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The Cost of Following Christ

August 14, 2018 by ChristianHolinessDaily

, “If anyone would come after me, he must deny himself and take up his cross daily and follow me” (Luke 9:23).What does it cost to follow Christ? For so long the Protestant Church in the West has taught how easy it is to believe in Christ that it is nearly sacrilege to speak of the cost of following Jesus. We teach the ABCs of salvation: “ask Jesus into your heart;” “believe in the name of Jesus;” and “confess your sins.” Then you will be saved. There is no mention of repentance. There is no teaching that we should take up our cross. There is no mention of the price is salvation.

Yet salvation does have a price. Of course we know that Jesus Himself paid the price, because nothing short of the death, burial, and resurrection of God could pay the price for the sins of the entire world …Because nothing we could do could ever earn our way into heaven.

Yet, Christ speaks of a cost. Think of the story of the Rich Young Ruler as it is found in the synoptic gospels (MT 19:16-30; MK10:17-31; LK18:18-30). The young man asks Jesus what must he do to attain eternal life. Jesus answers that he must keep all of the commandments.

The young man answers that he has done exactly that. Jesus then tells him, “Sell everything you own and give the money to the poor and the come and follow me.” The young man considers the cost and declines, going away sad. Why did he decline? The Bible tells us that he declined because he was very wealthy.

Why did Jesus answer this way? Well many Bible commentaries tell us that Jesus was talking about two different things: eternal life on the one hand and the Kingdom of God in the other. I don’t buy that because Christ does not trifle with one’s soul. If the man had not understood, Christ would have clarified.

Other commentators tell us that the passage is hyperbole. That Jesus didn’t really expect the man to sell everything and give it to the poor to be worthy to follow after Him. He only needed, some claim, to stop loving his material goods more than he loves Jesus. He could’ve, in reality, they say, continue to possess his goods and followed Jesus anyway.

Others tell us that we miss the entire point when Christ tells us that it is impossible with man, but all things are possible with God. And here we get closer to the truth.

Now we know that neither selling everything we own and giving it to the poor nor keeping the commandments is enough to get you into heaven. Nor does Christ tell us that everyone must give all they own to the poor.

Let’s take a look at other passages that speak of the price of salvation. At one point a scribe – a scholar dedicated to accurately copying Scripture – tells Jesus that he will follow Him as His disciple. Christ replies, “Foxes have holes, and birds of the air have nests, but the Son of Man has nowhere to lay his head.”

The Bible doesn’t directly state this but implies that the scribe, like the Rich Young Ruler, left disappointed.

Another follower asked to leave Jesus to go to his father’s funeral. Jesus answered, “Let the dead bury the dead.”

That seems harsh, but Jesus never once said it would be easy to follow Him.

And with that last sentence I just lost half my audience. Many of those who remain are saying “What about John 3:16?”

Well let’s take a look at John 3:16 in the larger context of the entire chapter. We have lived so long with the term “born again” that we fail to recognize it’s significance. Sure, Christ says that everyone who believes will be saved, but how many of those who follow the prescriptive ABC of salvation really believe? I fear not many, for few can live up to the expectations of the full context of the discourse in John 3. Take a look at verses 19-21.

And this is the judgment: the light has come into the world, and people loved the darkness rather than the light because their works were evil. For everyone who does wicked things hates the light and does not come to the light, lest his works should be exposed. But whoever does what is true comes to the light, so that it may be clearly seen that his works have been carried out in God.”

How many who consider themselves Christians actually change their direction? How many of them repent?

Christ tells us that we must be born again but he also tells us that we must die to self. In Luke 9:23, he says, “If anyone would come after me, he must deny himself and take up his cross daily and follow me”

The cross is not a symbol of hardship, like I heard growing up in church (a man I knew speaking of his life as a single father after his wife abandoned him years ago always ended the discussion with the words, “that’s just my cross to bear”). Not at all. The cross is not a symbol of hardship it is a symbol of death. When Jesus said to take up our cross and follow Him, he added a clause to the beginning: “deny yourselves, take up your cross daily and follow me!”

If we are to be born again we must also die to our own self. Christ does not tolerate a double-minded person; you should be either hot or cold but not lukewarm.

I have had preachers warn me about this message, the message of repentance. They tell me that, were they me, they would be scared of turning away seekers from the altar. I preached at a church three Sundays ago and preached on repentance. Another preacher was in the congregation that morning. He was scheduled to preach the following Sunday. When he did preach, he looked me in the eye from the pulpit and said that it is enough that people accept Jesus, believe in their hearts, and confess their sins. It is up to God to convict them enough to repent. I worry that preachers like him are convincing many sinners they are saved because they said a solitary prayer but never really repent and trust in Christ. Their lives show no fruit of the Spirit.

What does it cost to follow Christ? Just our very self.

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Holiness is, perhaps, the most misunderstood concept in Christianity. Anyone who has striven to follow the life of Christ can likely tell you that it is impossible to do. No one can match His love, His grace, or His compassion. For no one but Jesus is perfect. Once the believer is filled with and empowered by the Holy Spirit, though, he or she is filled to the brim with the love of Christ, and desires nothing more than to please God and follow in Christ’s steps. The love of sin is gone. In its place is a love and passion for others. That is Christian Holiness. This is Christian Holiness Daily.

Filed Under: cross, Holiness, repentance Tagged With: Christ, cross, follow, self denial

The Quest for the Mind of Christ – Chapter 4

June 21, 2016 by ChristianHolinessDaily Leave a Comment

It’s dark. Jesus is praying at his favorite hideaway, Gethsemane. The disciples are scattered. Eight of them are asleep near the wine press. Peter James and John are closer to Jesus, and they too sleep. One is not to be found. Judas has gone to the chief priests to arrange for a way to hand over Jesus. 

Why did Judas betray Christ? Did he have a choice or was he predestined to betray our Savior? While the Bible doesn’t tell us the answers to these questions, it does lend some insights. Judas was fixated on money; he loved it. He was the treasurer for Jesus and the Twelve. He kept the books, paid the bills, and made sure that funds were disbursed fairly… or that’s what he should’ve done as treasurer. He was so obsessed with money that he became a thief. So obsessed was he that he gave unwanted advice on other people’s money.

To understand why Judas betrayed Jesus, you must remember back to when Jesus and the Twelve are eating dinner at the home of Lazarus and his sisters, Mary and Martha. Martha is serving and Mary is worshiping at the feet of Jesus. She opens a canister of perfume made of pure nard, an essential oil derived of a Himalayan flower, and pours it on the feet of Jesus. She then rubs it in with her hair. This is not the first time something of this nature had happened to Jesus, and was surely not the first time Judas had witnessed such a thing. A woman of ill repute had once wiped away her tears from the feet of Jesus using her hair.

Foot washing was a common custom in Israel, and was usually performed by the lowest of servants. That Mary did this for Jesus was a symbol of complete obedience to the Savior, to acknowledge that he was Lord, and she was but a bond (willing) slave.

Judas, however, objected to this extravagant display off devotion, even though he had no real say in the matter. The oil was Mary’s, and if anyone had a right to object, it would have been Martha, who was not shy about objecting to her sister’s actions. Lazarus might have been right to object to Mary’s use of such fine oil. Yet, with the love and affection that the siblings shared for their Lord, objecting to the four washing never crossed their mind. Judas, though, had no right to object to the use of the bard, and should not have voiced an opinion. Remember, this was not his nard. The oil had not been purchased with money from the treasury. 

The nard was, we can only presume, purchased by Mary, a personal extravagance, at the cost of nearly a year’s wages (300 denarii, or about 300 times the average daily wage of a common worker). Think about the money you make in a year’s time and imagine spending that on essential oils. Now imagine giving it to Christ as an act of worship.

Judas, according to John 12:6, had grown used to dipping into the treasury whenever he liked; he used it as his personal bank. He suggested that the oil should be sold and the revenues used to help the poor. Christ, though, knew that what he really meant was that the oil should be sold and the funds put into the coffers so that Judas could steal from them.

“Let her be,” said Jesus. “That she may have this to anoint my body when I die. The poor you will always have with you. But you will not always have me.”

Something about this whole discussion burned inside Judas. He grew resentful. He had never fit in, not in his mind. He was a Judean. The others were Galileans. He had hoped for a revolution, and had secured a position that would leave him in authority after the revolution. He would be a great man. Remembering the words of Jesus, he thought, no he will not be those who are like a child who will be great. It will be those who are like a fox. A place in the Kingdom… He wondered…

Jesus, thought Judas, had never acknowledged that he would have a place in His Kingdom. He seemed to favor the others, the fishermen, the Galilean. Now, He reprimanded him in front of the others. In front of the women. “The poor you will always have.” Of course, we will, Rabbi, with your friends wasting such wealth. He shook his head in disbelief that Jesus actually took the side of this woman over his own treasurer. Does Jesus not realize that He would be nothing without his money management skills? Judas seethed.

So, why was Judas this way? Why did he go on to betray Christ just a short time later. This seems to have been the thing that pushed him over the edge. But, was it really? Was his betrayal a singlular decision or a succession of growing sins? Was he a backslidden believer or had he ever really believed? 

The other disciples are recorded in the Gospels making bold statements about the nature of Christ as Lord, God, the Son of God, the Messiah, the Christ. But Judas calls him Rabbi, or teacher. Nothing more. When the writers of the Gospels record the names of the Twelve, they begin with Peter, James, and John, the three that were closest to our Lord, and end with Judas. He is listed last because he betrayed Christ, but he may never have had a deep personal relationship with Christ. It is likely that he never believed in Christ as Messiah.

Like the Rich Young Ruler, Judas loved money more than Christ, and this led to sin, after sin, after sin. At last, he could live no longer with the guilt and pain of living a double life, and he was turned over to the lust of sin. Before long, he grew hardened to his sin. He no longer felt that his theft, resentment, and jealousy were wrong. His actions were not sin, not in his mind. He had justified it as a natural reaction to the way he had been treated. Jesus should count himself lucky that Judas didn’t abandon him. Without him to manage his affairs, Jesus would be another John, subsisting on locusts and honey, starving in the wilderness. Outwardly, Judas was one of the Twelve. Inwardly, he had grown cold and heartless. He would betray Christ for a “handsome price,” thirty pieces of silver.

Did Judas have a choice? Could he have NOT betrayed Jesus? God knew from the foundation of the earth that Judas would betray Jesus. The act was predicted with great specificity in the Old Testament (Psalm 41:9, Zechariah 11:12-13). Yet, God is a just God. The decision to betray Christ was solely Judas’s. Though God had, foreknowledge, He did not predestine Judas to be the Son of Perdition. Though God knew that Judas would not repent, the choice was Judas’s. He could have repented all the way up until the night of the Last Supper

His betrayal was the culmination of a chain of sins that had begun many years prior in the life of Judas Iscariot. How do I know this? His sins are alluded to in the account of Mary and Martha, when John (in chapter 6) calls him a thief, but I also know this because, while one may fall from devoted disciple to denier in one day, one does not go from devoted disciple of the Christ to betrayer in a moment of time. Judas’s course was long and deliberate, filled with many twists and turns and full of festering sins. He could have repented at any point along that journey. 

The Last Supper, as we have come to call it, was when Judas once and for all settled upon his decision to betray Jesus. Once Judas determined to never repent from this course of betrayal, Satan entered into him.   

Each and every sinner takes a similar course if they do not repent. Paul, in Romans 1, tells us that that God’s true nature is plain for us to see. Even His invisible qualities, His eternal power, His divine nature, are obvious to mankind. We cannot say that we don not know right from wrong. God makes it very clear what is right and what is wrong. We have no excuse. Yet, many of us choose to ignore the obvious and keep sinning.

Because we keep sinning, we spiral out of control.  Paul says that our thinking becomes futile (incapable of producing useful results!) and our hearts grow dark. Our desires grow perverse, and – at last – we reach the point, like Judas, that God turns us over to Satan. Paul puts it this way, God gives us over “to our shameful lusts.”

It doesn’t end there, though. Finally, God turns us over to a mind of total depravity (debase, immoral, unprincipled), or as the King James puts it, He turns us over to a reprobate mind (unprincipled, wicked, shameless). Paul defines the person with the depraved mind as one who is “doing what ought not be done.” Just as guilty, he says, are those who may not practice such depravity, but who approve of it.

It is a downward spiral, sin; sin leads to shame, which leads to hiding or running from God, which leads to more sin. That sin, in turn leads to more shame and more hiding from God until, at last,no shame remains. Our reprobate minds grow dull, and our depraved hearts grow dark. We are turned over to our sinful lusts. The reprobate mind no longer hears the voice of our consciences. Our depraved heart no longer hear God’s voice calling us to repentance. Once we have grown grow totally depraved, what is morally wrong seems right. What is right no longer matters. Rare is the man or woman who, at this point, yields to God’s voice and repents. 

In addition to the affects of unrepentant sin on our hearts and minds, sin has natural consequences. Gluttony, as example, can lead to obesity and a myriad of health problems. Drinking to excess can lead to liver disease. Promiscuity can lead to STD, AIDS, and ruin relationships. 

God wants us to repent. He doesn’t enjoy watching us destroy our lives. He is a good Father, who has told his children what’s right, set the perfect example of what is right, and hopes that one day, we will wake up, and decide to give up sins, and repent.

Is there a return from such a state of depravity? Rare though it may be, no man or woman who draws a breath is beyond God’s reach. Could Judas have repented? Yes. Did he? Only he and God know. He returned the thirty pieces of silver to the Temple. He  felt full of remorse, but his reprobate mind perversely told him that his only way out was to end his own life. Did God speak to him as he drew his last breath, calling him to repent and be saved? Surely. He is a merciful God. Did Judas repent and believe? The Bible is silent on that matter. 

Judas spent three years of his life pretending to be a close and devoted follower of Jesus Christ. Few could have told the difference between his faith and the faith of Peter. Both failed the test, but Peter repented, asked forgiveness and then fully trusted upon the love and strength of God. He persevered only by surrendering to Christ’s love. Judas felt remorse and surrendered to his reprobate minds and did not persevere. 

If you still draw breath, it is not too late to repent from your sins and fully trust in Christ’s love. 

Filed Under: The Quest Tagged With: Christ, depravity, Judas, reprobate, sin, the price of sin, the wages of sin

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