Saturday, September 3, 2022

13th Sunday after Pentecost – Proper 18 –Series C

 Luke 14:25-35
Are you willing to sacrifice all?

 

Almighty and eternal God, you know our problems and our weakness better than ourselves. In your love and by your power help us in our confusion and, in spite of our weakness, make us firm in faith; through Jesus Christ our LORD.

Problems, weaknesses, confusion, turmoil. These are but a few word, which might describe our lives in a fallen world outside of Eden. Thus, we ask the LORD to make us firm in faith. To hold fast to Him. To live with Him forever.

The appointed lessons for today call us to total commitment to the will of God. The Gospel reminds us to count the cost of being Christian, because the cost is extremely high. “None of you…” says the Savior “can become my disciple if you do not give up all your possessions!

The LORD’s holiness and perfection demands absolute and unequivocal commitment and service. Clearly, only those who are perfect can stand before the LORD. All others will perish.

This discipleship of which Jesus speaks, demands total renunciation; family, fame, fortune, and of course, self-actualization is gone! Consider those Jesus excludes. He says, “He cannot be my disciple.”

Discipleship is far from free. On three occasions, Jesus will simply say, “He cannot be my disciple!” Notice, the final, definite, categorical…”cannot.” You cannot be a disciple.

These are truly difficult words. What does the Savior mean here? You cannot be a disciple unless…

1.     You love Him more than family

2.     You bear the a cross of adversity

3.     You make Him your chief treasure

You cannot love Him more than family. “If anyone comes to Me and does not hate his father and mother, his wife and children, his brothers and sisters- yes, even his own life – he cannot be My disciple.” V. 26

Jesus makes a vivid assertion. He uses an overstatement to teach a profound truth. One must love Jesus even more than his immediate family.  Christ must stand at the center of your very life.  He desires your complete devotion, and loyalty. In a word, complete commitment.

Are you willing to sacrifice all? Christ Jesus has paid the cost of discipleship for you. For such a sacrifice is impossible except that Christ Jesus has already paid that cost with His life.

Jesus was the one who was ridiculed, mocked, rejected. Jesus was the one ridiculed mocked, rejected from the cross. “He saved other, he cannot save himself.” The world mocking says, “You did not consider the cost.”  Jesus is the one who went against legions as an army of one. He knew the cost. He understood the sacrifice. He entered the fray prepared for battle and went to war willingly for you.

Your commitment to Christ comes from His commitment to you. In the book of Malachi He reassures us of His love when He writes, “I have loved you.” Says the Lord. “But you ask, ‘How have you loved us?

Was not Esau Jacob’s brother?” the Lord says, “you I have loved Jacob.” – Malachi 1:2-3

When Jesus says, “hate his father and mother, his wife and children, his brothers and sisters – yes, even his own life…” He is saying that we are to love Him even more. We are to love Him more than family. More than relationships. More than even ourselves.

Transition: You cannot be a disciple unless you love Him more than family. You cannot be a disciple unless you bear a cross of adversity.

You bear a cross of adversity. –“And anyone who does not carry his cross and follow Me cannot be My disciple.

Jesus would earlier say, “If anyone would come after Me, be must deny himself and take up his cross daily and follow me.” – Luke 9:23

To follow Jesus requires self-denial, complete dedication, total obedience. He is the focal point of your salvation. Christ must be at the center of everything we in this parish do or say.

It is prescribed, “daily.”  Luke emphasizes continued action. We do not follow when we get around to it. When it is convenient, or when Christ fits into our busy schedule.

The disciples of Jesus were much aware of what the term “a cross” meant. Hundreds of men had been executed by this means in their region.

The cross was an instrument of death. The cross symbolizes the necessity of total commitment – even unto death.

Such is the vow you took on the day of your confirmation. And in the spring of the year, the confirmation class of 2023 will make a similar vow of faith:

Do you intent to continue steadfast in the confession of this church, and suffer all, even death, rather than fall away from it?”

The answer, “I do so intend, with the help of God.”

Your response to that question helps us see where our commitments lie. It is based not on our good intentions, not on our willingness to get serious with God. Rather, it is based on Christ getting serious with you.

It is done, “with the help of God.”  It is done with His commitment to you by going to the bloody and cruel cross to suffer and die for all of your sin.

Transition: To be a disciple you must love Christ more than anyone or anything else. You must bear the cross of adversity. You do this by making Christ your chief treasure.

You make Christ your chief treasure. – “In the same way, any of you who does not give up everything he has cannot be My disciple.” Vs 33

The cost, Jesus explains is total commitment. It is complete surrender to Christ.

Again. By ourselves, we cannot do this. Our sin rises against us. We are intent on pursuing our own agendas, our own interests, our own plans.

The LORD instills in us his own Spirit. It is the Spirit of Christ, the Holy Spirit, which calls, gathers, enlightens, sanctifies and keeps us in the faith. This causes us to think and consider what Jesus expects of us.  Our will, our all, our love, our serving.

In exchange, we receive the Father’s gifts; forgiveness, life, salvation.

As a builder estimates the costs and as a king evaluates the strength of his military, so we consider the cost of following Christ. The stakes are high, and the outcome is serious stuff. Know what you are getting into before you commit. And as you do; never look back!

Words- 1,125
Passive Sentences – 6%
Readability – 75.3%
Reading Level – 5.2



[1] Woodcut by Baron Julius Schnorr von Carolsfeld, 1794-1872, a distinguished German artist known especially for his book, The Book of Books in Pictures ©WELS for personal and congregational use

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