The Cruciform Road
To follow Jesus wherever he goes requires a life of self-denial and mercy and sacrificial service to help others – Matthew 20:20-28.
When Jesus sent his
disciples to announce the “Good News,” he warned they would find
themselves as “sheep among wolves.” Hostile men would haul them before “councils
and whip them in their synagogues.” They would be hated “by all men for
my sake.” The early church faced this stark reality. The same men who
should have welcomed Israel’s Messiah instead fought what he represented
tooth and nail.
The proclamation of
“Christ Crucified” proved to be an insurmountable stumbling block to
many of the “lost sheep of Israel.” However, to walk the same path of
self-denial as Jesus did is the only way for anyone, Jew or Gentile, to become
his disciple and achieve “greatness” in his Kingdom.
[Photo by John Thomas on Unsplash] |
The student is “not above his master”! Only by enduring to the end will the disciple be saved. If they persecuted their Lord, the “enemies of the cross of Christ” certainly have no qualms about mistreating his followers.
Jesus never promised
us a life of ease and wealth. According to him, we should expect suffering and
persecution for his sake:
- “Think not that I came to send peace on the earth. I came not to send peace, but a sword. For I came to set a man at variance against his father, and the daughter against her mother, and the daughter-in-law against her mother-in-law; and a man’s foes will be they of his own household.”
Jesus of Nazareth did
not wage war against humanity, but conflict begins whenever his disciples
proclaim his teachings and highlight his example, and thus persecution becomes
inevitable. Unregenerate men “stumble at the Stone of Stumbling,” and
that stone is Jesus Christ, the crucified Messiah who died for us when we were still
“enemies of God” – (Romans 5:10, 9:32).
While such warnings
strike us as grim, Jesus also declared: “He who does not take his cross to
follow me is not worthy of me. For he that finds his life will lose it, and he
that loses his life for my sake will find it.” The narrow road that leads
to life is cross-shaped. We must first count the cost.
The call to follow
the Crucified One is an all-or-nothing proposition. The
half-hearted man or woman will fall by the wayside when the trail becomes rough.
This does not mean all disciples experience persecution, but the potential loss of property, freedom, and life for his sake is the price of following the “Lamb wherever he leads.” The New Testament does not sugarcoat it!
In the Book of Revelation,
those who follow the slain “Lamb” find themselves standing majestically with
him on “Mount Zion.” However, before reaching that glorious summit, they
first overcame the “Dragon” by the “word and their testimony, and because they
loved not their lives unto death” - (Revelation 1:4-6, 3:21, 12:11,
14:1-5).
HIS ROAD
Jesus foretold his
arrest, trial, and execution to his disciples. Either they did not hear his
words or were incapable of comprehending them. In reaction, they began
jockeying for position in his coming Kingdom.
James and John
asked to sit at his right and left when Jesus came “in his glory,”
positions of high status. Their request highlighted their cluelessness. As his
words and deeds demonstrated, the servants of Jesus are summoned to
serve others just as he did, and sacrifice, suffering, and death must precede
glory.
Jesus challenged
James and John. “You do not know what you ask. Are you able to drink the cup
I am about to drink?” He drank the “cup” of God’s wrath on behalf of
others in his trial and execution. They declared they could, but his response
pointed to their ignorance. They had no idea what they were saying - (Psalm 11:6,
16:5, Isaiah 57:17-22, Jeremiah 25:15-28).
This warning was
not just for James and John, but also for all disciples. We will endure
suffering, deprivation, and persecution if we choose to follow him. Since James
and John desired high positions in his Kingdom, Jesus explained what that meant:
- “You know that the rulers of the Gentiles lord it over them, and their great ones tyrannize them. Not so will it be among you. But whoever wishes to become great among you will be your servant, and whoever desires to be first among you will be your slave, even as the Son of Man came not to be served but to serve, and to give his life a ransom for many.”
“Greatness”
is achieved by self-sacrificial service for others and showing mercy to our
persecutors, not by exercising dominion over them. If we wish to
become “great” we must first become the “servant” of all, just as
Jesus came “not to be served, but to serve, and to give his soul as a ransom
instead of many.”
In Greco-Roman
society, a ransom was paid to purchase the freedom of a slave. Christ’s statement
was a declaration of his mission: To give his life to free others from
enslavement to sin, death, and Satan, and, yes, including the salvation of the “enemies
of God.”
Jesus used the
example of his impending death to show what it meant for us to become his disciples,
both then and now. We are summoned to walk the same cruciform path as he did for
the sake of others, especially the weak, the marginalized, and our “enemies,”
just as Jesus gave his life as a ransom to free us.
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SEE ALSO:
- To Follow the Lamb - (The Messiah of Israel submitted to the way of the Cross and summoned his disciples to follow his example in their daily lives)
- His Path - (Jesus proclaimed a very different political reality, the Kingdom of God, one that bears little resemblance to the governments of this evil age)
- Ransom for Many - (His disciples are called to engage in self-sacrificial service for others just as Jesus gave his life as a ransom for many – Mark 10:35-45)
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