31 Then 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. 32 He said all this quite openly. And Peter took him aside and began to rebuke him. 33 But turning and looking at his disciples, he rebuked Peter and said, ‘Get behind me, Satan! For you are setting your mind not on divine things but on human things.’ Mark 8:31-33
Thanks to Hollywood, we live in a world of superheroes. Whether we know the Iron Man or Black Panther from the Marvel Universe or Superman or Wonder Woman from the DC Universe, we have come to know superheroes. They possess fabulous powers to counteract the fabulous powers of the supervillains. Some have weaknesses and vulnerabilities like kryptonite, but by and large the superheroes can do extraordinary things and by the end of the movies or the season, the superheroes always win in some way and the villains are defeated. We expect greatness and glory from our heroes.
By Superman’s standards, Jesus is a total failure. Then 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. We can see great suffering in Captain America, but the great suffering of Christ? Everyone loves the Justice League but rejected by His own people? Iron Man died, but destroyed Thanos, but be killed and crucified as a felon and failure? The popular expectation of our culture is greatness and glory, and the world cannot see greatness and glory in the passion and crucifixion of Jesus Christ, they only see weakness and humiliation. By the world’s standards, Jesus fails.
Perhaps this is why Jesus proclaim this prediction of his passion openly without riddles but when affirming his Messiahship, he commands silence and speaks only in riddles or parables. What if His priority is not to become the popular identity of political revolutionary or King, which is what they wanted Him to be (and the Superhero we want him to be) but what if His priority is to be One who gave his life for many? Not to be served but to serve? Not to conquer but to be conquered? Not for power but to empower? Not for glory, but to glorify? Jesus speaks openly about his cross, and perhaps our crosses also, but silences any talk about revolution. Messiah? Yes of course, but Crucified Messiah? Far more important.
It is no wonder then that Peter, and us, does what he does. He must put a stop to this nonsense. And Peter took him aside and began to rebuke him. Peter leads Jesus and Peter commands Jesus, these are the same verbs used earlier in this chapter about Jesus leading the disciples and Jesus commanding the crowds. But here, Peter leads and commands Jesus. Peter claims authority and superiority over Jesus. Peter is in charge and Jesus will not choose His own destiny of crucifixion, but Jesus will accept the destiny that Peter chooses for Him. Peter patronizes Jesus.
We do the same. We have the nerve to believe that we have authority over Jesus, like Peter believes. Authority to command what we want: more money for our Church budgets, more people attending worship, more upgrades and expansions to our buildings and campuses. But do we really have authority over Jesus? Peter thought his plan was superior to Jesus’ plan: revolution not crucifixion. Do we know better than Jesus what is a blessing to us: my church not the neighborhood, my cause not the cause of humanity, my glory and power not the empowering of the weak and the glorifying of the humble? But do we really know better than Jesus? We make the same mistake and force our destiny upon Jesus, instead of allowing Him to have the sovereign freedom to choose His own. We patronize Jesus.
What if the words spoken to Peter are the same words spoken to us, when we play God instead being merely human: he rebuked Peter and said, ‘Get behind me, Satan! For you are setting your mind not on divine things but on human things.’ Get behind me. Disciples follow, they do not lead and every time we try to lead, we are corrected and reminded of our place to follow. Satan. Satan means adversary or enemy. Disciples do not need to protect Jesus, Jesus is the one who protects the disciples and every time we try to prevent pain and suffering from Jesus, we really are trying to prevent pain and suffering from ourselves, we are corrected and reminded as Jesus’ enemies of our place as sheep or allies. You are setting your mind not on divine things but on human things. Disciples do not possess or control Jesus, that is the way of sin, the way of God is the way of faithfulness and self-surrender. Every time we clamp down on Jesus we are corrected and reminded of our place as creatures not the Creator. Jesus still corrects us, can we be corrected?
Friends, the ways of our world are the ways of the Superheroes, greatness and glory. But the way of Jesus Christ is the way of the Cross, no power without pain, no glory without humiliation. The disciples needed to be corrected and taught by Jesus, and today we still need to be taught: a crucified Messiah, means crucified Disciples. Jesus is still correcting, Jesus is still teaching, Jesus is still rescuing us. But we must come to terms that that rescue is not like the Avengers, but to truly rescue means crucifixion. When we are tempted to believe that God’s Anointed, and ourselves, can avoid suffering, rejection and death, let us remember and acknowledge that true power comes through pain, true glory comes through humiliation, true life comes through His death for us. Messiah? Yes. But Crucified? Amen.
Leave a Reply