Daily Devotion | November 13, 2020

Who Do You Say?

by Pr. Laurie Neill

In Mark 8:27-29, we come across Jesus asking his friends what the talk on the street is about his identity. In a sense, “What are people saying about me around the water cooler?” His friends offer up answers that all make sense given the time and culture of the question: John the Baptist; Elijah; a prophet. But it is interesting to note that Jesus doesn’t really seem too interested in what others are saying about him. Why bother asking? He doesn’t seem to agree or disagree with their speculations, but instead just asks another question:

“But who do you say that I am?”

Have you ever been in class and the teacher asks a question and you hesitate because you really don’t want to get the answer wrong? I wonder if that’s how the disciples felt. I wonder if they paused, sensing the weight of the question, maybe kicking the dirt or avoiding eye contact with Jesus.

Peter, the outspoken spontaneous one, chimes in, “You are the Messiah.” Yeah, he’s THAT kid in the class, always trying to impress. And he does. Jesus doesn’t ignore his response but instead praises it.

What I like—but also find challenging—about this little exchange is that Jesus could care less what the crowds say, but he is very interested in what we each say personally. In the world, there are all kinds of responses to who Jesus was and what he did and if it meant anything. But what everyone else thinks doesn’t matter. What you think does.

It is probably one of the most important questions any of us will ever answer and we may spend our whole lives trying to figure it out. But it is important enough to spend a whole life doing so. Or we may spend our whole life ignoring it. Either way, we will have to answer it someday. Who do you say that Jesus is?

“Christianity, if false, is of no importance, and if true, of infinite importance. The only thing it cannot be is moderately important.”
~C.S. Lewis

Peace,

+Pr. Laurie Neill

 

Featured art: Julien Dupré, In the Fields, 1877

About the art: This artwork has no connection to the devotion, but it caught my eye and I wanted to share it with you, especially because we are in the time of harvest. The artist, Julien Dupré, endeavored to depict the work of peasants in the fields in their harsh reality and to show the bond between peasant farmers and the land and their animals. Often, he depicted strong women positioned theatrically and yet elegantly in the forefront of his paintings, carrying out strenuous work as pitching sheaves of hay. The characters depicted in his paintings are not frozen in artificial and unnatural academic poses but are observed equally well in action, as in rest, and by doing so, showing them as everyday working people. (mydailyartdisplay.wordpress.com/2019/11/).

 

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