Can You Follow Jesus for 20 Days?

Jesus and the Samaritan woman

Jesus and the Woman of Samaria at Jacob’s Well

Jesus said, “If ye love me, keep my commandments.” John 14:15

How serious are you about following Jesus’ example in your daily life?

Well, it’s time to take it up to a new level.

A friend invited me to this Facebook event her church is promoting for the first 20 days of February.

The idea is to be spiritually radical in following specific examples from Jesus’ life.  Not dogmatically, but practically, in the spirit of the Good Samaritan.

Here’s the way it works:

20 Days. 20 Radical Acts.

Here’s the invitation from their Facebook page (see the link below):

“Are you up for the Challenge? Jesus taught it. Can you live it?

“Join the TMC Youth Community around the world for this challenge. Starting February 1st, we’re going to commit to focusing on one Radical Act a day and then share how we’ve put it into practice or gotten better insight about it.”

They pretty  much leave it up to you as to how literal you want to take these directives.  Personally, I’d start with the spirit of each one.  But let the Holy Spirit move you.

 Here’s the schedule:

 2/1 – Be childlike

2/2 – Befriend lepers, prostitutes, “undesirables”

2/3 – Cast the beam out of your own eye

2/4 – Challenge Pharisees

2/5 – Do good to people that hate you

2/6 – Feed the hungry, clothe the naked, shelter strangers, visit prisoners

2/7 – Forgive 70 X 7

2/8 – Heal the sick, cast out evil, raise the dead

2/9 – Let your light shine

2/10-Live more abundantly

2/11-Lose your life to find it

2/12-Love your neighbor as yourself

2/13-Multiply loaves and fishes

2/14-Seek the kingdom first – don’t worry about food/drink/clothing

2/15-Sell what you have – give to the poor

2/16-Take up your bed and walk

2/17-Travel without a wallet

2/18-Turn water into wine

2/19-Walk on water

2/20-Wash someone’s feet

 

Here’s the link if you want to officially participate: Follow Jesus’ Example for 20 Days   I encourage you to join in because people will be sharing how they have tried to put these ideas into practice and we can all learn from each other.

Will you accept the challenge?

If you do, just say “I accept” in the comment section below.

You will bless others and God will bless you.

James

 

 

To Follow Christ Daily

“And [Jesus] said to them all, If any man will come after me, let him deny himself, and take up his cross daily, and follow me.”   Luke 9:23

Well there it is, Jesus’ simple plan for being a Christian.  It’s not some complicated theology of salvation.  It’s not some theoretical discussion or intellectual journey.

It’s a straightforward demand that is not complicated but takes commitment.  It is simple but profound.  And it is not necessarily the easiest thing in the world… to leave all for Christ and actually follow him.

There were people in Jesus’ day who professed loyalty and vowed to follow him where ever he went (see Matt 8:19,20).  But I don’t think Jesus was looking for the kind of loyalty to his personality that some folks then and now lavish on a celebrity.

He didn’t want people just to traipse around, doggedly following his every move.  He wanted his disciples not to copy his behavior and words but to accept and follow his teachings, to live his ideas in their own lives.

He wanted disciples who would live according to God’s will instead of their own.

The first step:  deny yourself.

What on earth does that mean—to deny yourself?  To say we don’t exist?  Of course not.  Among other things, I think it means that we put our own will aside and seek God’s will. To please God instead of earthly personalities—including ourselves.

It is no small feat to get yourself out of the way so you can honestly and sincerely desire to do God’s will before your own.  But you can’t stop there.  It’s not enough to tell God you’re willing to do whatever He says.  You have to follow through and actually DO it.

We usually tell God what we want instead of asking what He wants.  Or as my friend Jim says, “We pray for God’s will and then tell Him what it is.”

It takes a humble heart to set aside even our most cherished hopes and dreams and trust ourselves totally to God’s care and live our lives accordingly.

But this IS something we can do.  Jesus did not make any demands on us that we could not fulfill.

Step two:  take up your cross daily.

I’ve always wondered at this saying.  Jesus had not yet been on the cross.  His disciples were unaware that he would be.  What did they think this meant at the time?  I bet they thought about this demand in a whole new light after Jesus’ crucifixion and resurrection.

To take up your cross is to face the world’s opposition to the truth that Jesus preached.  It looked like Jesus was destroyed by this opposition.  But just the opposite is true.  He was the ultimate victor.

Jesus gave his disciples the authority and dominion to cast out evil spirits and heal the sick.  Christ gives you and me the same authority today.

We are to take up our cross.  Jesus did not say: Let the cross take you up.  In other words, we do not need to feel that by taking up our cross that we are being crucified—although sometimes it certainly feels like it.

Jesus is not telling us to be crucified.  He is commanding us—and giving us authority—to take up the cross, to deal with and defeat the material world’s resistance to and hatred of spiritual Truth.

And in case you didn’t notice, he says “daily.”  It is a daily process, a way of life.  Not just a one-time or occasional effort.  To be a Christian requires day by day, step by step consistency.

Step three:  “follow me.”

Whoa!!  That’s a tall order.  Thousands and thousands of books have been written about what it means to follow Jesus.  So I won’t try to say too much here.

What did Jesus mean when he said simply, “Follow me”?

Jesus expected his disciples then and now to follow him:  to think the thoughts he thought, to act the way he acted, to love with the Father’s love as he did, to seek and do God’s will in everything.

Christ calls to each of us today, “Follow me.”  There is no call more urgent.

How will you respond?