Mark 8:27-30 · Peters’ Confession of Christ
The Secret Man
Mark 8:27-38
Sermon
by Frank Ramirez
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In 1972 two relatively unknown reporters, Bob Woodward and Carl Bernstein of the Washington Post, began to cover what was described by one person as “a third rate burglary.”

On June 17, 1972, five men were arrested for breaking into the Watergate Hotel, where the Democratic National Committee had its headquarters. They were attempting to place a wiretap in the party offices. Even though it was an election year, the story didn’t seem to have much traction, because President Richard Nixon had such a large lead over anyone who might oppose him.

Yet with diligence, hard work, and some luck Woodward and Bernstein discovered that what seemed to be a vague connection with the Committee to Reelect the President, had turned into a breathtaking story of political intrigue, corruption, and obstruction of justice. Two books, All The President’s Men, and The Final Days, resulted from their reporting, as well as the movie All the President’s Men. Ultimately, a president was forced to resign.

It became apparent in their reporting that one of the two reporters had an inside source that came to be named after the title of an infamous pornographic film, not because Woodward or Bernstein chose that name, but because someone else at the Post thought it sounded exciting.

Bob Woodward tended to refer to this mysterious source as MF, which stood for “my friend.” Many people assumed it had to be someone who was part of the Nixon White House, but as it turned out, MF also stands for “Mark Felt,” who at the time of the Watergate burglary was the number two man at the FBI. Felt resented the fact that civil servants had been installed as directors of the FBI after the death of its founder, J. Edgar Hoover. He resented the attitude of many in the Nixon White House that they were above the law, and could control any investigation by the FBI. Felt did not so much reveal information about the criminal acts he’d discovered as he invited Woodward to tell him what the two reporters were discovering, so he could confirm or deny their work.

For decades after the Watergate scandal it was a favorite parlor game for amateur and professional sleuths to name the source. Woodward never responded aye or nay, because he was committed to keeping his source’s identity secret until either that source gave him permission, which didn’t seem likely, or else died. That was the agreement, and Woodward meant to keep it.

Then, decades later, Woodward realized his source, who zealously hid his identity, had begun to sink into a cordial dementia. Even though he didn’t seem to be able to give informed consent, he told his family that he was the deep source. The family allowed him to make that announcement to reporters, and to be featured on the cover of a major magazine even though that source was unable to answer any questions about what he had done, nor could he even remember the people involved in the Watergate Scandal.

Reluctantly Woodward decided to publish a book called The Secret Man. 

Mark Felt was “The Secret Man,” who denied on several occasions that he was that secret source behind Woodward and Bernstein. Felt had planned for his identity to be revealed only after his death, but his dementia took events out of his control.

In the gospel of Mark it was Jesus who sought to be “The Secret Man.” Jesus told people to keep his actions and his words secret — although it didn’t do much good. In the first half of the gospel of Mark, Jesus didn’t want his disciples or others to tell the world about him. They did anyways.

The gospel of Matthew concludes with these instructions by the Savior to his apostles: “Go therefore and make disciples of all nations, baptizing them in the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit, and teaching them to obey everything that I have commanded you (Matthew 28:19-20). 

But in Mark, again and again, he insisted that his work must remain secret, The questions arise: Why wouldn’t Jesus let people talk about what he was doing? Was Jesus hiding something? Why didn’t he want people to tell his story?

Actually, this secrecy has a name. Some refer to it as the Messianic Secret. It has been the subject of many books and articles. I’m going to suggest that the reason Jesus did not want people to talk about him and his ministry was because that information was incomplete.

That’s because as important as his work was as a teacher, healer, wonder worker, leader, story teller, and Messiah was, any knowledge received through these events is incomplete.

That’s because you only know Jesus through the cross. If you don’t include the cross in your calculations, you don’t know Jesus.

Is Jesus a teacher? Yes he is!

Is Jesus a healer? Yes he is!

Is Jesus a wonder worker? Yes he is!

Is Jesus a story teller? Yes he is!

Is Jesus a leader? Yes he is!

Is Jesus a story teller? Yes he is!

Is Jesus the Christ, the Messiah, the Savior of the world?

Yes he is!

Consider the first eight chapters of Mark.

In the very first chapter a demon correctly identifies Jesus of Nazareth as “the Holy One of God (1:24).” Jesus silences the demon, because while Jesus is the Holy One of God, that’s not all he is, and there is no mention of the cross.

Only a few verses later Jesus was again exorcising demons from the ill, and Jesus was commanding them to silence.

The first chapter concludes with Jesus healing a leper, and insisting “…that you say nothing to anyone… (1:44). The leper disobeys Jesus. One can hardly blame him for spreading the news, but this is not news that Jesus wishes to be spread.

Jesus continued his healing and teaching ministry. At one point Jesus told those who were healed “…not to make him known (3:12).”

Jesus stilled the storm, and yet when he spoke in parables he didn’t explain what they meant. Mark’s gospel says that Jesus, “did not speak to them except in parables, but he explained everything in private to his disciples (4:34).”

 The fifth chapter is even more puzzling. Jesus healed a man who was a danger to himself, his family, and the villagers, inhabited as he was by Legion, because there were so many demons within him. When the man was healed he desired to follow Jesus, but Jesus refused to allow this saying instead, “Go home to your friends, and tell them how much the Lord has done for you, and what mercy he has shown you (5:19).” This limited the number of people he could tell about what Jesus shared with him to a small circle.

And later in that same chapter, after raising the daughter of Jairus, the synagogue official, Jesus “…strictly ordered them that no one should know this…” (5:43).

The ministry of the good news about the kingdom continued to build. Multitudes were fed, the sick were healed, and the disciples were sent out on their own missionary trip to drive out demons. It seemed as if the picture was being filled in about who Jesus was.

As the seventh chapter concludes, Jesus healed a deaf person and “…ordered them to tell no one; but the more he ordered them, the more zealously they proclaimed it (7:36).

Should we be surprised? Some have wondered — are we really seeing a bit of reverse psychology? Tell someone to keep something secret, and they’ll blab it everywhere.

The Pharisees confronted Jesus in the eighth chapter and demanded a sign. Here we see that if you are known as a wonder worker, people will want you to work wonders, and nothing more. Perhaps something about the reason for the Messianic Secret is revealed when Jesus, with a deep and heartfelt sigh, said, “Why does this generation ask for a sign? Truly I tell you, no sign will be given to this generation (8:12).”

Once again Jesus fed the multitudes. Afterward, he healed a man who was blind, and Jesus tried to keep this action secret, for as it says in Mark 8:26, “Then he sent him away to his home, saying, ‘Do not even go into the village.’”

Then we get to what matters, when The Secret Man was finally ready to let the cat out of the bag. Jesus asked the disciples what people were saying about him. How were they identifying him? At first they hemmed and hawed, perhaps worried that they would get the wrong answer — Jesus was John the Baptist, or Elijah, or one of the prophets come back from the dead.

But Peter gave the correct answer — Jesus was the Messiah.

What does that mean? In that day there were many different brands of Judaism, just as we have many different denominations today. Some of these groups believed in a Messiah. Some didn’t. And they understood what the Messiah might be in different ways.

There were Pharisees who, despite the legalism displayed by those who challenged Jesus, tended to be the ones who served the ordinary people the most often as leaders in the synagogues.

There were the Saducees, who tended to be richer, well placed politically or religiously, who did not believe in an afterlife and didn’t need a Messiah, because they believed when God made someone rich it was because God favored them over the poor. Why would they want things to change?

There was the Dead Sea Community, sometimes called the Essenes, who had their own holy books on top of the others recognized by their co-religionists, who lived peacefully, though they planned to take up arms once the Holy War broke out to drive out the Romans and restore God’s kingdom through the sword. Their Messiah would not come until those end times!

There were the guerrilla fighters, known as Zealots or Sicarii, who had no intention of waiting for God to bring the kingdom into the world. They were going to do it themselves or die trying.

That’s why, even when Peter got the right answer, asserting that Jesus was the Messiah, he had the wrong understanding of what the Messiah would do. So Jesus “sternly ordered them not to tell anyone about him” (8:30). Not yet. Not until “he began to teach them that the Son of Man must undergo great suffering, and be rejected by the elders, the chief priests, and the scribes, and be killed, and after three days rise again” (8:31). This is what the disciples needed to know. This is what we need to know. After this, there is no reason for the Messianic Secret, because Jesus will be turning his eyes toward Jerusalem. Before the world all will see that he will undergo great suffering, rejection, torment, and death. All will see that he will rise from the dead.”

And not only Jesus. Make no mistake. Jesus told not only his disciples, but the crowd, “If any want to become my followers, let them deny themselves and take up their cross and follow me. For those who want to save their life will lose it, and those who lose their life for my sake, and for the sake of the gospel, will save it (8:34-35).”

This is crucial. What does it mean for us to take up our cross and follow Jesus? For many people it means that we must accept the suffering that is the lot of every human being. We hurt in different ways, physically, emotionally, and spiritually. Some of us suffer from diabetes,  arthritis, or cardiac conditions. Some of us suffer emotionally. For some of us what comes easy to others proves next to impossible. There is so much suffering to which Jesus came to minister, and which we are called to minister to as well.

I think the crucial thing about the cross is that Jesus did not deserve it. Jesus was not guilty of a crime. Jesus was not exposed to public humiliation and a complete loss of face. Jesus was covered with shame for something he had not done, but he accepted it.

Certainly we don’t deserve the physical and emotional suffering we experience either. But I wonder if we only truly pick up our cross and follow Jesus when we stand up for him, stand up for the gospel, and receive shame, false accusations, loss of face, for his name, for the sake of the good news?

When we stand up for refugees, for outsiders, for those who are reviled by the public, and share their shame, we are picking up our cross and following Jesus. When we risk becoming unpopular, losing our friends, and even face arrest, like those who marched for Civil Rights, keeping their faith before them and their Bibles in their hands, then we are picking up our cross and following Jesus.

When we serve the sick and suffering who are reviled by the world, we are picking up our cross and following Jesus.

When we do so, our reward is great. Jesus concluded this chapter by saying that if we prefer the world’s regard, “…what will it profit them to gain the whole world and forfeit their life? Indeed, what can they give in return for their life? Those who are ashamed of me and of my words in this adulterous and sinful generation, of them the Son of Man will also be ashamed when he comes in the glory of his Father with the holy angels (8:36-38).

Finally, in the ninth chapter, we see glory. We see why Jesus accepts the cross and why we do too. Jesus takes three apostles up a high mountain and he is transfigured, transformed, visible as a creature of light, in the presence of Moses and Elijah, and we know him. And while Jesus was the source of the light, we will be revealed as reflecting the light, sharing God’s glory, our crosses transfigured and transformed as well.

Once again:

Is Jesus a teacher? Yes he is!

Is Jesus a healer? Yes he is!

Is Jesus a wonder worker? Yes he is!

Is Jesus a leader? Yes he is!

Is Jesus the Christ, the Messiah, the Savior of the world?

Yes he is!

Was Jesus going to travel to Jerusalem and be brutalized by the political and religious leaders of the city, betrayed, turned over to Roman authorities, and be crucified? Yes he was.

Remember, even though Peter got the secret identity right, he still got it wrong because he wanted Jesus to become the Christ without the cross.

Many of us want our Christianity without the cross. We are not willing to share both suffering and glory. We do not wish to risk the world’s disdain. Let’s stand by Jesus. Let’s stand by the cross. Let’s carry our own cross. Let’s carry out own cross — all the way. All the way to glory.

The secret is out anyway.

Amen.

CSS Publishing Company, Inc., Mark His word: sermons on the Gospel lessons for Proper 16-29, Cycle B, by Frank Ramirez