Then Jesus said to his disciples, "If anyone would come after me, he must deny himself and take up his cross and follow me." - Matthew 16:24.
What does it mean to be a follower of Jesus?
Followers of Jesus choose to
pursue Him. Followers of Jesus can look at today, compare it to the same day last
year, and say, “Yes, I am closer to Jesus and I am more like Jesus today than I
was on this day last year.” There is an assurance of that.
You see, the word following implies forward movement; it
implies a pursuit or chasing after Jesus. And, so it stands to reason that if I
am following Jesus, I will be on a forward-moving journey with Him, and in that
journey I will become more like Him, and my today will not be the same as my
yesterday.
I’ll go so far as to say those who today are no closer to
Jesus than last year, well, they aren’t really following Jesus at all. More
than likely, these good people are simply church Christians who believe church
attendance, church busyness and participation in church stuff is synonymous
with following Jesus. Churchyness (my word) can contribute to the spiritual journey of
following Jesus, but for many it does not. Churchyness is largely a clinical exercise to meet
cultural expectation: I want people to know I am associated with a church so they will believe that I am a good person. If I were Satan, I would love, love, love people to buy into that theology.
Look at what the prophet Isaiah writes in Isaiah 51:1: “Listen
to me, you who pursue righteousness and who seek the Lord: Look to the rock
from which you were cut and to the quarry from which you were hewn.” We are called
to “pursue” and to “seek” Jesus; we are called to be moving forward in our
faith journey. We are called to be followers.
In Philippians 3:12-16, Paul writes, “but I press on to take
hold of that for which Christ Jesus took hold of me” and “But one thing I do:
Forgetting what is behind and straining toward what is ahead, I press on toward
the goal to win the prize for which God has called me heavenward in Christ
Jesus.” Paul says we are to be moving forward, following Jesus, “pressing on”
and “straining toward.” Am I? Are you? Is your today significantly more close to Jesus than your yesterday? Ask your spouse. Ask your parents. Ask your friends.
It’s all easier said than done, frankly, because we live in
a broken and sinful world, and because we are broken and sinful people. But,
that does not excuse us from being on the journey. In fact, we are guaranteed
the journey will be hard and also that few will actually choose to take this
narrow way. Jesus says in Matthew 7:13-14, "Enter through the narrow gate. For wide is the gate and broad is the road that leads to destruction, and many enter through it. But small is the gate and narrow the road that leads to life, and only a few find it."
At this writing, Vicki has me on a diet. To be on that diet
requires life changes on my part and a diligent moving forward. I am on a journey. At the end, I will be different than I am today. But,
along the way, I will face temptation and may even slip backward. In fact,
unless I am diligent and focused, I will choose to fail. And, then I will no
longer be able to say that I am on a diet at all. I can “watch what I eat” and lie
about being on a diet, but I know that I won’t really be on a diet at all. On
the other hand, I might stumble on the diet, regroup and begin the journey
again. Even though I have slipped, I can still claim to be on the diet because I
am continuing to move forward.
So often, the faith journey - following Jesus - is a two steps forward and one step backward journey, but it is still about making that one step of progress. It's always about moving forward and being more like Jesus.
Life is constantly calling us backward to the easy, to the
comfortable, to the “be like everyone else” and if you and I succumb to that,
we will never be able to follow Jesus. Nothing about that cross is easy or
comfortable or like “everyone else."
In summary:
Following Jesus is about saying:
- My life is better, more peaceful, more joyful and more hopeful when I set my eyes on Jesus and decide to follow Him.
- By following Jesus, what I really mean is that I will respect Him as my leader, and pursue Him. He is in front of me, and I will chase Him and pursue Him toward a goal of being more like Him. What does that mean? I will intentionally choose to (a) completely love people – all people – not just in words, but in deeds; (b) extend undeserved forgiveness to people; (c) see beyond the surface attitudes of people to understand the motivations, and then minister to them; and (d) I will build relationships with all people – all people – and help them discover joy, peace and hope that’s only found in Jesus Christ. I will call others to pursue Jesus and pray to see them baptized according to Matthew 28:19.
And, I know that I as I draw close to Jesus, and as I follow Him, it will be very difficult to maintain the pursuit.
- People won’t understand. They will raise an eyebrow, and I can expect following Jesus to reshuffle the deck of my relationships. I will gain new friends; I will lose old friends. It will be joyful and painful all at the same time. In the end, though, it will be peaceful.
- I can expect following Jesus to cost me something. It might cost me a job. It might cost me position. It might cost me time and money. Jesus' sacrifice on that cross was costly to Him; following Him and becoming like Him will absolutely cost me. There is no cheap grace; only a costly, expensive grace. That's why it's the narrow way and few really choose it.
- As the white hot light of the cross burns my sinful nature, the pressure of it all will cause me to retreat into the darkness of my sinful nature. And, I will find myself in a sorrowful place because my retreat will grieve the Holy Spirit within me. And, I can expect Jesus to find me and ask, “Scott, what are you doing? Are you a believer or not? In or out? Let’s get back on the journey.” And, I will decide to follow or not.
What I have learned about following my Jesus:
- I must be intentional about it. The world is calling me away from Jesus; following Him requires my absolute focus and best effort.
- I must allow the Holy Spirit to place me around people – even people that make me feel uncomfortable - for encouragement and correction; love and service.
- I must look beyond what I want and see what others need. And, then I must respond the best that I can. And, where I can't respond, I will mobilize others to respond.
- The call on my life is not to be perfect; the call of my life is to simply focus my life on being more Christ-like and allowing the Holy Spirit to guide my thoughts, actions and my attitudes.
- I must anchor my life in Scripture and prayer.
- The world will notice, my family will notice, my friends will notice, and following Jesus will tighten some of my relations and loosen others. Following Jesus comes with a cost, but it is a cost worth paying.
- I only understand a fraction of all this, but I understand all that I need to know. I need Jesus, others need Jesus, and it is my responsibility to follow Jesus – to work to be more like him – each and every day of my life so that others can see and know Jesus because of His reflection on me.
- If my today is not closer to Jesus that my yesterday, I am not following Jesus at all.
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