No Kodak Moment
Mark 8:27-38
by Rev. Cynthia Horn Burkert
It is amazing to think how cameras have evolved just in my lifetime. I
remember so clearly my first little camera. The film was complicated, so
someone else had to load for me, and I could only take photos outside
because it had no flash. My grandparents had Kodachrome, but I was content
with the little crinkly-edged black and white photos my camera produced.
Then came drop-in film cartridges, flashcubes, and Polaroid instant
pictures. I’m grateful for the snapshots of my growing up that those
cameras provided, little pictures of life in the 1950s and 60s and 70s.
We all have those snapshots, I imagine. The family is gathered for
Thanksgiving dinner: click. We’re headed for church in our Easter finery:
click. We put the new baby in grandmother’s arms for the first time:
click. We catch the busy toddler napping: click. Cap and gown and a
brand-new diploma: click. All the candles on the birthday cake are lit:
click. Mr. and Mrs. Newlywed: click. They record our lives, one click at a
time.
Now, of course, it’s all about digital cameras. Just think what we can do
with those photos: as soon as you take the picture, you can look at it on
the little monitor, and if you don’t like it you can erase it from the
disk! You can download the picture to a computer, and edit it: cut people
out; make it lighter, darker; change the background. The cost of printing
them out is almost nothing. Everyone I know who has one of these cameras
seems to take twice or three times as many photos as they did before: so
many more snapshots recording the events and people of our lives, but
every one just a moment in time, gone as soon as the camera clicks.
Peter had a snapshot image of Jesus. When Jesus asked Peter who he said
Jesus was, Peter replied: “You are the Messiah.” Click! Now, there’s a
snapshot we want to put on the refrigerator with a magnet, tack on the
bulletin board at work, save between the pages of our Bible.
Pheme Perkins, Biblical scholar at Boston College, suggests that terms
like “Messiah”, “Son of Man”, “Son of God” have pretty much lost their
power. They are all labels that can be applied to Jesus, but they no
longer convey any expectations, either of Jesus, or of us.
(
That was not necessarily true for Peter: Peter used a term that was known
among Jews of his era, among Jesus’ followers, that signified a whole host
of expectations. Messiah comes from the Hebrew word mashiach. It has been
equated to the Greek Christos, for “anointed one,” a term that could be
applied to kings and prophets. In the Hebrew scriptures, however, mashiach
is most frequently used as “deliverer.” In the long history of the use of
the term, mashiach is even applied to Cyrus of Persia, who allowed the
captive Israelites to return from Babylon to Jerusalem!
Peter and the Jews who followed Jesus saw in him the expected deliverer,
the one who would rescue them from the oppression of Roman authority and
the ritual-obsession of the Pharisees. They were looking for a successful,
conquering messiah.
But when Peter makes his confession, Jesus is determined not to let him
rest in that “click”, that snapshot. The direction that Jesus’ teaching
takes is not at all comfortable for those disciples looking for the
messiah of earthly power and authority. Jesus must make Peter and the
disciples understand that he is not Christos, the anointed one, as mere
prophet or king; he is not maschiach as deliverer from mere human
hungering and suffering. For Jesus, as for the disciples, success will be
defined in terms of suffering.
Many of us have had our snapshot moment, when like Peter we “got it”: we
had the water poured and the word said, we had the mountaintop experience
at camp or retreat or in Bible study, we asked Jesus to take away our
sins, perhaps we even heard our own call to ministry, in whatever form
that might be, lay or ordained, within the church or out in the world. We
are content to live into that snapshot moment, to be who we were at that
time, using it for all time as our reference point to define who we are,
who God is, and who Jesus is.
And when we observe the reality of the misery in so many quarters of our
world, when we are confused and dismayed by the evil that seems to be all
around, we take refuge in our confidence in a better world to come, by and
by. In the meantime, in the midst of life’s trials, Jesus is the one to
whom we cling: our personal savior, for our personal challenges.
Jesus is determined to take Peter, the disciples and us to a deeper level:
a deeper understanding of who Jesus is and a deeper understanding of who
we are in relation to him, and in relationship with God’s people.
First he orders them not to tell anyone. Peter’s confession comes in the
wrong context for the deep understanding into which Jesus absolutely must
lead the disciples. Peter’s confession has come on the heels of the
feeding and healing miracles:
healing and feeding are definitely part of Jesus’ ministry, but they are
NOT what make him truly who he is.
To know Jesus as our deliverer is not merely to know him as the one who
solves all our problems, rescues us from all danger and calamity. To
perceive Jesus that way is what some have called, “putting God in a box,”
to say, “This is what I need God to be, so this must be who God is.” But
that God, that Jesus, that savior, is a caricature of the real thing, and
Jesus is not going to let Peter limit him that way. We dare not try to do
that, either, because the real Jesus, the one whom we call Lord, not only
transforms our circumstances, but has the power to transform us into
different people.
Jesus struggles to make the disciples understand: the “click” is not
enough. The snapshot suitable for framing, for tacking on the bulletin
board, is not the whole picture. Who Jesus is cannot be contained in a
“Kodak moment.”
We cannot crown him, Lord of Lords, King of Kings, unless we are willing
to go the whole journey with him. Peter’s confession on the way to
Caesarea Philippi is not all the way. Who Jesus is can only be understood
if we understand his complete identification with God’s will. And if we
are to understand, then we must not pause for a coronation, but go all the
way into the suffering. It is only in the aftermath of the cross, and the
resurrection, that we can call Jesus “Lord.” So, immediately after Peter’s
confession, Jesus begins to predict his suffering.
In verse 31, the writer of the gospel of Mark records, “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.”
These words lead Peter to rebuke Jesus, to dispute with him for saying
such a thing. Oh, how Peter would like to stay in that confessional
moment, to keep things solid and understandable, in a term he’s got his
mind around, “messiah.”
The words of Jesus in reply. “Get behind me Satan” seem very harsh to our
ears, but they were entirely appropriate in response to a disciple
rebuking a teacher.
More importantly, they get right to the heart of the problem: if we get
stuck in our “snapshot moment”, in our picture-perfect image of Jesus, and
in our comfortable image of ourselves in relation to him, then the evil
one has all sorts of opportunity to play with us.
Peter did not deny Jesus that day; the denial would be later. But he did
not confess the whole of who Jesus was and is, and we are often in danger
of doing the same. If we fail to allow Jesus to be all that he is, and if
we are reluctant or unwilling to let Jesus’ transforming love remake us,
over and over again, then the stale and stagnant places in our souls
become fertile breeding ground for the evil one.
Peter then and we now do not want to endure change: yet the new thing that
God was doing in Jesus Christ could not be contained in a one-word
confession, and it could not be achieved without change and challenges to
cherished hopes and expectations.
It is in our nature that even when a change we have longed for finally
comes, we still suffer grief: at the very least, we no longer have that
old familiar thing to complain about! But that is to trivialize the nature
of change, for all change, even change for the better, involves loss. Loss
implies grief: anger, denial, fear; surrender, yielding, or capitulation;
and sadness.
Jesus speaks not only to his disciples, but to all the crowd following
him: “Those who lose their life for my sake, and for the sake of the
gospel, will save it.” As Eugene Peterson has paraphrased these verses in
The Message, “Anyone who intends to come with me has to let me lead…Don’t
run from suffering; embrace it. Follow me and I’ll show you how. Self-help
is no help at all. Self-sacrifice is the way, my way, to saving yourself,
your true self. What good would it do to get everything you want and lose
you, the real you?”
There may be loss, and change, and even suffering, but there is also
overflowing grace in Jesus’ way. Jesus’ suffering is essential to his
identity. Through his way of suffering we get to the ultimate confession:
Jesus is Lord. In him, we are not only saved but we become part of God’s
ongoing creative activity in the world, reconciling all things to God. The
one who invites us to follow him, calls us to be his disciples, asks that
we allow God to work in and through us, Jesus Christ, is the one who will
lead us through the suffering, beyond the cross, to the new life to which
we are all being called.
We just need to be sure he’s “in the picture”!