“Who do you say I am?” | Bible Daily Devotions for Teens, Christian Youth Articles

“Who do you say I am?”

If Jesus asked you this question today, how would you respond?

Originally published by Karina Stetina on the Good Book Blog by Biola University.


How does the world reply to Christ’s question in Mark 16:15 ,“But who do you say that I am?”

  • Great teacher?
  • Religious leader?
  • Humanitarian?
  • Example?

C. S. Lewis responds:

A man who was merely a man and said the sort of things Jesus said would not be a great moral teacher. He would either be a lunatic — on the level with the man who says he is a poached egg — or else he would be the Devil of Hell. You must make your choice. Either this man was, and is, the Son of God, or else a madman or something worse. —Mere Christianity

As Lewis recognizes, Christ is far more than a great moral teacher. Christ, as revealed in Scripture, is the holy Son of God.

Who did the disciples say Jesus was?

When Christ asked his disciples in Mark 16:13-15 “What do people say about the Son of Man?” they responded, “Some people say you are John the Baptist or maybe Elijah or Jeremiah or some other prophet.” Then he asked them, “But who do you say I am?”

Peter responded, “You are the Messiah, the Son of the living God.

While Peter and the other disciples recognized Christ as the Messiah, they often failed to act in proper reverence. As the disciples walked alongside of Christ, however, their responses moved from a posture of familiarity to a recognition that they were in the presence of the holy God.

For example, John, in Mark 10:35, called Christ “teacher” and asked him to grant him and his brother James a place at his right and left side. We see a dramatic change in Revelation 1:17-19. When John finds himself in the presence of the holy risen Christ, he falls down as if he were dead.

It is only when Christ touches him with the same hand with which he holds the stars, that John is able to rise and stand in Christ’s holy presence. The resurrected Christ enables John to have a new vision of what it means to be a disciple of Christ.

Who do you say Jesus is?

If you were asked by Christ today the very question that he posed to the disciples how would you respond?

We are called, like John, to recognize the glory of the holy, risen Christ. We should move from seeing Christ simply as our teacher, to acknowledging his holiness and sovereign majesty. Though we do not see him in his full glory, like John did, we are given a glimpse of his holiness in the Word.

What should our response be to the holy, risen Christ?

The only appropriate response is, like John, to fall down and worship Christ and to bear witness to his holiness.

How to respond to the truth about Jesus

Our new identity in Christ calls us to not simply be followers of Christ, but to be holy like Christ (1 Peter 1:16). Christ calls us to be obedient children who have been ransomed from death to new life.

Our hope is not in ourselves, our behavior, or our acceptance by others. Rather it is in the resurrected Christ, who purchased our redemption, thereby redeeming us, cleansing us, restoring the image of God in us, and enabling us to have a new nature, like his.

Our new nature enables us to love God and love others, pointing ultimately to Christ’s character and glory (Mark 12:30-31).

God promises to complete the good work that he has begun in us (Phil. 1:6). Our hope and faith are not based on our good work, but on Christ’s good work already completed. We await in faith and hope, both gifts given to us, to see his work finally completed in us at the second coming.


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