Dedicated discipleship
Luke
9:51–62 51When the days were
approaching for him to be taken up, Jesus was determined to go to Jerusalem. 52He
sent messengers ahead of him. They went and entered a Samaritan village to make
preparations for him. 53But the people did not welcome him, because
he was determined to go to Jerusalem. 54When his disciples James and
John saw this, they said, “Lord, do you want us to call down fire from heaven
to consume them?”
55But he turned and rebuked them.
“You don’t know what kind of spirit is influencing you. 56For the
Son of Man did not come to destroy people’s souls, but to save them.” Then they
went to another village.
57As they went on the way, a man said
to him, “I will follow you wherever you go.”
58Jesus said to him, “Foxes have
holes, and birds of the air have nests, but the Son of Man has no place to lay
his head.”
59He said to another man, “Follow
me!”
But he said, “Lord, first let me go and
bury my father.”
60Jesus told him, “Let the dead bury
their own dead, but you go and proclaim the kingdom of God.”
61Another man also said, “I will
follow you, Lord, but first let me say good-bye to those at my home.”
62Jesus told him,
“No one who puts his hand to the plow and looks back is fit for the kingdom of
God.”
Two weeks ago, I finally
brought my road bike out of the garage after getting flats in both tires last
fall. Since repairing the tires, I have logged about 200 miles in the past two
weeks. I’m working to get in shape for a one-day 100-mile bike ride in August.
My other goal is to log 2000 miles by December 31st.
For me to reach my goal means being
faithful - no days off. It means being committed – biking at least 11 miles a
day. It means being dedicated – biking in wind, rain, heat and cold. Biking in
Wisconsin is hard where our two seasons are 9 months of winter followed by 3
months of road construction.
It is the same for a high
school athlete who wants to earn a scholarship to a D-1 university. The athlete
needs to put in the time in the weight room, the soccer pitch, the basketball
court or the driving range.
It is the same for a student studying
at college or the electrician learning his trade or the teacher preparing her
classroom. There are long hours, lots of studying, foregoing vacations, getting
to work on time, staying late, etc.
You cannot succeed unless you
are driven, faithful, dedicated and committed. If that’s true for biking,
athletics, studies or career, it is even more true for our discipleship as Christians.
St. Luke reports: “When the
days were approaching for him to be taken up, Jesus was determined to go to
Jerusalem” (Luke 9:51). After his transfiguration on the mountain, Jesus is
walking along the road to Jerusalem to die on the cross for the salvation of
sinners. He is unwavering in his goal. Along the way Jesus meets some men who
wish to join his group of disciples. This is exciting! In a very short time,
Jesus is going to be sending out his seventy-two disciples (Luke 10:1). He
could always use a few more.
As Jesus is walking along the
road with his current disciples, a man walks up to him and says, “I will follow
you wherever you go” (Luke 9:58). Jesus always initiated the call to
discipleship. Remarkably, the Gospels never tell us about anyone offering to
follow Jesus and then successfully becoming a disciple. Jesus always confronts
their self-confidence.
Jesus does that again. Jesus
says to the man, “Foxes have holes, and birds of the air have nests, but the
Son of Man has no place to lay his head” (Luke 9:58).
The man has made a bold
promise to follow Jesus wherever he goes. No hardship will be too difficult. No
sacrifice will be too great. Does this man know where he is promising to go
with Jesus? Jesus is determined to go to Jerusalem – where he will be arrested,
beaten, scourged and crucified.
Jesus lovingly warns the would-be
disciple that foxes and birds have more than the Son of Man does on earth. There
are no comfy pillows or air-conditioned rooms. Following Jesus means constantly
being on the move, being uncomfortable, treasuring heavenly things more than
earthly things, giving up a home and regular family life to be a dedicated
disciple of Jesus.
As he is walking, Jesus sees
another man and invites him, “Follow me!” But this man replies, “Lord, first
let me go and bury my father” (Luke 9:59). That sounds like a perfectly reasonable
reply.
Jesus responds to the man’s
excuse, “Let the dead bury their own dead, but you go and proclaim the kingdom
of God” (Luke 9:60). That sounds a little harsh, doesn’t it? Yet, in their
Jewish culture, if the man’s father had just died, this son would be at the
funeral, not on the road talking to Jesus. The Jews buried their dead within 24
hours. If the father had died, the son would have been busy making funeral
plans.
What the man was probably
saying to Jesus was, “Lord, I appreciate the invitation, but let me go take
care of my family obligations first. You know, like my elderly father dying
someday. Then, when the funeral is over, I will be right there proclaiming your
kingdom.”
This man put his family responsibilities
first and sharing his Savior second. Proclaiming the kingdom of God must have top
priority. God can never take second place. As important as earthly responsibilities
are, they can never take precedence over being a dedicated disciple of Jesus.
Service to Christ requires our whole-hearted obedience and our undivided
attention.
Burial is not Jesus’ concern.
Resurrection is. Jesus is not in the burying business. He is in the business of
confronting death and removing saints from their graves. Jesus is headed to Jerusalem
where death will meet its match. There the Lord of life will die … and bring about
the destruction of death.
A third would-be disciple
offers, “I will follow you, Lord, but first let me say good-bye to those at my
home” (Luke 9:61). A simple goodbye. What could be wrong with that? Maybe a
little going-away party. Jesus looks into this man’s heart and sees his desire
to see his family is stronger than his desire to serve the Lord. As sanctified
as his answer is, Jesus understands it as an excuse not to follow Jesus right
away.
Jesus uses a farming
analogy, “No one who puts his hand to the plow and looks back is fit for the
kingdom of God” (Luke 9:62). Any farmer will tell you that you cannot plow
straight if you are looking over your shoulder. You cannot move forward
correctly if you are constantly pining for the past. You cannot follow Jesus if
you are distracted by what’s going on around you. Being a dedicated disciple
means always putting service to Christ even over service to those within our
family.
These three
would-be disciples handed in their discipleship applications to Jesus. But, sadly,
all three have something that holds them back. There is something that keeps
them from dedicated discipleship.
What about you?
Are you ready to
put in the long hours it takes to study the Bible – at church, at home, with
your family?
Are you willing to
stop binge watching TV to put your children to bed with a kiss, a Bible story
and a prayer?
Are you content to
put your projects at home aside for a time so projects in your church home can
be completed?
Are you comfortable
standing up for your Christianity while everyone else around you is sitting
down?
Are you devoted to
worshiping your Savior every single worship service and not just when it is
convenient for you?
Are you
enthusiastic to be a committed Christian, not just one hour a week in church or
from 4 to 9 pm while your kids are home or from 9 to 5 when you are at work,
but all the time, every moment, 24/7?
Are you passionate
about being a dedicated disciple of Christ?
Jesus gives some
tough words to these would-be disciples. These are difficult words for us
lukewarm disciples. Jesus means serious business. His words are urgent. They
are hard, edgy, and demanding. His claim on our discipleship is radical. It is
all or nothing. No halfway disciples. No compromises. No misplaced priorities.
Remember, Jesus
was determined to go to Jerusalem to the cross. This was radical! The Son of
God dying for sinners! It was all or nothing. It meant either salvation or
damnation for us. Jesus could not go halfway. He could not compromise. We were
his priority!
You might be able
to ride your bike 100 miles or pull an all-nighter studying or put in long
hours working in sweltering heat. You can make yourself dedicated, committed
and faithful. But you can’t do that with Christianity. You will always falter.
You will always fall. You will always fail.
The only way that
you are willing to take your cross to follow Jesus is because Jesus has already
gone to the cross for you. His salvation is your motivation. His cross is your
catalyst. His propitiation is your provocation. His resurrection is your reason
for action.
To follow Jesus
means to go to the cross with him. To lose your life to let Jesus save it. To
become least to receive Jesus’ greatness. To admit your weakness to receive
Jesus’ righteousness. To give up everything to receive everything from Jesus.
To die in order to really live.
We are not asking
Jesus if we can follow him. He extends his discipleship invitation to us. By
the power of the Holy Spirit in us, we accept his gracious invitation. We take
up our crosses daily and follow him (Luke 9:23).
One way we visibly
show that we are following Jesus’ cross is by physically following Jesus’
cross. We lift high our processional
cross in our festival services like Epiphany, Palm Sunday, Easter, Pentecost, Reformation,
Christ the King and Christmas Day. With our eyes, we follow the cross from the
back to the front of the church. This represents everything Jesus tells us
would-be disciples - Jesus wants us to lay everything and everyone else aside,
keep our eyes fixed on his cross and follow him through life, into death, and
into life eternal.
There are probably
many churches today that do not have a processional cross. Maybe that’s because
they don’t know its history. Processions were used in the earliest days of
Christian worship for practical reasons – the pastors and choir members needed
a way to get from the back to the front of the church. There were no sacristies
in those days where the pastor could just walk out by the altar. It was very
practical then for ministers of the gospel to enter the church in a procession.
They would follow a raised cross on a pole – a processional cross.
Processional
crosses were used in Christian churches hundreds of years before crosses were
ever placed on altars.
A processional
cross is either an empty cross or a crucifix with the corpus or body of Christ
on it. The cross is affixed to a pole and raised in procession into and out of
the sanctuary.
Epiphany first
used our processional cross 9 years ago for the Festival of Pentecost. Our
cross was made specifically for Epiphany to match our oak woodwork, yet it was
stained a little lighter to still stand out. The cross is made of oak,
bloodwood, canary wood and curly maple. The nimbus or halo around the cross is
reminiscent of the ancient Celtic cross and symbolizes eternity. The Celtic
cross I wear around my neck matches our processional cross. The design of the
corpus or body of Christ surrounded by the asymmetrical mosaic symbolizes how
Jesus was made sin for us, so that in him we might become the righteousness of
God (2 Corinthians 5:21). The mosaic looks broken because we are whole in
Christ.
The cross is placed next to the pulpit where the sermon is
preached as a reminder that “Christ crucified” is the central message of all Christian
teaching (1 Corinthians 1:23).
Again, practically
speaking, churches today have sacristies, so they do not need to lift a cross
in processional to enter the sanctuary. Yet there is deep symbolism in the
processional cross. As we “Lift High the Cross” and see it carried through the
assembly and into the chancel, it teaches that we can approach the altar of God
in worship only through Jesus’ sacrifice on the cross (1 John 2:1-2). Martin
Luther College where our WELS teachers and pre-seminary students are taught and
Wisconsin Lutheran Seminary where our pastors are trained each have a
processional cross for festival worship.
We are determined
to take up our crosses to follow Christ who was determined to go to Jerusalem
to the cross. May the processional cross remind us to set everything else aside,
make Christ’s kingdom a priority, and look only ahead to Jesus so that he may
make us determined disciples. Amen.
Comments
Post a Comment