The Apocalypse of Jesus Christ
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Mark 9:1-13 (NLT)
The Gospel of Mark
The Apocalypse of Jesus Christ
Introduction: Mark is written for disciples. It’s a road map for discipleship
to Jesus. So in a time where there is a lot of confusion about what’s going
on, who we are and what we are to be doing - Mark’s gospel is a road map
for the people of God in how to follow the way of Jesus.
Mark is also a book of mystery - Mark’s Gospel is so filled with mysterious
references to Jesus and his identity. Mark, though rarely quoting the OT, is
a master of the Biblical text and has told the story of how God is
cryptically and mysteriously present and bringing his kingdom on earth
through the suffering, crucified and resurrected messiah, Jesus.
As we’ve noted, the Blind man and the progressive healing (Mark 8:22-26)
is Mark’s way of showing us what is going on within the heart of Disciples.
The disciples, the religious and state leaders are blind to Jesus’ works. But
a blind man is taken outside of the village, and through Jesus’ healing
touch he is now able to see everything! As Jon shared with us two weeks
ago, the disciples have an understanding of who Jesus is; they have had
front row seats, as it were, to his miraculous works, his teachings and his
way of life. They believe, according to Peter, that he is the Messiah. And
they are correct, Jesus is the Messiah, the anointed king, here to rescue,
to bring salvation and usher in the kingdom of God but he will accomplish
this in a way no one expects - "As he says the Son of Man must suffer
many terrible things and be rejected by the elders, the leading priests, and
the teachers of religious law. He would be killed, but three days later he
would rise from the dead."
Mark in this passage is beginning one of his biggest themes of his Gospel
and that is - How Jesus’ disciples are to measure power, victory and
greatness. For Mark, following Jesus to victory is not through violence and
the assertion of power but by going the way of the cross, enduring
suffering patiently… this is the way that leads to victory.
1. The Apocalypse
a. The passage we are looking at this morning is an Apocalyptic
passage. That's a very popular word right now..we hear at all
over the place from conservative christians predicting the end
of the world, to descriptions of recent natural disasters... But
the Biblical idea of Apocalypse and our American/English ideas
of it are in fact worlds apart. When we speak of an apocalypse
as Americans we mean the end of the world, a cataclysmic
event, Blood moons and tsunamis, firestorms, etc. When the
Bible speaks of an apocalypse it is speaking of a revelation
and unveiling of something that was previously hidden, not the
end of the world or even a cataclysmic event.
b. Here on this mountain top we have an unveiling of what Mark
told us at the beginning of the Gospel, but has been veiled to
the multitudes, the religious leaders and even the disciples That this lowly Jewish Rabbi, Jesus of Nazareth is in fact the
Messiah, the Son of God. And though Mark has been dropping
hints and hyperlinks to this truth all along the way it is here that
we see the veil being pulled back and the true glory being
revealed.
c. Mark wants us to understand and see this moment as the
theophany of theophanies - A theophany is a visible
manifestation of the Divine.
d. We know this because once again Mark is dropping
hyperlinking hints as the story unfolds.
e. Jesus says in verse 1 that there were some present who would
not taste death until they witnessed the kingdom coming in
power… and then six days later it says he led Peter James and
john up a high Mountain.. directly connecting the
transfiguration to Jesus’ statement. This is the case in all 4
Gospels.
f. Not only that but this 6 days later and being led up a mountain
is a hyperlink to Exodus 24 where Moses ascends the
Mountain of God in the wilderness and sees the Glory of the
Lord - A theophany on the mountain.
g. Interesting to note that Moses actually appears in this scene,
and he is also accompanied by Elijah who also had a similar
experience - a theophany on the mountain of God. Of course
these two men together are representatives of the Law and the
Prophets - Moses foretold the coming of a Prophet like him who would bear the final word to the people of God - if the
people did not listen to him, obey his voice they would be cut
off from the people of God and the promises of God. Then
there is Elijah. It was foretold that Elijah would appear before
the great and awesome day of the Lord - the coming of the
Kingdom of God… Both these individuals are here giving as it
were their endorsement of Jesus… and then as the scene
comes to a close they fade out and Jesus is brought front and
center - the glory cloud, the voice - my beloved Son - Listen to
him!!
h. Peter, James and John are getting as it were a sneak peak into
the future - they are seeing a vision of the vindication and
glorification of Jesus. They’re seeing the King, with power and
authority. Later Peter in his second epistle would describe this
moment this way - “We were eyewitnesses of his majesty
(Kingly language). For when he received honor and glory
from God the Father, and the voice was borne to him by the
majestic Glory - This is my beloved son in whom I am well
pleased…” Peter uses Majesty, honor and glory - We should
understand this scene on the mountain as a vision into Jesus
future installment as the messianic figure of Daniel 7 (Read the
passage)
i. This of course is important for the disciples to see and hear at
this moment - most likely being bewildered by this tragic news
of the suffering and death of the Messiah at the hands of their
leaders… - That news would and did rock their worlds - a
crucified Messiah, was a failed Messiah and a scandal. This
teaching of Jesus would cause them to question God’s
sovereign power, and his goodness, his love and justice - how
could God allow his anointed king to suffer such fate, what
would happen to the people of God, and the promises of God how could God allow such evil ????
j. It in light of all of this that the Apocalyptic vision comes - they
need to see that the suffering one in vindicated, exalted and
enthroned as the victorious King
k. We see a similar pattern in the apocalyptic visions of the
prophets in the OT and with John the Revelator. In the major
Prophetic/Apocalyptic books we have a consistent pattern that
occurs in all of them. In each we have the prophet ushered into
the heavenly court. He sees the LORD, the Ancient of days,
seated on the throne, receiving worship, glory and honor from
every part of the creation. Each vision has some aspect of the
present world power as a beast of some sort that defies and
blasphemes the Lord but is dealt with, and judged by him, put
to death, thrown into the sea, or into the pit.. But the point I
want to make is that each of these prophetic visions gives the
prophet a view behind the veil - they see the world, the course
of history as it truly is. Their eyes are opened to the true reality
of things, and the vision is one of hope!
i. Also, fascinating to note that in John’s vision in
Revelation we have the paradoxical vision of a
slaughtered lamb who is the victorious exalted Lord! The
slaughtered lamb is exalted and seated on the throne,
bringing his kingdom into this world, ruling in
righteousness and justice.
l. These Apocalyptic visions are given in order that the prophet
(or whoever is receiving the vision) might share it with others
that they also may have hope. That they would continue to give
their allegiance to the Lord and the Lord alone, even through
suffering and death, that they would be faithful even unto
death… The Vision is to bring shape to their lives - In the same
way that Peter writes to the Church about the Living hope that
we have. The vision gives us the hope, the strength we need to
endure whatever evils, suffering, or obstacles lie before us…
i. I think that this passage comes at just the right time/
moment for us. There are so many heavy, discouraging
things that we are dealing with at this moment - From the
Pandemic, to politics, to fires, and even the coming
transition at our church. In this moment we need this
Apocalyptic vision to give hope to our own lives - The
Suffering Messiah, the slain lamb, Our great shepherd, is
enthroned as the victorious king over all! He reigns, and
his kingdom is coming! Let this vision sustain you, may it
give you strength for the road ahead, as we collectively
journey the way of the cross that leads to resurrection
and vindication
2. Listen to him
a. Peter has his own ideas of how the kingdom comes. In fact, in
one sense Peter is right he is recognizing the significance of
the event. It's a vision of the king and the kingdom. It’s here!
And that’s why he blurts out his plan. He wants to set up camp
and stay there. Peter’s idea is a kingdom without suffering, it’s
the crown without the cross. And as we’ve noted before and
Jon mentioned a few weeks ago there was no understanding
of a suffering messiah in the first century - quite the opposite in
fact! The messiah was the conqueror! He was the liberator. He
was the son of David, and like Judah Macabee who would
violently overthrow the enemies of the people of God, and
usher in the Kingdom.
b. But what the Divine voice from heaven says here is - Listen to
him! What has Jesus been saying, what has he been doing?
c. Jesus' version of the Kingdom of God is very different from his
contemporaries, and different from our ideas of power and
kingship even to this day - Jesus isn’t talking about their
violent politics and hostile takeovers; He's plundering the
kingdom of darkness and talking about the kingdom of God
d.
e.
f.
g.
being like seed. He isn’t keeping up with their beloved
traditions; he’s purposely going against them. He isn’t giving
honor and care to the religious system and leaders of the day;
He’s giving it to the poor, the possessed, the disenfranchised
and outcasts, the gentile, the tax collector and the prostitute.
Jesus isn’t talking about violent death to his enemies but his
own violent death at the hand of his enemies… Listen to him is
what the voice is saying
This exhortation has bearing upon all of Jesus’ words, but has
particular relevance to the new instruction Jesus had been
giving to his followers concerning the necessity of his
sufferings and of their participation in his humiliation….
Suffering, nonviolence and faithfulness to the end, is the way of
Jesus
There can be no doubt that Mark intended for the early Church
to take this particular word to heart… and to wrestle with this
hard truth - that God calls us to victory and glory through
suffering, through bearing injustice, wrong, and evil - to
respond with love and forgiveness, grace and reconciliation He calls us to follow Jesus, to the cross and on to victory and
glory…
i. Did you know, “The New Testament highlights Jesus’s
nonviolent response to violence as a pattern to follow
more than any other aspect of His ministry.” - Preston
Sprinkle, Fight: A Christian Case for Non-Violence
We need to give all the more attention to listen to him! A huge
mistake of the church in history (especially the western church)
is that we have not sat long enough with or thought long
enough about our nonviolent master and king. We have not
taken Jesus' Kingdom manifesto seriously. We have actually
gone along with the world, the way of violence and the way of
the dragon.
We need to listen to Jesus - why? “We live in a culture where
all forms of suffering are avoided, or at least medicated. I get a
headache, and I pop a pill. I get hungry, and I immediately eat.
If I feel cold, I put on one of my many coats. If I get tired, I rest.
If I catch a cold, I crawl into bed, call in sick, and pop another
pill. And if someone thinks about oppressing me, watch
out! ...Our culture gives us no categories to view suffering—
especially suffering at the hands of an oppressor—as victory.
Our culture sees suffering only as defeat, as evil. It never sees
suffering as a means of victory. This is why we need to read
John’s vision about what’s really going on from God’s
perspective to correct our American, self-serving, “I will defend
my rights at all costs” mind-set. We need to follow the
slaughtered Lamb wherever He goes, so that I can reign with
Him in victory.” -Preston Sprinkle, Fight: A Christian Case for
Non-Violence
3. Wrestling with the Tension
a. As the disciples are coming down the mountain, they have so
many thoughts and questions. But Jesus has his own question
that he wants his disciples to continue wrestling with in light of
what they have just seen - “And how is it written of the Son
of Man that he should suffer many things and be treated
with contempt?” How indeed. That the king of kings, the true
and rightful ruler, the hope and healer of the world would suffer
many things, be treated with such disdain and hatred and be
killed. How can this be?
b. Followers of Jesus, disciples are being called to wrestle with
this tension: that the suffering servant, the slain lamb, is the
victor! That Jesus wins the victory, and is enthroned through
essentially losing, laying down his life, giving his life as a
ransom for the sins of humanity. It calls into question and
judgment the way that the world achieves power, success and
victory. Followers of Jesus are being called to follow the lamb,
and have nothing to do with bloodthirsty, crushing power plays
of this world's system..
i. “Weakness as humans measure power and weakness, is
the way God is and the way God operates in the world.
To live in a way that corresponds to this reality may
indeed be paradoxical, but above all it is faithful; it is true.
To seek power as humans measure it - is not merely a
mistake; it is to betray and renounce the gospel. It is
important therefore to note that the NT does not
understand the gospel as power and weakness but
power in weakness” - Michael Gorman, Reading Paul
ii.
“Because followers of Jesus are living out the kingdom of
God in a world that is still under sin, death, and the devil
it makes it very difficult. Injustice will happen to us. we
will be taken advantage of, we will often be despised and
rejected. Though we live in this tension of the already and
not yet (God’s kingdom has come, but is not fully here)
we do so according to the way of the cross, in hope that
evil will be resolved by God in the future. Our living
cannot violate our nonviolent, self-giving, God obeying
love of the cross, which determines the structure and
fabric of our existence day by day.” - Michael Gorman,
Reading Paul
iii.
c. We are being called to listen to Jesus exclusively - he is the
teacher, the Rabbi, the final word of God to us. Listen to him
and follow him as you live in this tension of what it means to
follow Jesus in the way of the cross, and onto resurrection
glory. As we see in this incredible Apocalyptic vision, the end is
already fixed, the Crucified one is enthroned, he reigns
forevermore, the new creation is coming into being...
d. But as C.S Lewis so wisely said, “Meanwhile the cross comes
before the crown and tomorrow is a Monday morning”. You
and I are being called to work out the details, through the
contemplation and meditation of Jesus, his life and his words,
through the application of the Spirit and our church community
- we are being called to work out what this looks like, in our
lives, in our homes, in our jobs and our personal relationships..
e. So, in closing, as we head into this week, as we reflect on what
we’ve read and what we have heard, as we discuss it with our
discipleship group - Are we truly listening and obeying the
voice of Jesus? Are we being with him, becoming more like
him, following him in his overall way of life?
i. A good way to know whether or not we are truly listening
is if we feel the tension. Do you feel that tension? The
tension of suffering and glory; the tension of the already
and the not yet.
4. Prayer: Holy Spirit, do for us what we cannot do for ourselves...