When we
were on vacation we met all kinds of different people. At a rest stop in Montana we met a couple
who were probably about our age who had just retired and were traveling around
with no specific destination in mind. Although we didn't pursue the
conversation very far, I wondered if their plan was to spend the rest of their
life doing that.
We also met
a very nice young man who was our guide on a kayak expedition in Clayoquot
Sound. As we chatted with him we discovered that he grew up on a farm in Ontario and had come to
Tofino to surf. It seemed as if his purpose for living was to surf and the
guiding job was just something he needed to let him live there and surf.
In both of
these cases, it seemed as if the purpose for living for these people was their
recreation. There is nothing wrong with vacations or recreation. We all need
times of rest and refreshment, but I wonder about how people can make that
their reason for living? Yet I know that we have to be careful not to be too
critical because as I look at my life and reflect on the life of other people I
know, I sometimes wonder what our purpose for living is. What is the life
principle by which we live? As I ask that question, I don't mean the life
principle by which we say we live, but the one we really live. The purpose and
principle of life by which we live is revealed by what we actually do. If
someone was to look at how we use our time, how we spend our money and what
occupies our mind, what would they say our purpose for life is?
I. Jesus Gave His Life
We call
ourselves Christians and the term Christian implies being a follower of Christ.
As we think about our purpose for
living, as Christians, it would be good to look at the purpose for living that
Jesus had. How did Jesus live His life? By what principle did He live?
When we
read this we discover first of all that Jesus life was focused on God's
project. The word "must" is often used in Scripture to describe a
divine necessity. Since the beginning of time, God has had a project to bring
the people He created to Himself. Jesus came into this world in obedience to
His Father and so His life was focused on God's project. He wanted to do
whatever was necessary in order to do what God wanted. In order to do so He was
willing to suffer. The purpose of Jesus was not suffering, but if suffering was
needed to accomplish God's purposes, he was willing to suffer. And He did
suffer when he was mocked and beaten. He was willing to be rejected. His
purpose was not to be rejected, but to accomplish God's purposes. Yet if it was
necessary for him to be rejected He was willing to be rejected because He came
to do God's will. And He was rejected by the Jewish religious leaders. He was
also willing to sacrifice his own life. His purpose was not to die, but to
bring salvation to all people and the only way for Him to accomplish that was
to die. And so Jesus died on a cross. Jesus' life was about God's will and
doing what God wanted Him to do. He was willing to let go of his own life and
agenda in order to accomplish God's. In the end, through the resurrection, He
did accomplish God's plan and was glorified.
Jesus' life
was about serving His Father. He did not come to this earth to be born, to
procreate, to gather as many toys as possible and to live as long as possible. He
came to offer Himself to do God's will.
II. Being A Jesus Follower
As we read
that, we are thankful that Jesus came to accomplish God's purpose. Yet in a way
we recognize that He was a unique individual and expect that Jesus would be totally
focused on God's purposes. Because of that thinking, we are tempted to
disconnect what Jesus did from what is expected of us, but we can't do that
because the very next thing Jesus says in this passage is, "If any want to
become my followers." Being a Christian means belonging to Christ and it
means following Christ. It is not simply about accepting the gift of salvation,
saying thank-you and going on our own merry way. If we accept the gift of
salvation, it comes to us by being followers of Jesus and we realize that the
example of Jesus is an example for us to follow. If we call ourselves followers
of Jesus, then we need to follow the example of Jesus as well. In Luke 9:23 , 24 , Jesus tells us what
following Him will mean.
A. Deny Yourself
If we are
to follow Jesus, the Bible says that we must deny ourselves. Jesus denied
Himself when he left heaven. We can perhaps understand the willingness to leave
our air conditioned homes to go work at camp and stay in a non-air-conditioned
cabin, but that is a far cry from leaving heaven to come to earth as a baby as
Jesus did.
What does
it mean for us to deny ourselves? It doesn't mean buying everything at the
dollar store or picking the poorest quality or not enjoying life. It is much
more difficult than that. It means that our life isn't ours any more. The
questions we need to answer are, Are we living for ourselves? Is Christianity
our life or just a part of our life? Is Jesus at the center or are we? If we
are followers of Jesus we do not belong to ourselves, but to Him who gave His
life for us. LABC says, "Believers must be willing to make the pursuit of
God more important than the selfish pursuit of pleasure."
B. Take Up Your Cross
But denial
of self is only the first step. The next step in following Jesus is to take up
our cross daily.
Jesus very
literally took up His cross. He was given the cross to carry to His place of
execution and then he was placed on the cross and died there. We have no
question about what it meant for Jesus to take up His cross, but we do wonder what
it means for us to take up our cross.
Most of us,
however, will not be called upon to do that. Does this passages still mean
something to us even if potential martyrdom is far from us? Can we really
engage with this passage if crucifixion is such an extremely remote
possibility? Does it mean anything to us if it isn't a decision we will ever
have to make?
I think
there is another way of looking at this. Jesus took up His cross because that
was the task that God had for Him. When Jesus prayed in the Garden of Gethsemane He
asked for God to remove the need for His death. But it becomes clear that the
cross was the only way that God could accomplish His plan through Jesus.
Repeatedly in the gospels, including in the verse we just read in Luke 9:23 , Jesus indicated that
He had come in order to die. That was God's purpose for Jesus.
We will
likely not have to take up a cross in the literal sense of the word because
that is not the call of God on our life. For us to take up our cross means to do
what God wants us to do. The first step of being a follower of Jesus is to say
that our life is no longer our life. The second step is to let God know that we
are prepared to do whatever He wants us to do for Him. To take up our cross is
to commit to God's will for our life. For Jesus that was taking up the cross,
for us, it will be something else, but the intention is the same. Are we
willing to do what God calls us to do for Him? Is it the purpose of our life to
accomplish God's will for our life. If we do that, we will be doing what Jesus
did.
It is
interesting that the text says that we need to do this daily. How realistic and
how helpful to read the word "daily" because we know very well that
it is a decision that must be made daily. If Jesus re-evaluated His purpose in
life in the Garden
of Gethsemane then surely
it is not surprising that we also need to make this decision to choose daily to
accomplish God's purpose for our life. Ellis says, "Luke stresses the need
for a daily renewal of such an attitude."
C. Follow Jesus
The final
way in which we imitate Jesus is that we follow Him. How do we follow Him?
We follow
Jesus by doing the things we just talked about. Jesus denied Himself and if we
deny ourselves, we follow Jesus. Jesus was committed to the task God gave Him,
even going to the cross. If we focus on God's purpose for our life, we will
also be following Jesus.
But there
are other ways of following Jesus that we should probably mention as well. We
follow Jesus by doing things the way Jesus did them. Jesus lived a holy life
and if we seek to live a holy life, we will be following Jesus. Jesus was
filled with compassion and grace and demonstrated that compassion and grace in
all His relationships. If we exercise compassion and grace in all our relationships,
we will be following Jesus.
We will
also follow Jesus if we rest in Him. Several times in the last week, I have
heard a word of encouragement to rest in Jesus. The were based on Matthew 11:29 where we are
invited to take His yoke upon us and to discover that He is gentle and humble
and that in Him we will find rest. As we read these verses, we read them as a
hard thing. But we need to be careful to understand that following Jesus does
not mean working harder and harder to hand more and more of our life over to
Jesus. It is rather trusting Him, having given our all to Him and recognizing
that in Him we will find rest. Following Jesus means having the relationship
with Him that He had with the Father. A relationship of trust and hope.
III. The Importance Of Living This Principle
This is the
point which is actually made in verses 25, 26. Our attitude may be "Such a
life is so hard, how will I be able to deny myself and take up my cross." As
we read on, we see that Jesus puts a completely different perspective on it.
A. To Gain Abundant Life
In verse
24, Jesus said, "For those who want to save their life will lose it, and
those who lose their life for my sake will save it."
Have you
ever seen the T-shirts with the message, "He who dies with the most toys
wins." One response I saw to this was, "He who dies with the most
toys is dead." Based on this verse, my question, would be, "If
accumulating toys has been the pursuit of your life, have you ever really
lived?"
When we
were on vacation, I took the book on Harry Lehotsky's life out of the church library
and read it. It is really an amazing story which illustrates this verse. Harry
grew up in New York
and early on developed a passion for ministry in the inner city. Most of us
would think that purchasing a house in inner city Winnipeg and giving your life to ministry in
the inner city was a major sacrifice. Yet this was what he was called to and as
I read the story, I never got the impression that he felt he was making a huge
sacrifice or suffering. The impression I got was that he was exactly where God
wanted him and that he had joy in serving where he was.
If we
pursue safety, abundance and pleasure and that is what our life is about, we
will not find life. I believe that we will eventually find boredom because we
have no eternal purpose for living.
If we are
willing to deny ourselves and take up the life that God intends for us, then we
will find life. I have personally discovered this in my life. Several times I
have gone where I did not at first really want to go, but have found that going
where God wanted me has brought great meaning and joy.
If we are
willing to give up our life, the life we will find is a life filled with purpose
and joy and hope. If we give our lives to Jesus, we will find life because we will
be doing what God has created us for. How great it is to be doing what God has
created us for.
B. To Gain Eternal Life
But as we
read verse 26 we discover that there is another very serious way in which we
lose our life if we don't give our lives to Jesus.
The other
day Jeremy told me that at Drive Through Prayer he had observed the reaction of
a person who cycled by. The cyclist had noticed those sitting there, then saw
the signs explaining that they were praying and then cycling away shaking his
head. This was unusual because most people who pass by are encouraging and
supportive. Jeremy mentioned that his initial reaction to this was to feel self
conscious. I can certainly understand that reaction. Identification with Jesus
is a way of sacrifice. It is sacrifice not only in the sense that we need to
deny our own way and follow Jesus' way. It is also a sacrifice in the sense
that it is not the most popular way in the world. Recently someone mentioned
people they knew who are vigorously anti-religious. Representing Jesus to them
will not be a popular thing to do. Most people around us do not assume that
Jesus is the way, the truth and the life. To follow Jesus will definitely be a
counter-cultural thing to do. All of us face the challenge of being followers
of Jesus in this context in one way or another. There are times when it is just
much easier being quiet about our love for Jesus. There are times when we would
like to point to Jesus, but we are afraid of the consequences and so we remain
silent. There are times when the church has given up on Jesus and simply tried
to present a message of niceness and helpfulness and love.
Following
Jesus means that we must not be afraid to live for Jesus, represent Jesus and
speak for Jesus no matter how unpopular it is. Of course, we still need to earn
the right to be heard, we need to be loving and sensitive and all of that, but
when our life is put on the line, following Jesus means that we stand with
Jesus.
If we do
not, our very eternity is in jeopardy. That is the message of Luke 9:26 , which says,
"Those who are ashamed of me and of my words, of them the Son of Man will
be ashamed when he comes in his glory and the glory of the Father and of the
holy angels."
For some of
us it is actual persecution which may cause us to be ashamed of Jesus' name.
For some of us the possibility of mockery may cause us to be ashamed of Jesus
name. For others of us, adopting the values of having fun and seeking safety
may cause us to be ashamed of Jesus' name. But the message of Jesus in this
passage reminds us that denying ourselves, taking up our cross and following
Jesus is the only way that we will gain eternal life. If we reject that way, if
we are ashamed of His way of sacrifice, ashamed of His name or ashamed of Him, we
will lose our life in the sense that we will lose our eternal life. Marshall says, "A
person who wishes to preserve his own way of life by avoiding self-denial or
martyrdom will lose his life, i.e. at the final judgment, and will not enjoy it
in the age to come."
Conclusion
So what we have here is a principle of life.
Jesus was focused on the will of the Father and therefore was willing to deny
Himself by coming to this earth and willing to suffer death. As a consequence
he was raised up to reign eternally. The principle, as lived by Jesus, is that
if we are willing to give up our way and give ourselves to Him, God will
accomplish great things and give us life.
The
disciples of Jesus faced similar decisions. In the context of a passage that
speaks about how difficult it is for a rich man to enter the kingdom of heaven,
Peter commented in Luke 18:28 ,
"Look we have left our homes and followed you." Jesus responded by
affirming their decision and promising blessing and life including eternal life
for their decision.
Paul
certainly had made a decision to live by this principle. On several occasions
he expressed this. For example, in Philippians
1:21 he wrote, "For to me, living is Christ and dying is
gain." Kent
writes, "Christ had become for him the motive of his actions, the goal of
his life and ministry, the source of his strength." In Philippians 2:17 Paul wrote,
"But even if I am being poured out as a libation over the sacrifice and
the offering of your faith, I am glad and rejoice with all of you—"
What decisions
do you make as you contemplate what it means to deny yourself and take up your
cross to follow Jesus? It will mean different things for different people
because God's call to each of us is different. For some it will mean going to Africa . For me it has meant coming home. The key is
"What does Jesus want me to do and am I willing to do it?" I would
invite you to such a decision.
The
principle of the kingdom is that God has gained by sacrificing His life in
Christ. He calls us to gain by sacrificing our life for Christ.
As I have
thought about these things, I have wondered if it is a principle that pertains
to the church as well. I believe it would be an appropriate application of this
verse to suggest that if we as a church want to save our church life we will lose
it. If, on the other hand, we are willing to sacrifice our church life in order
to be loving servants to those who are lost, we will gain it. I recognize and
share the sentiments I have sometimes heard expressed that we need to get more people
to come to church. If our motivation for that sentiment is so that we can
preserve the church we have always had here, it seems to me we are going in the
opposite direction of this passage. It is a way of trying to save our life. I
believe that the way forward for our church is to follow the principle of this
passage and be willing to lose our life as a church in order to follow where
God wants us to go. We need to be willing to make the sacrifices necessary in
order that God can give life to our church. I would invite us to make that
choice. What would that mean to do so? I believe that instead of saying
"we need more young people to come to our church" we should say,
"who are the lost and broken we can serve." I believe it would mean
instead of saying, "come and see what we have going at our church" we
would say, "how can we go and love the broken of this world?" I think
this may be a very radical way of thinking and living, but I also believe that
this is one way of reading this text and following Christ. I also believe that
it is the way of God for our church.
At Christmas
2010 we were enjoying our family gathering at our home in Rosenort. As usual,
when there are people who are highly involved in church in the family, we were
discussing the church and also discussing things that were happening at Portage Avenue Church .
Anemone had just turned 3 years old and while we were discussing these things
she said, "Let it go and it will grow." We thought it interesting
that she said this and asked her, "Are you talking about the church?"
and she said, "yes." I have never forgotten that. I don't know if it
is guidance, or prophecy or a random statement, but I do believe that the text
we are looking at today says the same thing. Willingness to sacrifice ourselves
and serve God brings life from Him whether personally or in the church.
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