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Life's Ultimate Question

Scripture: Mark 8:27-8:38
Date Added: August 2011
Audience: General Adults (31 - 49)
What are your deepest hopes and hurts? Fondest dreams and desires? Frustrations and fears? Worries and anxieties?
Will being here make any difference?
Yes!
The Living Christ is here! What do you really expect He can and will do for you? Spurgeon was right, " We have great needs, but we have a great Christ for our needs!"
The lyrics of a popular contemporary song by Brendan Graham and Rolf Lovland that communicates what Christ is ready to do for us and through us.
"When I am down and, oh my soul so weary;
When troubles come and my heart burdened be;
Then I am still and wait here in silence,
Until You come and sit awhile with me.

There is no life, no life without its hunger.
Each restless heart beats so imperfectly,
But when You come and I am filled with wonder,
Sometimes, I think I glimpse eternity.

You raise me up so I can stand on mountains,
You raise me up to walk on stormy seas,
I am strong when I am on Your shoulders,
You raise me up to more than I can be."

Is that what you want from the Savior this morning:
vision, courage, strength, power to exceed your expectations? Who wouldn't? ! And yet, they are all available only to those who are able to answer His ultimate question.
Christ first asked life's ultimate question on the road
to Caesarea Philippi. Few places could have provided a more significant locale.
Jesus, walking ahead of His disciples, was silhouetted against the city in all its Roman glory. Rising up out of its center was a translucent temple of white marble built by Herod the Great in honor of the Caesars. Around it were magnificent villas and palaces added by Herod's son Philip, who had renamed the city to honor Caesar, and to impress his own name in history!
The power of Rome was in the air, but so were the hauntingly vivid memories of worship of the pagan god, Baal-once so powerful in that region. In fact, before Philip renamed it, the city had been called Balinas in honor of the pagan fertility god. Ruins of temples and shrines of Baal orgy worship punctuated the landscape.
Framing the view and overshadowing the region was Mount Hermon, metaphor of Israel's quest for God. Undoubtedly, sharp recollections filled the disciples' minds of the strategic times God had encountered great leaders of Israel on that mountain. On the slope of Hermon a cliff filled with ancient inscriptions and niches containing statues of pagan gods gave stark reminder of the conflict Israel had faced maintaining its monotheism against syncretism, the blending of religions and their gods.
It was here in this region of ambiguous symbols of humankind's lust for military might and the religious quest for meaning, that Jesus stopped, turned, and confronted His disciples with a penultimate question, "Who do men say that I am?"
This was not the question of an insecure leader seeking to know his standing in the public opinion polls. It was a probing inquiry designed to determine the extent to which people were discovering His true identity, mission and message.
The answers were really very complimentary. The disciples rehearsed the speculations they had heard.
They told Jesus that the fears of Herod Antipas, who murdered John the Baptist, had promoted the theory that He was John raised from the dead. Others believed He fulfilled the prophecy
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