1. "If any wish to come after me, let them deny themselves and take up their cross and follow me. For those who want to save their life will lose it, and those who lose their life for my sake and for the sake of the gospel will save it. For what will it profit them to gain the whole world and forfeit their life? Indeed, what can they give in return for their life? Those who are ashamed of me and my words and this adulterous, sinful generation, of them the Son of Man will also be ashamed. When he comes in the glory of his Father with the holy angels."
[25:57] (42 seconds) (Download raw clip | Download cropped clip)

2. "Who do people say that I am? This is the first question in our text this morning that I stumbled over. Who do people say that I am? When I first read those words, I pictured myself asking those in a vulnerable moment amongst friends. Asking them, what are people saying about me? Do you think they like what I'm doing? Usually asking someone these questions because I feel some sort of insecurity. My love language is words of affirmation after all, so if you don't give me what I need, I'm going to ask you to say it. But I'm not quite sure that truly is what's going on with Jesus here."
[27:46] (59 seconds) (Download raw clip | Download cropped clip)

3. "Mark is a series of questions about identity and expectations. It's important that we realize that these issues are not locked in the past. This was not only a problem for the disciples or for early Christians to whom Mark is writing. Mark's profiles are a deeper and dynamic lesson that spans the ages. How are human knowledge and expectations in tension with the aims of God? We know the way things are, how they're supposed to go. If we believe God is active and that Jesus is alive in the world today, then the question posed to us is not whether we confess Jesus as Messiah. That's the easy part. We know what the title is. The question becomes, how do we misunderstand what the title means? How do our expectations not align with God's?"
[36:08] (81 seconds) (Download raw clip | Download cropped clip)

4. "Who do you say Jesus is, is who you have decided to be. You can't answer Jesus's inquiry without revealing who you are. Who you are reveals who you have decided Jesus to be. Our response to the question is typically how we live and how other people live. So I'm going to ask you to tell us how you live and how other people see you live. So if that is our response, and we remember my quote from my class, that the meaning of a communication is the response it elicits, regardless of the intent. That means that our response to God's call, our response to God's questions, our response in the form of our actions and our words, those are defined. Defining God's message to people, whether or not it's the way God intended it."
[38:24] (85 seconds) (Download raw clip | Download cropped clip)

5. "So when your identity, when your soul is grounded in Christ, it is taking over your entire self, so that in each action and each word that we do and say, we are better reflecting the true message and goal and love of Jesus Christ. That's a heavy burden. There's talk of suffering in this, and it's not saying that we have to suffer to be a good Christian. It's saying that the world does not, work the way God wants it to. So when you start living the life God intended, when you express the message correctly, it's going to be hard, and you're going to have pushback. But we believe that it is possible, and we believe that Jesus empowered us to do this because God knows that we can."
[43:15] (83 seconds) (Download raw clip | Download cropped clip)

6. "Think of that famous quote from Gandhi, that I like Jesus and all his messages, but I'm not sure about his followers. That our life, the way we treat others, the way we treat ourselves, that is portraying a message about God. Is it the one that God wants? Is it the one that God wants? Is it the one that God wants us to portray? We don't have Jesus physically by us to go, no, you're wrong. That's not what I meant, unfortunately. So we have to recognize that we have greater power than we could possibly realize. That also reveals how trusting God is to each and every one of us."
[40:53] (78 seconds) (Download raw clip | Download cropped clip)

7. "There is a difference in naming an identity and grasping it. We are seeing the split between human expectations of Jesus and the realities of what Jesus expects. There's a professor who says, and pastor named Caroline Lewis, who I often read her commentaries, and she touched on something beautifully about all this. She said, Mark is a series of questions about identity and expectations. It's important that we realize that these issues are not locked in the past. This was not only a problem for the disciples or for early Christians to whom Mark is writing. Mark's profiles are a deeper and dynamic lesson that spans the ages."
[33:59] (63 seconds) (Download raw clip | Download cropped clip)

8. "Jesus says these things boldly. And in a turn of events, Peter's short-sightedness is again visible as he rebukes Jesus. No, no, no, your definition is wrong. There is a difference in naming an identity and grasping it. We are seeing the split between human expectations of Jesus and the realities of what Jesus expects."
[33:59] (37 seconds) (Download raw clip | Download cropped clip)

9. "Who do you say that I am? Who will you say that you are? In our scripture today, there's a lot of the scripture from our lesson today is pretty well known in the Christian world, the whole pick up your cross, lose your life, gain it. This isn't a not well-known scripture. And I read that someone pointed out that there's a lot of people who pointed out an interesting thing about the Greek, because we're Presbyterian, so I'm going to bring it up again. Gotta love the Greek references. About the portion of the scripture where he says, for those who want to save their life will lose it, and those who lose their life for my sake and for the sake da-da-da-da will gain it. That one. They said that the translation life there really is not doing justice to what the real Greek word intended. They're doing the best with their translation. They're doing the best with their translation. They're doing the best with their translation. But it really is more of your inner being, your soul, your who you are."
[43:15] (81 seconds) (Download raw clip | Download cropped clip)

10. "So with the question, you say that I am, it is also a question saying, who will you say that you are? I'm going to return to my communication quote in a moment. See, the rub of this question, the heart of its difficulty, if we only had to provide an answer, that would be one thing. But this answer to Jesus's question is also going to give voice to our own identity. Who do you say Jesus is, is who you have decided to be. You can't answer Jesus's inquiry without revealing who you are. Who you are reveals who you have decided Jesus to be."
[38:24] (66 seconds) (Download raw clip | Download cropped clip)