Here are a few of the images along with their core ideas, used in the Cost of Discipleship message.
Luke 14:25-35 and John 6:60-69 are the two main texts.
Also see Luke 9:23-27, 57-62 and Matthew 19:16-30.
Jesus said hard, challenging, disturbing, things that confront and upset our sensibilities.
The crowds were attracted to Jesus, and sometimes for the wrong reasons. He was inspiring and the promises he made were staggering. He healed the sick, raised the dead, cast out demons, performed miracles, challenged the religious system, taught profound truths about God . . .
These promises are so staggering in their scope, that when they come to hearts that are conditioned by a narcissism and the mindset that wants to know "what's in it for me," we begin to act as if God exists for me instead of the other way around.
So Jesus has to hit the "RESET" button and reboot our faith, our way of thinking, our values and our heart.
In Luke 14 he gives four conditions of discipleship.
Jesus must be supremely important - above all else that we love.
We must take up a cross.
We must follow Him.
We must give up everything that would hold us back - a total reorientation of life around Christ.
If we do not do these things - then, WE CANNOT BE HIS DISCIPLES!
That is a HARD teaching,.
So - what are you going to do about Jesus?
Will you have ears that hear?
Will you allow all that needs to die in your life - die, so it can be raised to newness?
Will you surrender and release all the "stuff"/idols in your life and allow Jesus to decide what He wants to return to you as blessings (and what He will not return to you)?
And this requires a "leap of faith."
Jesus wants you to count the cost, consider this very carefully, pray and wrestle and even "agonize" if you have to. He wants you to be truly, really and fully "in with Him."
With man, this impossible, but with God (the Author and Perfector of our faith) all things are possible - even this total renewal of life.
In a day or two, I'll have a post that asks the question: What exactly does it mean to be a Christian? And we will pick up on this theme in light of the hard teaching of Jesus.
Brian K. Rice
Leadership ConneXtions Internationalwww.lci.typepad.com