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?

“Jesus Wept”

”Jesus wept.”    John 11:35

As every Sunday School kid who has to memorize Scripture knows, this is the shortest (and easiest to learn) verse in the Bible.

But its size is not indicative of the deep spiritual insight it gives into the thinking of Christ Jesus.

Why on earth would Jesus cry?

Was he sad, was he upset?  What was going on that moved him to tears?

Let’s set the scene.  It’s about a week before Passover (and Jesus’ crucifixion).  Jesus has just returned with his disciples to Bethany because he received word that his dear friend Lazarus was gravely ill.  When he arrives, he learns that Lazarus has already been in the tomb four days.  “He’s too late,” is what everybody’s thinking.

Jesus asks to see the burial place and begins to weep.  From the way he was crying, those around him could tell that Jesus loved Lazarus.  But they assumed he was sad.  And I have heard prominent preachers declare emphatically that Jesus was crying because he was grieving for Lazarus.

Nothing could be farther from the truth.

Did Jesus think he was too late?  Absolutely not!  He knew exactly what he was about to do.  He actually had delayed his arrival on purpose and had told his disciples that he was glad he had not been there so their faith would be strengthened when they saw what he would do (see John 11:6,15).

Jesus had a very different perspective on death, what it was—and what it wasn’t.  Jesus knew he would call Lazarus out of that tomb.

In fact, he had just comforted Martha that Lazarus would rise again. She thought he meant here-after, at the Last Day.  Jesus emphatically declared “I am the resurrection, and the life.”  Not was.  Not will be.  But here and now.  Jesus insisted he was the resurrection and the life that very moment—and every moment for all eternity.

But why did Jesus even go to the trouble of resurrecting Lazarus?  If Lazarus was going to be resurrected at the Last Day as Martha believed, what difference did it make?  In eternity, isn’t that all that really matters?

Obviously Jesus didn’t feel that way.  He took the grand truths of eternity and applied them to every day life.  The human condition was his laboratory for proving the omnipotence and love of God.

Take away the stone.

So Jesus comes to the tomb and he tells those nearby, “Take ye away the stone.”  Notice Jesus says “ye” which is second person plural.  It obviously will take more than one person to roll back the heavy stone at the entrance of the cave.

Martha’s immediate reaction was:  Why bother, he’s been in there four days and stinks by now.  How utterly disrespectful this action might have seemed to her.  She hadn’t yet glimpsed what Jesus was about to do.

Now just imagine how long it must have taken for a bunch of strong men to move that stone.  Probably a good long while.   If you had been one of the men rolling back the stone, what would you have been thinking at this point?   What was everyone else thinking?  How was their thinking evolving from being absolutely certain that Lazarus was dead, to curiosity as to what Jesus was going to do, and finally to expecting something amazing to happen?

The very command to roll away the stone helped to dissolve the conviction that Lazarus’ death was irreversible.  The removal of the stone allowed expectation to fill its place.  The stone represents fear, doubt, disbelief, and defeat.  It is the feeling of hopelessness in the face of all the material world throws at us.

And then of course, Jesus spoke those powerful words, “Lazaurs, come forth.”   And Lazarus stepped forth to the astonishment of everyone except Jesus.

So why did Jesus cry?

He was not sad.  He was not discouraged.  They were tears of joy, tears of victory and deep spiritual gratitude—gratitude to God for delivering Jesus himself from death after the crucifixion.

Jesus knew in a week’s time he would be facing his own death.  Lazarus’ emergence form the tomb foreshadowed Jesus’ own victory over the grave in his resurrection.  And Jesus knew it with absolute certainty.  God was reassuring Jesus that death could not defeat him.   It was God’s promise to his dearly beloved Son that death did not have the final say and that Christ destroys the power of death.

Christ has given us the victory over death.

Do we obey when Christ tells us to take away the stone?

Do we come forth when he calls us from the grave of sin, discouragement, and self-condemnation, etc.?

Obey Christ’s call.  Come forth.

“He is risen” in our hearts.

Happy Easter.