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Summary: Each of us is carving an inscription for our lives through the choices we make every day. So, what will be on your gravestone? Perhaps a cross, carrying a message of loving sacrifice. |
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Summary: Jesus reveals his identity as the Son of Man to the disciples, and Peter is incredulous. Jesus continues to invite Peter to discipleship, even as Peter rebukes his teacher for suggesting that the anointed of God will be rejected and killed. Discipleship with Jesus is costly and does not follow worldly conventions. |
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Summary: Everybody has opinions. Disciples are known by their commitments. |
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Summary: When Jesus asked, “But who do you say that I am?” Peter gave the right answer, but in the wrong context. Peter, like many today, believed that Jesus was the Messiah but did not understand Jesus’ messianic purpose. |
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Summary: As it was in the time of Mark’s gospel, so it is now: People have many different opinions about who Jesus was, what he stood for, and what his life means today. As followers of Jesus, even today, we are the “you” in “But who do you say that I am?” We see, and proclaim, a different “Jesus” from the one seen by other religions, by popular culture and by the “spiritual, not religious.” |
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Summary: These verses are the climax of Mark’s gospel. What has come before in the gospel finds completion in Peter’s claim that Jesus is the Messiah. Jesus’ rebuke of Peter and his foreshadowing of the Cross show the direction that this completion will take in the immediate future — and in the coming centuries. Here Jesus responds to earlier requests for a sign with the sign of the Cross. |
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Summary: Egosurfing is natural, and because it is slightly voyeuristic, it feels a tiny bit naughty and fun. Even Jesus searched for himself on social media — the media being a group of students, popularly known as his disciples. So, he asked them, “Who do people say that I am?” But then Jesus asked them a more personal question — one that leads us to ask: “Who are we?”
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Summary: When Jesus began to describe the suffering that soon awaited him, Peter rebuked him. But Jesus in turn rebuked Peter, telling him that his mind was not on divine things but on human things. That can easily be true of us as well. We can get so caught up in our own desires and wishes, our own agendas for ourselves and our loved ones that we may not spend much time focusing on divine things, especially the will of God.
The truth is that it is only as we seek the will of God in all things that we discover God’s plan for us, which in turn brings great joy and satisfaction.
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Summary: Jesus understood our need for instruction. He offers himself as a model and teacher. But are we willing to follow someone who tells us we must “lose our life”? |
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Summary: We expect to have things our way; we expect to have things go our way ... and we don’t like it when they don’t. Peter learned an important lesson from Jesus about this — and we can (and should) learn the same lesson for the same reason: God is God and we aren’t. |
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Summary: The cross is not a one-dimensional instrument of torture and death. Instead, it has at least four sides to it: window, mirror, solution and summons. |
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Summary: On the way to the cross, Jesus helps his disciples understand that death and dying are part of life. We must incorporate this reality into our lives in order to be fully faithful to our calling. |
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Summary: On the way to the cross, Jesus helps his disciples understand that death and dying are part of life. We must incorporate this reality into our lives in order to be fully faithful to our calling. |
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Summary: The cross of discipleship is not forced on us, but is one we choose to carry. And when we do choose it, others benefit. |
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Summary: Jesus pushed Peter aside with his words "Get behind me, Satan." If Jesus can accuse Peter of such infidelity, how many people in our lives are attacking us in the guise of friendship and concern? If we were to identify five people who have tried to lead us down the wrong path of life, who might they be? What might they look like? It could be surprising. |
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There are 15 sermons in your results. |
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