The Questions of Christ

The Questions of Christ

Carl Pollard

It’s always refreshing to spend time with young children. Often, we as adults aren’t always willing to be honest. No worries about that with young kids; they are brutally honest. If you ask a small child, “How do I look?,” you will get the truth. Emily’s nephew, when he was around 3-4, came up to me while I was sitting on the couch and asked why my stomach moved so much when I laughed. It wasn’t an insult; he was genuinely curious. You’re going to get the honest truth from the young, and maybe that’s not such a bad thing! 

If you spend any amount of time with children, you’ll also be guaranteed to get a million questions. 

“What’s this?” “Why?” Our cousin, when he was younger, would ask “why?” to every thing you said. But everything is new and unknown to a child. Asking questions is how they learn! This is something worth imitating. Never stop asking questions, as questions are how we grow! That’s one thing you’ll never hear a know it all do: ask a question. Especially in our spiritual lives, we must never stop asking questions. 

In His ministry, Jesus was always asking questions. These were asked not out of ignorance, but because His questions got those listening to think. His questions made people confused, angry, sad, curious, and excited. These questions are worthy of our attention as we try to answer some personally, that He asked His followers. 

“Why are you afraid?” 

“Why do you call me good?” 

“Where is your faith?” 

Each of these need answering on a personal level. Jesus’ natural response when confronted was to ask a question. If He were to look at your personal life, what questions would He ask? He sees your faith now, and there are questions we need to answer. 

Christ sees our hearts, He knows our thoughts, He watches our daily actions. 

What would the Son of God ask of me? 

If you were to count every question posed by Jesus from start to finish you’d find around 307. Why? Why so many questions? Perhaps, it’s because when we ask ourselves questions, we grow. And Jesus is solely concerned about our spiritual growth. 

When we ask ourselves questions, or we read a question from Jesus, we are forced to ponder the answer. Why DO I call the Lord good? Where IS my faith? Why AM I afraid? 

Asking the right questions is everything. 

Answering the perfect questions of Christ is essential if we are going to grow in our faith. 

“Who Do You Say That I Am?” (Matthew 16:15)

In the verses leading up to this point Jesus asks His disciples who the people think He is. The apostles begin answering with some of the things they have heard the people say. “Some say you’re John the Baptist. Others say Elijah or Jeremiah. Some say you’re a prophet.” There were many who acknowledged the Lord’s power and wisdom. 

His miracles were too blatant to ignore, so that even the Pharisees acknowledged He was a miracle worker. The people heard Him teach, they saw His interactions with the sick, the blind, the possessed. Their conclusion? He is a prophet! 

In verse 15, Jesus narrows the focus. His first question was broad, concerned with how everyone saw Him. Notice what He asks next: “But who do YOU say that I Am?” Who you believe Jesus is can only be answered by YOU. 

Many in our culture believe Jesus existed, but He was just a good teacher, a wise man, or a prophet. Many in our part of the country even believe that He is the Son of God. 

But who do YOU say that He is? Our personal view of Christ determines how much we will take what He says seriously. 

Who is Christ to you? Do you truly believe in Him? Peter responds in verse 16 with the answer we should all have for this question. 

“You are the Christ (anointed one), the Son of the Living God.” This is the only right answer. If we are unable to grasp the implications of this statement, we may need to spend more time in God’s word. The fact that Jesus is the Son of God is the SOLE reason we have eternal life. Many will go their entire life claiming to believe Jesus is the Son of God, but never live as though this were true. 

Who do You say that Christ Is? 

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