Mark
puts the proclamation of Messiahship in context with suffering, rejection,
death, and resurrection. The person and work of Christ are bound together. This
rejection and suffering of Christ means that a faith must able to pass scrutiny
of trial. This refers to the trials associated with Jesus’ arrest, especially
by the Sanhedrin. Peter's rebuke of the Lord shows how imperfect his
understanding of the role and the work of the Messiah was. We, like Peter,
welcome a Messiah that gives us what we want. Not so the one who gives us the
opposite of what we want. The temptation to reject the cross is one that Jesus
had faced since the wilderness trials. Any invitation for Jesus to take a path
other than the way of the cross ultimately comes from Satan. This is the harshest
rebuke Jesus ever leveled against anyone.
Beautifully,
Mark places the warning of the cost of discipleship with the warning of Jesus'
death and resurrection after calling out Peter. The desire to avoid suffering
may be the greatest danger to our discipleship. If we try to save our lives, if
we look to hoard our lives we cannot help but to lose them. Each day that is
past is gone and nothing can get it back. Even a day of exquisite pleasure and
selfish delight are lost and cannot be kept. Nothing prevents the march of time
toward death. The one who dies to self has already moved beyond the point of
having anything to lose and all his life has waits for him in Heaven.
Christianity is the hardest of all faiths. All other faith systems try to keep
life here and perhaps a good life to come. Such an approach is ultimately
false. The exchange of which Jesus speaks is a “great deal”. The sands of time
are going; they are fleeting and nothing can stop them. Why not trade those
fleeting moments for eternal value and reward?
Jesus concludes this teaching by linking the Son of Man with the Messiah. He now demands and teaches that the only way
to have the lasting life is an open loyalty to His person. Jesus is the great
stumbling block for all history because He allows nothing other than absolute
loyalty to Him on every occasion, everywhere and at all times.
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