13Now when Jesus came into the district of Caesarea Philippi, he asked
his disciples, "Who do people say that the Son of Man is?" 14And they
said, "Some say John the Baptist, but others Elijah, and still others
Jeremiah or one of the prophets." 15He said to them, "But who do you say
that I am?" 16Simon Peter answered, "You are the Messiah, the Son of the
living God." 17And Jesus answered him, "Blessed are you, Simon son of
Jonah! For flesh and blood has not revealed this to you, but my Father
in heaven. 18And I tell you, you are Peter, and on this rock I will
build my church, and the gates of Hades will not prevail against it. 19I
will give you the keys of the kingdom of heaven, and whatever you bind on
earth will be bound in heaven, and whatever you loose on earth will be
loosed in heaven." 20Then he sternly ordered the disciples not to tell
anyone that he was the Messiah.
Step 1-Initial Diagnosis: Locked in the Past
Whatever prompted the first question from Jesus' lips to his disciples,
the answer of the disciples is very much on the surface. Any Pharisee
could have said just as much. Its almost Sunday Schoolish. Say what the
scholars say. Yet it also depicts a kind of thinking that is so old that
it cannot imagine anything really new (at least, no more new than John
the Baptist, but even that reference is a contemporary recycling of the
old).
Step 2-Advanced Diagnosis: Bound to traditionalism
What did not occur to the disciples in their answer to the question is
any sense of the person with whom they were journeying. Jesus' second
question, therefore, comes out almost starkly, "But who do you say that I
am?" None of the other disciples answer, except Peter. Maybe they're
afraid to answer. Or maybe, as their first answer betrays, they know
just how delicate the question is and just how judicious their answer
must be. Either way, their lack of immediate response betrays them -- they
are so inescapably bound to "old" traditional answers that cannot help
them with this contemporary and relevant question.
Step 3-Final Diagnosis: Bound to pass
Maybe why they are afraid to answer is that they know just how much their
answer has eternal ramifications. To give the wrong answer would hold
them accountable for their wrong. But not answering, at this moment,
also has divine consequences. Timing is everything. But the time is
bound to pass. So also are the disciples, if they do not answer -- and
answer rightly.
Step 4-Initial Prognosis: The Messianic Son of the Living God
Peter's confession goes out on a limb. "You are the Messiah, the Son of
the living God." God in their midst! That answer could scorch them for
sure, whether right or wrong. If right, how could they stand before God.
If wrong, God would vindicate his name. But Peter is not scorched. He
is, instead, blessed. Jesus' timing is everything. The confession at
Caesarea Philippi is the beginning of new journey that must take Jesus
(and the disciples) to Jerusalem -- not for an ending, but for a new
beginning. There the messianic quality of Jesus, the truth of Jesus'
identity, will find its liberating fruit for Peter and for all the
disciples, taking their accountability as his own, and giving them the
blessed fruits of his righteousness.
Step 5-Advanced Prognosis: Blessed Confessing
The joy for the disciples and Peter is that they get to keep on
confessing, not living in fear. "The gates of Hades" (the power of
death) cannot prevail against us in our confessing, which is itself the
revelation of faith given to us by Jesus' Father and our Father. But in
the confessing, we are living beyond the power of death, living instead
with the "new" life that Jesus brings to us.
Step 6- Final Prognosis: Keys for Life
All of this frees us to be Jesus' new people to unlock the lives of
others. For in our faithful confession as this Christ's church, we have
the keys to bind and loose. We have the keys. The confessing life calls
us to use them to help others, now, to newness they may never have
imagined before. Our confession of the promising tradition unlocks not
only our own souls from the past, but frees and liberates others to
embrace the new promising Son of Man, Messiah Jesus.