In the Revised Common Lectionary (RCL), this year
concentrates its attention on the gospel readings from the Book of Mark. There are several themes and devices that we
find in Mark more than in any other gospel.
For example, the word “immediately” occurs in this gospel 41 times. There is a sense of urgency as Jesus moves
from place to place.
Another idea unique to this gospel is how Jesus will perform
a mighty act or issue some marvelous revelation and then caution those who are present
not to tell anyone about it. That seems
counter to what we think about in terms of witnessing or testimony. You would think that as Jesus moves about and
does these marvelous things that he would want the report – the good news – to be
spread to as many people as possible.
But Jesus taught counter to this.
In biblical studies scholars call this idea “the Messianic Secret.” The concept has evolved since it was first
put forth in 1901. But at its core the
concept carries with it the notion that Jesus does not want news about him to
spread because he is a miracle-worker.
He rejects the idea that everyone will think of him as a sideshow or as
a short-cut to healing and feeding.
Jesus ever desires that people come to him not in search of personal
gain, but in a quest for spiritual truth and the knowledge of God.
Sadly, some who have not spent a lot of time with this
gospel try to explain Jesus’ attitude as a kind of “reverse psychology.” Their position is that if Jesus tells them
not to do something, their human nature dictates that they go and do it. There are certainly instances of this behavior
occurring – Mark 7:36 and 8:30 being examples.
But there is never a report of this psychological mumbo-jumbo being at
the heart of Christ’s motivation. Jesus’
miracle-workings grow out of his being the Christ of God. But miracle-worker is not who Jesus is. Jesus’ task is never to serve the desires of
people. It is to point the way to God.
Two thousand years later some folks still haven’t learned
this lesson. They view Jesus as a
leveler of scores and a provider of wants.
They speak of Jesus as a nationalistic Christ who favors one nation over
another, or who elevates a particular ideology over the rest. “Personal Lord and Savior” gets corrupted
into “supporter of what I think.”
Mark’s Gospel concerns itself with answering the question, “Who
is Jesus?” Is he the Christ? Yes.
Is he the Son of God? Yes. Is he the deliverer of humankind? You bet.
Is Jesus one whose mission is to be exclusive and to favor only a few of
those whom God created?
Not so much.
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