Jesus were similar; that is, they were both urging people to change direction in life before it was too late.

But there was more to it than that. For King Herod Antipas had had John killed. Herod Antipas was the son of Herod the Great, the man who had figured so prominently in the birth of Jesus. It was now publicly known that Herod Antipas was living with his brother Phillip’s wife. When John had the courage to rebuke him for it, he paid with his head. Now, it was an ancient Jewish custom that those great men on earth who had met a violent death possessed great powers in the spirit world. Some, therefore, believed that Jesus was literally John the Baptist, come back to life, or sent back from heaven. In fact King Herod himself believed this and trembled at the thought. In Mark 6:16 it reads: “ This man is John the Baptist, whom I beheaded, and he has been raised from the dead.” Herod had heard all of these miraculous stories of Jesus and he just knew it was John the Baptist come back from the grave with supernatural powers to torment his guilty conscience. It was easy to understand, then, why many would think Jesus to be John the Baptist.

But they further said: “Some say you are Elijah.” Now, how did they get that kind of idea? The Jews believed that before the Messiah came there would be a time of terrible tribulation. There would be a Messianic travail. Every conceivable terror would burst upon the world. Every standard of honesty and decency would be torn out; the world would become physical and moral chaos.

Into this chaos would come Elijah as the forerunner of the Messiah? He was to bring order into chaos, heal the breaches, and prepare the way for the coming of Messiah. When Elijah came the Messiah would not be far off.

One day we see that the television is on but there is no one in the room listening to it. The announcer is talking about a golf tournament that is in process. He says: Smith has to make this putt to win the championship. There will be no tomorrow." And just as he says, "There will be no tomorrow," in walks Lucy. She immediately goes into a panic and starts running around and yelling to the other children: "The world is coming to an end. They just announced it on television." Her panic quickly spreads as we see all the peanuts kids as they go wildly screaming about. Finally in the last square we see all of the children huddled on top of Snoopy's doghouse waiting for the end of the world. And Charlie Brown finally speaks up with a puzzled voice: I thought that Elijah was supposed to come back first."

Well, Charlie Brown knew his Bible. Elijah was suppose to come back before the end time. When the disciples told Jesus that some people thought he was Elijah, they were expressing a common thought among the people that the end was very near. The Jews had held fast to this belief for over 900 years. Little wonder then that when Jesus was on the cross and he spoke the words “Eli Eli,” which actually means “My God, My God,” that some mistook him to be calling on Elijah. In Mark 13:35 it reads: “Behold, he is calling Elijah. Let us see whether Elijah will save him.” It is easy to see why many thought Jesus was the great Elijah.

II

But not only did the first century Jews have preconceived ideas about the Messiah, the twenty-first century Christian also has preconceived ideas about the identity of the Messiah. You might ask, how can this be? For we know Jesus and his teachings. We sit on this side of the resurrection with 2000 years of church history behind us. But consider with me three common pictures of Jesus.

First, some people today look upon Christ as the hero type. They think that Jesus came to rescue them from all of the problems and tough decisions that the world throws at us. This theory was seen in Jesus Christ Superstar.

“So your the Christ the great Jesus Christ;
prove to me that you’re no fool,
walk across my swimming pool.

So you’re the Christ the great Jesus Christ;
prove to me that your divine;
change my water into wine.

Feed my household with this bread,
you can do it on your head,

Or has something gone wrong,
why do you take so long.

Come on King of the Jews, I only ask of you what I’d ask any Superstar.
What is it that you’ve got that put you where you are?

I’m waiting I’m a captive fan,
I’m dying to be shown that your not just a man.”

It’s the hero concept of Jesus. This is the Benny Hinn picture of Jesus: If you have faith in Jesus he will heal you and prosper you. It is the God of the prosperity/faith movement. And whatever can be said of it, it’s not a new concept. When Jesus was in the Wilderness it was Satan who tempted him by saying: “Jump off this cliff.” Come on, be a hero Jesus. People love a good stunt; pull a miracle out of your bag to leave the people in awe. No, it’s not a new idea. But Jesus rejected it then as he does now.

Secondly, others say that the Messiah is a judge. They believe that Jesus came into the world as condemner and convictor. Well, this is certainly not a new idea either. It was the one talent man in the parables of the talents who went to the master and said: “I knew you were a hard man reaping where you did not sow.” Some of us still talk that way today.

Evangelism has been given a bad name because for years the model has been to hold a fiery hell in front of peoples face. For those of you who are parents, how would you feel if you knew that the only reason your children came to you was out of fear. I think that you would be hurt. In the same way I cannot help but feel that it hurts our heavenly father if we project only that kind of an image of him. I’m not saying that a person can’t be scared into salvation. Maybe he can. But if the primary reason we serve God is so we can avoid hell then it seems to me that we have missed the point somewhere along the line. Calvary wasn’t meant to melt God’s heart brothers, it was meant to melt our heart.

A minister from Nebraska said that when he was a young boy he was in a wreck. His father quickly pulled him from the flames but in the process his Father burned his hands. As he grew to adulthood he sometimes wondered if his father really loved him, then all he would do is look at father’s his hands and he knew the answer. Do you wonder if God really loves you? Then look at the nail prints in the hands of Jesus and you’ll know the answer. “For Christ came into the world, not to condemn the world, but so that the world through him might be saved.”

Third, there are others who see Jesus as the great spoiler. These people think Jesus taught a long list of “thou shall nots.” Jesus cramps their life style. And, unfortunately, these people have plenty of examples in the church to point to, to prove that they are right. These are lifeless, colorless Christians who never smile, and seem as if they have no good news to share. They feel that it is wrong to be yourself, wrong to be free, wrong to enjoy beauty. Jesus the pale anemic Galilean is their view of our Savior and they fail to see the new life and abundant living of which Jesus spoke. They fail to see that ours is a liberating Christ. They fail to see in Jesus' teaching a dynamic man who challenged, pushed, loved, enjoyed, laughed, cried. It's all there but he's not seen this way because we have preconceived ideas about him and these ideas cloud our reading, cloud our understanding until we are left with a static Jesus, listless, religious, and devoid of life.

III

Jesus asked the question: “Who do you say that I am?” Answering this question correctly will move you away from the wrong misconceptions of Jesus. Who do you say I am? When you are asked in Sunday school, or by your children, "who is Jesus?" do you say what others say about him? We do that sometimes. We say what parents say, what friends, professors, authors, preachers say. But the question is, “Who do you say that I am?”

Finally impetuous Simon Peter shouted out “thou art the Christ the Son of the living God.” Correct! But then Jesus began telling exactly bow he would be Messiah. He would be Messiah by suffering, by being rejected, and finally by being killed. It was at this point that Simon Peter pulled Jesus aside and said: “Master, don’t talk like that. It’s not going to be that way.” Maybe he was naive enough to really believe that. Maybe he felt that all this martyr talk would hurt their image. This was not the king of political and military talk that the people wanted. Peter knew that Jesus was Messiah but his idea of Messiah and Jesus’ idea of Messiah didn’t match up. In a word, Peter’s concept of the Messiah did not include a cross.

What is our concept of the Messiah and what does discipleship, being in his service mean to us. Does it include suffering, self-giving, self-denying? Losing ourself in order that we might find ourself? Total commitment. A cross? In the end we must all answer this question for ourselves. For the question is one that we must all: Who do you say that I am?

ChristianGlobe Publishing, ChristianGlobe Sermons, by Brett Blair