"The Journey to the Cross: Jesus' Mission of Love and Lordship"
Week 47 (1/26) Text: Mark 12:13-34 Title: "The Cornerstone of the Cross"
Big Idea
The cross of Christ is the cornerstone of life and eternity—it defines our allegiance, reshapes our purpose, and anchors our love for God and others.
Context and Overview
This passage highlights three separate challenges to Jesus from various groups:
- The Pharisees and Herodians regarding taxes (v. 13-17).
- The Sadducees regarding the resurrection (v. 18-27).
- A scribe seeking clarity on the greatest commandment (v. 28-34).
Teaching Points
1. The Trap of Allegiance (Mark 12:13–17)
- The Scene: The Pharisees and Herodians attempt to trap Jesus with a question about paying taxes to Caesar.
- Key Insight: Jesus brilliantly reframes the conversation, teaching that allegiance to God transcends earthly authority.
- Application:
- Dual Citizenship: As Christians, we live in two kingdoms. We honor earthly authorities, but our ultimate allegiance is to God.
- Imago Dei: The coin bears Caesar’s image; you bear God’s image. Your whole life belongs to Him.
- Cross-Reference: Colossians 1:13 – "He has rescued us from the dominion of darkness and brought us into the kingdom of the Son He loves."
2. The Trap of Resurrection (Mark 12:18–27)
- The Scene: The Sadducees, who deny the resurrection, try to stump Jesus with a hypothetical marriage scenario.
- Key Insight: Jesus corrects their limited view of eternity, revealing the power of God and the reality of resurrection life.
- Application:
- Know the Word: The Sadducees missed the truth because they didn’t know Scripture. Don’t make the same mistake.
- Hope in Resurrection: Jesus points us to a future where God’s power makes all things new. This life isn’t all there is.
- Cross-Reference: John 11:25 – "I am the resurrection and the life. The one who believes in me will live, even though they die."
Acts 23:8 – “For the Sadducees say that there is neither a resurrection nor angels nor spirits, but the Pharisees acknowledge them all.”
3. The Trap That Traps Itself (Mark 12:28–34)
- The Scene: A teacher of the law asks Jesus about the greatest commandment. Jesus responds with the Shema (Deuteronomy 6:4-5) and the call to love your neighbor as yourself (Leviticus 19:18).
- Key Insight: Jesus reveals that love for God and others is the cornerstone of God’s law and the cross.
- Application:
- Prioritize Worship: Loving God isn’t just about emotions; it’s about your whole being—heart, soul, mind, and strength.
- Practice Love: Loving your neighbor isn’t theoretical. It’s practical. Serve them. Forgive them. Show them Jesus.
- Cross-Reference: 1 John 4:19 – "We love because He first loved us."
Conclusion
Here’s some questions for you to reflect on:
- Are you living under His authority?
- Are you giving to God what belongs to Him?
- Are you building your life on the hope of resurrection?
- Are you loving God with everything you’ve got and loving people the way He commands?
Gospel Realization
The cross of Christ is the ultimate expression of allegiance, eternity, and love. Jesus paid the price for our sin, rose from the dead, and invites us to build our lives on Him. At the cross, we find forgiveness, purpose, and the power to love like never before.
“He experiences for us what we do not want but deserve (slavery and death), and provides for us what we do want but don’t deserve (a life of freedom).”
― Scot McKnight, Jesus Creed: Loving God, Loving Others