“Then Jesus said to his disciples, ‘If any of you wants to be my follower, you must turn from your selfish
ways, take up your cross, and follow me. If you try to hang on to your life,
you will lose it. But if you give up your life for my sake, you will save it.
And what do you benefit if you gain the whole world but lose your own soul? Is
anything worth more than your soul?’”
(Matthew 16:24-26, NLT).
(Matthew 16:24-26, NLT).
Recognizing and confessing
belief in Jesus as the Messiah is only the beginning of discipleship. Jesus invites
every person, but those who want to follow him must be willing to “turn from,” “take up,”
and “follow.” Jesus
didn’t make being his disciple sound easy. To those who were hoping to have
special positions in Jesus’ earthly Kingdom (see Luke 22:24), these statements
would have been tough to hear. Denying their personal desires and taking up a
cross in order to follow this man was not the life they had imagined.
To “turn from your selfish ways” means rejecting the “me first” attitude. Our normal, sinful human tendency is
to take care of ourselves, focusing on personal desires and security (I just
describing myself). Jesus was saying
that anyone who wanted to follow him first had to turn away from those selfish
desires and earthly security and put him in charge. This attitude transforms
self-centeredness to God-centeredness. It means dying to self and living for
Christ, putting personal desires and life itself into his hands.
Jesus went on to say that
those who willingly “give up”
their lives will “save” it.
This statement was as jarring to people in Jesus’ day as it is today. The Greek
word for “life” is psyche, referring to the soul, the part
of the person that includes the personality with all its dreams, hopes, and
goals. Those who “hang on to”
their lives in order to satisfy desires and goals apart from God, ultimately “lose” their lives. Those who willingly “give up” or “lose”
their lives for the sake of Christ, whoever, actually “save” them. Think about this: Nothing we can gain on our
own can compare to what we gain with Christ. Jesus wants us to choose to follow
him, to turn all that we are and have over to his disposal. Instead of letting
us foolishly try to control our futures – which only he know – he wisely wants
to take care of our lives for his own glory. In Jesus we really live. Amen.
THINK BIG. START
SMALL. GO DEEP.
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