He Makes Bread and Heals Blindness

Mark 8:1-26

About the Sermon

Have you ever had a dream that kept coming back, but maybe with some of the details rearranged? That’s what this passage is like for us and it’s what this account must have been like for the disciples. We have another feeding, another boat scene, another conversation about bread, and another healing that involves spit. We’re going to handle it all in one sermon. But not because it’s just more of the same, but because there is a point to be made in this rolling cadence of familiar action. Where is Jesus leading us this time?

About the Series

Mark began his gospel with the words of the prophets, who told of a day when the Lord would come to his temple, and when he would deliver his people from sin. He also composed his gospel with a deliberate geographical movement from Galilee to Jerusalem. Why did he do that? To show us that the Lord’s path leads to his enthronement on a cross. But there is a second reason: to show us our path. The path of discipleship— the path of those who would follow Jesus—has a cross in it as well. Our fates are bound up with his. Thankfully, this path does not end with suffering, but with resurrection and life. This is a book written about discipleship for disciples like us.
Mark began his gospel with the words of the prophets, who told of a day when the Lord would come to his temple, and when he would deliver his people from sin. He also composed his gospel with a deliberate geographical movement from Galilee to Jerusalem. Why did he do that? To show us that the Lord’s path leads to his enthronement on a cross. But there is a second reason: to show us our path. The path of discipleship— the path of those who would follow Jesus—has a cross in it as well. Our fates are bound up with his. Thankfully, this path does not end with suffering, but with resurrection and life. This is a book written about discipleship for disciples like us.

Sermons in the Series