Who Do You Say That I Am?
Primary Texts: Matthew 16:13–17:13; Mark 8:27–9:13; Luke 9:18–36
Main Sayings: “Who do you say that I am?” “If anyone would come after me, let him deny himself and take up his cross and follow me.” “This is my beloved Son… listen to him.”
By now, Jesus has taught with authority.
He has healed the sick, forgiven sins, commanded demons, calmed the storm, raised the dead, and exposed shallow religion.
The question can no longer remain vague.
So Jesus asks it directly:
“Who do people say that the Son of Man is?”
The disciples answer with the public opinions.
Some say John the Baptist. Others say Elijah. Others say Jeremiah or one of the prophets.
Those are high answers.
Respectful answers.
Religious answers.
But they are not enough.
Respect Is Not the Same as Recognition
Many people are comfortable placing Jesus among the great spiritual figures.
A prophet. A reformer. A moral teacher. A healer. A voice of compassion. A man close to God.
That sounds honoring.
But in the Gospels, partial honor can still miss the truth.
The crowd has categories for Jesus, but the categories are too small.
That is still true today.
Some want a Jesus who confirms their religious system.
Some want a Jesus who improves their morality.
Some want a Jesus who blesses their private spirituality.
Some want a Jesus who inspires justice without claiming judgment.
Some want a Jesus who comforts the conscience without ruling the life.
But Jesus does not ask, “Do people respect Me?”
He presses deeper.
“But who do you say that I am?”
“You Are the Christ”
Peter answers:
“You are the Christ, the Son of the living God.”
This is the confession at the center of the movement.
Jesus is not merely one more messenger inside history. He is the Christ, the anointed King, the Son of the living God.
Jesus says Peter did not discover this by flesh and blood. The Father revealed it.
That matters.
Jesus’ identity is not solved by popularity polls, religious comparison, intellectual fashion, or cultural preference.
The question is not what label makes modern people comfortable.
The question is whether we see who Jesus says He is and who the Father reveals Him to be.
The Christ Must Suffer
Then Jesus does something unexpected.
After Peter confesses Him as the Christ, Jesus begins to teach that He must go to Jerusalem, suffer many things, be killed, and be raised on the third day.
Peter rebukes Him.
That reaction is understandable.
A suffering Messiah does not fit human instinct. We want glory without wounds. Victory without humiliation. God’s kingdom without a cross.
But Jesus turns and says:
“Get behind me, Satan! You are a hindrance to me.”
That is severe.
Peter has the right title, but the wrong understanding.
He confesses Christ, but resists the cross.
And Jesus will not allow that.
Any view of Jesus that honors His greatness but removes His suffering is incomplete.
Any faith that wants power, blessing, or rescue without the cross is not yet listening to Jesus.
Take Up Your Cross
Jesus then turns the cross toward His followers:
“If anyone would come after me, let him deny himself and take up his cross and follow me.”
This confronts every shallow spirituality.
Jesus does not invite people merely to add Him to their ambitions.
He does not offer salvation as decoration for an unchanged life.
He says deny yourself.
Take up your cross.
Follow Me.
This does not mean earning forgiveness by suffering. It means the path of Jesus cannot be separated from surrender to Jesus.
A person cannot keep self-rule as king and call Jesus Lord in any serious sense.
Glory on the Mountain
Then Jesus takes Peter, James, and John up a mountain.
He is transfigured before them. His face shines. His clothes become radiant. Moses and Elijah appear with Him.
The scene is overwhelming.
Then the Father speaks from the cloud:
“This is my beloved Son, with whom I am well pleased; listen to him.”
The command is simple:
Listen to Him.
Not merely admire Him.
Not merely place Him beside other voices.
Not filter Him through what we already prefer.
Listen to Him.
Moses and Elijah stand there, but Jesus remains central. The Law and the Prophets do not compete with Him. They point toward Him.
Why This Matters
Movement 6 brings the identity question into the open.
Jesus is confessed as the Christ.
He predicts His suffering, death, and resurrection.
He demands cross-bearing discipleship.
He is revealed in glory as the beloved Son.
And the Father commands us to listen to Him.
This leaves no safe middle ground.
A respected Jesus is not enough.
A useful Jesus is not enough.
A prophet Jesus is not enough.
A crossless Jesus is not enough.
Jesus asks the question every reader must answer:
“Who do you say that I am?”
Staff Writer, A Disciple of Christ.
The JesusAccordingToJesus.com staff is committed to helping readers examine the person, words, and claims of Jesus with clarity, honesty, and reverence. Our work is shaped by a deep conviction that Jesus must be understood first by what He said about Himself, why He came, and what He calls every person to consider. We write for thoughtful readers, seekers, skeptics, and believers, pointing beyond mere religion to the living Christ, in whom truth, grace, meaning, and eternal hope are found.
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