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MARKed by Jesus: Mark 8:1 - 9:13 — 1/12/2026 10:00 AM

Dr. Thomas White, President of Cedarville University, brings a message from Mark 8:1 - 9:13. Dr. White explains that seeing clearly means serving the Jesus we need, not the Jesus we want.


Notes

Chapel Recap: Seeing Jesus Clearly

Today in chapel, Dr. Thomas White brought us through Mark 8, centered on one powerful theme: Seeing clearly means serving the Jesus we need, not the Jesus we want.

Dr. White structured his message around a series of contrasts found throughout the chapter, each revealing how easy it is to misunderstand Jesus even while being close to Him.

First, verses 1–10 describe provision without perception. The disciples witnessed Jesus miraculously feed thousands, yet they still struggled to understand who He truly was. “We can see God provide,” Dr. White explained, “but fail to perceive that He is the ultimate Provider.” Seeing miracles does not automatically produce spiritual clarity.

Next, verses 11–13 reveal religion without recognition. The Pharisees demanded a sign, not because they lacked evidence, but because they lacked belief. “You can have religion,” Dr. White warned, “and not recognize who Jesus really is.”

In verses 14–26, Dr. White pointed to discipleship without discernment. The disciples were physically near Jesus but spiritually confused and in need of corrected vision. This section culminates in Jesus healing a blind man in stages — a living illustration of how spiritual sight often develops gradually.

Verses 27–33 feature confession without comprehension. Peter correctly confessed Jesus as the Christ yet immediately rejected the idea of a suffering Messiah. Knowing the right answer about Jesus does not mean we fully understand His mission.

That misunderstanding leads to the heart of the chapter in verses 34–38: no crown without a cross. Jesus identifies that following Him requires self-denial and sacrifice. “Discipleship,” Dr. White said, “is the willingness to lose your life for the sake of the Gospel.”

Finally, Dr. White pointed ahead to the beginning of Mark 9, offering a glimpse of glory. Though suffering is real and unavoidable, it is not the end. “The Messiah must suffer,” Dr. White said, “and if you follow Him, you will suffer too.” Yet that suffering is framed by future glory, giving us hope and endurance through this present life.

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