“You are the Christ, the Son of the living God” (Matthew 16:16).

If you have been walking through each of the daily readings through Mark, this quote from Peter might sound very familiar and you would be correct. For the Mark parallel version of this account was presented this past Thursday: “You are the Messiah” (Mark 8:29). Peter is saying more than he is aware of because he is speaking through the inspiration of the Holy Spirit not from his own insight, not as man does but as God does. He is recognizing that Jesus is the long awaited Messiah, but still not with full comprehension, as again we saw in Mark’s account when he Peter sought to rebuke Jesus for saying what kind of Messiah he would be.

That Jesus is the Messiah, the Christ, the Anointed One for whom the people of Israel have been waiting for with great anticipation, is beyond what anyone could have even imagined. Peter, in Matthew’s account, also stated that Jesus is “the Son of the living God.” Messiah and Son of God, bringing to the fore that Jesus is the preeminent priest, prophet, and king. Jesus indeed was the One to “gather the tribes and cleanse the temple and defeat Israel’s enemies” and Peter knew “that there was something qualitatively different about his Master” (Barron, 100).

Jesus does not hide or sidestep Peter’s affirmation. He commends Peter by saying, “Blessed are you, Simon son of Jonah.” (Matthew 16:17). Imperfect Peter, shared the deposit of faith that is the ground of what we believe as Christians. Jesus not only affirms this statement but goes further and renames Simon as Peter. Throughout the Bible when there are those who follow the will of God through their acts of faith they are renamed, as was Abram who became Abraham. Simon becomes Peter, the rock, upon which Jesus will build his Church.

Our lives will be changed when we not only accept this truth but like Peter follow Jesus. Step by faithful step, we come to know, Jesus the Christ, the Son of the living God. At each Mass we can behold Jesus re-presented on the altar, receive him, and consume him so that we can be transformed by his love. In reading these accounts we are invited to meditate, pray, and listen to God speaking to us through them. Being nourished by the Gospels we can then like, Peter, think, speak, and act not as humans do, but as God does.

When we allow God in, he will touch our minds, hearts, and the depths of our souls to reveal to us our sins and those areas of our lives in need of healing. Not to condemn us, but to free and heal us. When we trust in Jesus, when we are willing to take up our cross and follow him, our lives will never be the same. There is a freedom and love that we will experience that is beyond anything that we can ever imagine and it continues to expand and grow the more we receive and share what we have received.

Let us meditate on this great testament of faith given to us by Peter our first Pope. Let us ponder what it means that Jesus is the Christ the Son of the living God, and that he came to forgive and heal, guide and lead us to be members of his Church, the Body of Christ, so that we may conquer evil and reign with him in this life and into the next.


Photo: St. Peter with the keys in front of St. Peter’s Basilica. Accessed from Vaticannews.va

Link for the Mass readings for Saturday, February 22, 2025

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