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The Cost of
Discipleship
by
John MacArthur
All Rights Reserved
(A copy of this message on cassette tape may be
obtained by calling 1-800-55-GRACE)
Selected Scriptures
To speak of the cost of discipleship in our society may be
not the most needful thing from the viewpoint of the listener
right now, it may become more needful in the days ahead. If we
were in Eastern Europe tonight, we would be speaking on a subject
very dear to the heart of the hearer. In fact, I would daresay
that they are so well apprised of the matter of the cost of
discipleship that perhaps it wouldn't need to be spoken of at
all, except to encourage them. And frankly, the approach that I
will take in this message wouldn't be needed at all because no
one in a country where you pay a price for naming the name of
Jesus Christ is going to do that unless they are willing to pay
that price. There are no shallow, uncommitted believers. Why
pay the price? And yet in our society here, we have developed
this incredible theology that says you can be a Christian and not
worry about being committed. In fact you can be a Christian and
not even be a disciple. Those who teach that would say yes
there's no question in the New Testament about Jesus assigning a
tremendous cost to discipleship. But you don't need to worry
about that because that's second-level Christianity. First-level
Christianity doesn't really have any particular cost at all.
To show you how pervasive this is, one of the longest
standing, most widely read fundamentalist newspapers in America
is a newspaper called "The Sword of the Lord." In "The Sword of
the Lord's" January 8 issue of 1988, this year, the editor writes
this, referring to Luke 9:57 to 62, let me read it to you. In
Luke 9, the Lord is speaking about discipleship. And starting in
verse 57, He says this, "And as they were going along the road,
someone said to Him, I'll follow You wherever You go. And Jesus
said, The foxes have holes and the birds of the air have nests,
but the Son of Man has nowhere to lay His head. And He said to
another, Follow Me. But he said, Permit me first to go and bury
my father. But He said to him, Allow the dead to bury their own
dead, but as for you, go and proclaim everywhere the Kingdom of
God. And another also said, I will follow You, Lord, but first
permit me to say goodbye to those at home. But Jesus said to
him, Not one after putting his hand to the plow and looking back
is fit for the Kingdom of Heaven."
The writer of "The Sword of the Lord" said this, "This
passage has nothing to do with salvation. These calls are not
calls to salvation, they are calls to discipleship. MacArthur,
like many others, confuses discipleship with salvation and uses
passages dealing with discipleship to try to prove that the
sinner must give up all that he has and all that he is to receive
Christ. This is simply not true. Nowhere in the Bible is the
sinner told to forsake all that he has to be saved."
What is a disciple? Is it something different than a
Christian? It's fairly clear in the Bible that Jesus calls men
to follow Him. That writer is saying that doesn't have a thing
to do with salvation.
Doesn't it? All of the calls of Jesus to discipleship, are
they something more than salvation? You see, the word "disciple"
is so much a part of our Christian faith that it hardly has any
meaning outside of Christianity. You just don't hear that word
outside of Christianity. It is used 262 times in the New
Testament. The word is mathetes, the basic root meaning is to be
a learner but it has much more content than that. The lexicons
tell us that it means "one who shares a close and intimate
relationship with a person." Quote: "The disciple is one who at
Jesus' call follows after Him. He must observe the will of God
and even binding upon himself unreservedly to the person of
Jesus, go as far as death and the gift of his life out of love,"
so says Leon Dafur(?) in his wonderful study of the New Testament
language.
Discipleship...more than just being a learner, being an
intimate follower, having an intimate relationship, following to
the point where you would go as far as death out of love.
There's no question about the fact that the only message Jesus
ever proclaimed was a message of discipleship. The call that
Jesus gave was a call to follow Him, a call to submission, a call
to obedience. It was never a plea to make some kind of momentary
decision to acquire forgiveness and peace and heaven and then go
on living anyway you wanted. The invitations of Jesus to the
lost were always direct calls to a costly commitment.
Listen to Matthew chapter 13 and the familiar parable in
verse 44. "The Kingdom of Heaven is like a treasure hidden in
the field which a man found and hid. And from joy over it, he
goes and sells all that he has and buys that field. Again, the
Kingdom of Heaven is like a merchant seeking fine pearls. And
upon finding one pearl of great value, he went and sold all that
he had and bought it." Now we know those parables.
A man found a treasure, sold all he had and bought it. A
man found a pearl, sold all he had and bought it. Now that says
that when a man comes across the saving gospel of Jesus Christ,
he gives up all he has. He turns his back on all of life to
embrace Christ.
But what do people who want to espouse that this is not a
call to salvation do with that passage? This is what they do.
They say what the parable is teaching has nothing to do with
salvation. The man who found the treasure and the man who sought
the pearl is Christ. The treasure is the church. The pearl is
the church. This is a parable about Christ buying the church,
giving up all that He had to purchase the church.
Let me suggest something to you. In the first place, the
field here, they say the field is the world and so buried in the
world is the church, why do we say the field is the world? And
they will say, "Well, in the other parable about the wheat and
the tares, the field is the world." Oh? That's another parable.
In the parable of the soils, the field is the heart. So we
cannot necessarily interpret this parable by arbitrarily picking
the other parable that seems to fit the interpretation we like.
Furthermore, Christ was not simply plowing along in the
world and come stumbling across the church in tact. Nor did
Christ go on a life-long crusade to try to find the church that
was most precious. The church before the Lord redeemed it was
neither precious or valuable. It was not a treasure and it was
not beautiful. Christ did not purchase the church because He
discovered its tremendous value. Furthermore, Christ told these
parables to the disciples to unveil the mysteries of the Kingdom,
not to explain the atonement from God's viewpoint. But that is
the extent to which the interpreter will go when he wants to
eliminate a gospel that demands that a person give up everything
to receive Christ.
There's a striking parallel in Mark chapter 10 and verse 21.
This is what that says. "Jesus looked at the rich young ruler
and said, One thing you lack. Go and sell all you possess and
give to the poor and you shall have treasure in heaven." Same
message. You want eternal life? Give up all you have and take
the treasure.
That's not the only strong call of Jesus to discipleship.
In Matthew chapter 10, very familiar to us and we'll go back to
it later on, Matthew 10:32, "Everyone therefore who shall confess
Me before men, I will confess him before My Father who is heaven.
But whosoever shall deny Me before men, I will deny before My
Father who is in heaven. Do not think that I came to bring peace
on the earth, I didn't come to bring peace but a sword. I came
to set a man against his father, and a daughter against her
mother, and a daughter-in-law against her mother-in-law, and a
man's enemies will be the members of his household. He who loves
father or mother more than Me is not worthy of Me. He who loves
son or daughter more than Me is not worthy of Me. He who does
not take his cross and follow after Me is not worthy of Me. He
who has found his life shall lose it, and he who has lost his
life for My sake shall find it." A strong call to total
commitment.
In Luke's gospel and chapter 14, we hear the echo of the
same level of commitment, verse 25, "The multitudes were going
along with Him, He turned and said to them," He's talking to the
multitudes, "If anyone comes to Me and doesn't hate his own
father and mother and wife and children and brothers and sisters,
yes, and even his own life, he cannot be My disciple."
Now, someone reads that and says, "Well, that's...that's so
hard, it can't mean salvation. So a disciple has to be a second-
level Christian. They have to already be believers." Then why,
pray tell, does He give this message to the multitude? Why does
He give it to the multitude? It's very clear that He's speaking
to unbelievers. It's very clear that He is speaking to those who
do not know Him.
In John 8:31, Jesus said, "If you continue in My Word, then
you're My real disciple." John 15:8, Jesus says, "My true
disciples bear fruit." And every one of those contexts, Matthew
13, Matthew 10, Luke 14, John 8, John 15, are all contexts in
which Jesus is calling men to salvation and still there are many
who deny that there is any such call involved in salvation. They
say, "Just believe and take the gift....just believe and take the
gift."
Again reading from a book entitled "The Hungry Inherit," the
author writes, "How fortunate that one's entrance into the
Kingdom of God does not depend on his discipleship. If it did,
how few would ever enter that Kingdom," end quote. Oh? Isn't
that exactly what Jesus said? "Narrow is the gate
and...what?...few there be that find it." But wanting to assume
that more than a few are saved, these teachers say one can be a
believer saved without being a disciple obedient. So they come
up with two levels of spiritual life. Level one is an
uncommitted disobedient, even unbelieving believer who made a
momentary decision to receive salvation but has no desire to
follow Christ and they often call him "the carnal Christian."
Hopefully some day such a person will come to level two. Level
two is disciple. And there you have the obedient, committed
people who love and serve the Lord, who turned their back on
their former life and longed to live the new life. They're not
perfect but the desire of their heart and the fruit of their life
shows the work of God.
Level one people, these folks say, are saved but the only
way they can know they're saved is by remembering the decision
they made in the past. That's all the assurance you need, they
say. If you need assurance, just reach back into your past and
remember the moment you believed. Of course, if you get far
enough along in your unbelief and disobedience, you won't want to
be assured about something you're indifferent to anyway, so it's
a moot point. But we are told it is enough for someone to simply
believe, receive the gift without repenting, without confessing
Christ as Lord, without surrendering their life to Him.
They say such believers will...will not be rewarded. The
result of such a dichotomy is that there's a difference between a
believer and a disciple. But there's more than that. This kind
of thinking totally changes the whole ministry of Christ because
all of a sudden Jesus instead of calling sinners to salvation is
calling first-level believers to level two. And the one of whom
it's very clearly said that He came to seek and save the lost,
that He was not come to call the righteous but sinners to
repentance is not really an evangelist, He's a deeper-life
preacher, totally changes the ministry of our Lord from
evangelism to calling believers who live in sin, deny God,
Christ, disobey, aren't committed to shape up. Is that the
ministry of Jesus?
I don't think so. In fact, I'm confident it's not. I
believe that every Christian is a disciple, every Christian is a
follower of Christ. Some of us are following more faithfully
than others, but every true believer has committed himself or
herself to follow Jesus Christ. I do believe that as we have
seen you can be a follower of Jesus and not be a real Christian.
You could follow along without having a changed heart and say,
"Lord, Lord," and He would say, "I never knew you." Like John
6:66, "Many of His disciples walked no more with Him." Like
those who wanted to follow Jesus in Matthew chapter 8, but they
certainly were not willing to make whatever commitment had to be
made. They were the ones of whom we read earlier who said, "Let
me go do this and let me go do that, and let me go do the other
thing." And He said, "You're not worthy to be My disciple."
So, there are some disciples, quote/unquote, who aren't
real, but there are no believers who aren't disciples. It simply
means that we have entered into a relationship with Jesus Christ
in which we follow Him. We don't follow perfectly and please, we
don't follow out of our own will and our own flesh, we follow
because God in His sovereign grace transformed us into followers.
The term "disciple" never in the Scripture is it applied to
second-level believers. The truth is that evangelism itself is
to make disciples. And that's so clear. In Matthew, do you
remember the great commission? Matthew 28:19, "Go therefore
and...what?...make disciples." Go therefore and make disciples
of all the nations. How do you make a disciple? "Baptize them
in the name of the Father, the Son and the Holy Spirit and teach
them to observe all that I've commanded you." That's evangelism.
You have them publicly name the name of Jesus Christ, be publicly
baptized as a profession of their faith and then set about to
live a life of obedience, that's making disciples. We are called
to make disciples.
The other accounts of the great commission, one of them is
in Mark 16:15. He said, "Go into all the world and preach the
gospel to all creation." Matthew says make disciples. Mark says
preach the gospel because they're one and the same. "And he who
has believed and been baptized shall be saved." Luke, he said,
"Thus it is written, that Christ should suffer and rise again
from the dead the third day," this adds more words to that great
commission. "And that repentance for forgiveness of sins should
be proclaimed in His name to all nations."
Matthew says make disciples. Mark says preach the gospel.
Luke says proclaim repentance for forgiveness and speak of the
death and resurrection of Christ. It's all one and the same.
The great commission then is to preach the death and resurrection
of Christ, preach repentance for the forgiveness of sins, call
for faith to make disciples. That sums it all up. The mission
of the church is to make disciples, to bring people into an
intimate relationship with God through faith in Christ Jesus.
Disciples are people who believe the gospel, people who have
turned from their sin to embrace the forgiveness of God, people
who have had a transformed life so that they are motivated to
obey what the Lord has commanded them.
The term "disciple" is used synonymously for believer.
Listen carefully to passages out of the wonderful wonderful
record of the early church, the book of Acts. Verse 1 of chapter
6, "Now at this time while the disciples were increasing in
number, a complaint arose on the part of the Hellenistic Jews
against the native Hebrews because their widows were being
overlooked in the daily serving of food. And the Twelve summoned
the congregation of the disciples and said, It is not desirable
for us to neglect the Word of God in order to serve table." Now
it says that the disciples were increasing and the Twelve
summoned the congregation of the disciples. That can't mean
anything but the believers. It certainly doesn't mean that he
got all the second-level Christians sorted out and had a special
meeting for them.
Verse 7, "And the Word of God kept on spreading and the
number of disciples continued to increase greatly." Conversion,
believers, disciples...same term.
In the eleventh of Acts, I think it's verse 26, it tells us,
"And when he had found him he brought him to Antioch and it came
about that for an entire year they met with the church and taught
considerable numbers," listen to this, "and the disciples were
first called Christians in Antioch." Barnabas being the key
figure here. The disciples were first called Christians in
Antioch. Disciple has to mean believer if Christian means
believer...believer, disciple, Christian, all the same.
Chapter 14 verse 20, "But while the disciples stood around
him, he arose and entered the city," and that has to do with the
believers where Paul was stoned. "The next day he went away with
Barnabas." You can begin to see now that Christians are called
disciples.
And then in chapter 15 verse 10, "Now therefore, why do you
put God to the test by placing upon the neck of the disciples a
yoke which neither our fathers nor we have been able to bear?"
says Peter. So believer, disciple, Christian, all the same.
Why make a distinction? Why do people do this? Again I
point out because they're fearful that if you have conditions
involved in salvation, you have negatively affected grace. In
other words, they want salvation to be purely of grace, only
believe, purely grace, do nothing, just believe. And they say if
you add the fact that you have to turn from sin, confess your
sin, repent of your sin, surrender to Christ, you've added all
these human works to grace.
Not so. All you've said is that God when He saved someone
by grace does all of that. It's all in that saving grace. It's
part of it.
And then, secondly, I believe that people hold this view
because they want to develop a theology that will dispose of the
hard demands of Jesus. They want to make it easy for everybody
to be saved.
And the third reason that people hold to this is because
they would like to save some people that are lost. What do you
mean? Well, they have people that they love who made a
profession of faith in Christ, never demonstrated a changed life
and they'd like to develop a theology that will get those people
in heaven.
A pastor from behind the Iron Curtain said to me, one time,
"There's no easy believism in our churches. There's no shallow
professions of faith. Nobody is taking Jesus who isn't willing
to lay their life down because that's the price in many, many
cases. The cost of naming Christ," he said, "is so high that we
don't have false conversion. If they aren't willing to pay the
price," he said, "they don't want to be associated with Jesus
Christ in any way at all." Now that would clear the air about a
lot of things.
When He called them in that hostile environment, he
carefully instructed them about the cost of following Him. Half-
hearted people who weren't willing to make the commitment didn't
respond. He turned away the reluctant to pay the price, like the
rich young ruler. He told them the price, he went away. Those
would-be disciples who said, "Let me go do this and let me go do
that and let me go do the other," He said you're not worthy to be
My disciple. It is a turning. It is a repenting. It is a
giving up and an embracing of Christ.
John Stott wrote in his helpful little book Basic
Christianity, "The Christian landscape is strewn with the
wreckage of derelict half-built towers. The ruins of those who
began to build and were unable to finish. For thousands of
people still ignore Christ's warning and undertake to follow Him
without first pausing to reflect on the cost of doing so. The
result is the great scandal of Christendom today, so called
nominal Christianity. In countries to which Christian
civilization has spread, large numbers of people have covered
themselves with a decent but thin veneer of Christianity. They
have allowed themselves to become somewhat involved, enough to be
respectable but not enough to be uncomfortable. Their religion
is a great soft cushion. It protects them from the hard
unpleasantness of life while changing its place and shape to suit
their convenience. No wonder the cynics speak of hypocrites in
the church and dismiss religion as escapism," end quote.
In Luke 14 Jesus put right on the line what Dr. Stott is
referring to when He said, "Which one of you when he wants to
build a tower doesn't first sit down and calculate the cost to
see if he has enough to complete it? Otherwise when he's laid a
foundation and is not able to finish, all who observe it begin to
ridicule him saying, This man began to build and wasn't able to
finish. Or what king when he sets out to meet another king in
battle will not first sit down, take counsel whether he's strong
enough with ten thousand men to encounter the one coming against
him with twenty thousand? Or else while the other is still far
away he sends a delegation and asks terms of peace? So therefore
no one of you can be My disciple who doesn't give up all his
possessions."
Pretty straight talk. You don't want to be like the guy who
wanted to build the tower, got half way in and didn't have what
it took to make it all the way. You don't want to be like the
general who went to war and wasn't ready for what he was to
encounter. In other words, there's a sense in which you
recognize the total cost of giving up your life for Christ. The
Christian isn't somebody who buys fire insurance, who signs up
for an escape clause to keep him out of hell. Puritan William
Perkins wrote these words, "The true Christian is of this
disposition of mind that if there were no conscience to accuse,
no devil to terrify, no judge to arraign or condemn, no hell to
torment, yet he would be humbled and brought to his knees for his
sins because he has offended a loving merciful and long-suffering
God," end quote. That's the difference. The truly repentant
sinner is devastated by the way he has offended God with his sin.
He's not whimsically looking for some fire insurance. A true
disciple loves, a true disciple obeys. We don't love perfectly,
we don't obey perfectly. Sometimes we love very imperfectly and
disobey, but the pattern of life is obedience and love for the
Lord. And even when we fail to love Him, we feel the guilt, we
fail to obey Him, we feel the guilt because we do belong to Him.
We have that intimate relationship which God has in His grace
given to us.
Let me say it again. I do not believe that these are human
efforts, I believe that this is what God does in your heart. God
gives you a love for Himself. God gives you a heart to obey.
God turns you from your sin. They're not pre-salvation human
works, they're inherent in God's saving work.
Let me take you back as we draw things to a final focus to
the passage of Matthew 10 and point out to you the important
things to note in this matter of discipleship. Remember now,
Jesus says in Matthew 10, "Everyone who confesses Me before men,
I'll confess before My Father." Jesus says, "I came to set a man
against his father and against his daughter, and he that loves
father or mother more than Me is not worthy of Me." Jesus said,
"Take up your cross and follow after Me," giving all of these
elements of discipleship.
You say, "Well, now is He...is this a call to salvation? Or
is this a call to believers to become disciples?" Well, as I've
said to you, it obviously is a call to salvation from the general
sweep of the New Testament but just one simple little thought
might even make the case in this passage more clear. In chapter
10 verse 1, and I started reading at verse 32, but in verse 1 it
says, "And Jesus have summoned His twelve...what?...disciples."
Beloved, they were already...what? Disciples. This is not a
call to discipleship. He already addressed the twelve as
disciples. They were already called disciples. Yes, Matthew 10
is addressed to them, but they're already disciples. He's simply
defining what discipleship means.
And in the parallel passage of Mark, Mark says He was
talking not only to the disciples, which Matthew emphasizes, but
to the disciple and the crowd. And in Luke 14, which we referred
to earlier, Luke eliminates the disciples and has Him speaking
only to the crowd. This then is simply Jesus laying out the
standards of discipleship, it is a call to salvation...nothing
short of that.
You say, "Why did He give to the disciples?" So they would
know how to give it to the crowd, so they would know how to
evangelize. Jesus calls for total commitment. What does it
mean? Number one, I'll give you three thoughts. Number one, it
means confessing Christ before men. Verse 32, "Everyone
therefore who confesses Me before men, I will confess before My
Father who is in heaven. Whosoever shall deny Me before men, I
will also deny him before My Father who is in heaven." It is a
confession of public confession.
Now public confession in and of itself is not enough. In
Matthew 7 the people say, "Lord, Lord, we prophesied in Your
name, did many wonderful works," and so forth. "He said, I never
knew you." There are those who profess the name who aren't real,
but there are none who are real who don't profess the name.
Everyone, He says, therefore who shall confess Me before men.
That is openly affirming relationship to Christ. "If thou
shalt," Romans 10:9 and 10 says, "confess with thy mouth Jesus
as...what?...Lord." Confess Me before men, that's a universal
generic term, open confession public confession, wherever one is
that's where He starts this matter of discipleship.
The heart of discipleship, beloved, is a commitment to Jesus
Christ. That means that you're willing to publicly identified
with Him no matter what that cost. That means you're willing to
face a hostile world boldly to acknowledge Jesus as Lord and
master. Oh, we don't always do it. Even Timothy was dangerously
close to being ashamed of Christ. Peter denied Christ. We have
those lapses, but a moment of failure doesn't invalidate the
disciple's credentials. All of us have times of failure, but
it's not our purpose, it's not our desire to keep our
relationship to Christ hidden, it's our desire to pronounce it,
to proclaim it. And if we willingly affirm our loyalty to
Christ, then we are the ones that He will affirm His loyalty to
as well. If we're willing to say I belong to Christ, He'll be
willing to say this one belongs to Me.
On the other hand, those who consistently deny the Lord by
silence, by ungodly living, by words are simply masquerading,
they're not God's disciples at all.
So, it all starts with that public confession. If someone
denies Christ, says they don't believe, they don't care to obey,
they can't possibly meet this characteristic of a true disciple.
And again I say, this is not something we do in our flesh, this
is something God produces in us by giving us the heart of a
disciple. He gives us a heart to love Him, a heart to want to
proclaim Him, a heart to want to announce that we belong to Him.
Secondly, following hard on that one, a disciple not only
confesses before men his Lord, but prefers Christ over all
others. Verse 34 starts to talk about the family and how the
sword comes down between father and mother and sister and brother
and enemies become people in your own household and you cannot
love father or mother more than Me and be worthy of Me. You
cannot be My disciple if you're not willing, if need be, to cut
those relationships off. Very strong language...very strong.
And Luke's language is even stronger. Luke in chapter 14
verse 26, "If anyone comes to Me and doesn't hate his father or
mother, wife, children, brother, sister, and even his own life,
cannot be My disciple."
Well, what do you mean by that? Do you mean you literally
have to hate your family? No, no, you have to deny your...your
natural human relationships that would constrain you and hold you
back from Christ just like you have to deny yourself...just as
you have to consider yourself dead, Romans 6. Just as you have
to lay aside the old self, Ephesians 4:22, just as if you have to
treat your flesh with human contempt, 1 Corinthians 9:27. So if
your family holds you back, you have to treat them as dead.
Our dear brother, Mishko(?) Horbitech(?) said it tonight.
His only family has not spoken to him in three years. That was
the price, but he prefers Christ above all others...above all
others. Talked to a young lady a week ago, brand new in Christ
from a Jewish family, suffering the tremendous alienation that
her family put upon her for her faith in the Savior. That's what
Jesus is talking about. If there's any human relationship that
holds you back from naming the name of Christ, from serving
submissively under His Lordship, you're not worthy to be His
disciple.
Why is Jesus so strong about this? Because He wants to
chase away the uncommitted. You understand that about Jesus? He
wanted to drive away the false disciples. He didn't want the
tares. He didn't want the false believers. He didn't want them
because He didn't want them to be deceived and He didn't want His
church to be affected by them. So He chased them away by the
strength of the call to commitment.
Thirdly and finally, the Lord Jesus Christ must not only be
the one we prefer above all else but the one for whom we would
willingly give our lives. Verse 38, "He who doesn't take up his
cross and follow after Me is not worthy of Me, he who has found
his life shall lose it, he who has lost his life for My sake
shall find it."
You know what I believe, beloved? I believe that if you and
I ever got in a situation where we had to give our life for Jesus
Christ, we would experience joy. I know when you're here you
say, "Oh, man, I don't know if I ever got into that if I could
ever do it." I believe you could because I don't believe God
gives you the grace to bear that until you need it. And I
believe you would come and experience what Peter says is the
grace, the spirit of grace and glory would rest on you and you
would be like all the rest of those martyrs that don't surpass
you in spiritual strength, don't surpass you in knowledge, who in
facing death through the years of the history of the church faced
it joyously and victoriously because they were given grace for
that hour.
But I'll tell you something. There's no way that statements
like that can be made to accommodate the kind of carnal approach
to conversion that is in vogue in our generation. Jesus is
saying you have to be willing to take up your cross. Somebody
says, "Oh, yes, my cross...that's my 1959 Chevy that doesn't
run...that's my leaky roof...that's my mother-in-law, my cross."
I've heard all kinds of things.
In the first century a cross meant one thing and it wasn't a
Chevy and it wasn't your leaky roof and it wasn't your mother-in-
law, it was death. He's talking about forsaking everything, even
your own life. "He who has found his life will lose it," you
possess your life, hold on to your life, don't let go, boy, you
keep your physical safety, don't let anybody get near you and
accuse you of anything, deny Christ under pressure, deny Christ
under persecution, hold on to your life...you don't have a
transformed life because one with a transformed life that is
bound by God's gracious transforming power to love Christ would
never do that. You lose your soul if you do that cause you're
not a true disciple. But the one who is willing to lose his life
for His sake gives evidence that he has a changed life cause
that's not natural, that's supernatural. And only because God
has transformed you, put His Spirit within you would you do that
or be willing to do that.
Genuine disciples don't shrink back from death. In Hebrews
it says in chapter 11 verse 38, talks about men who...who were so
worthy the world wasn't worthy of them. They wandered in deserts
and mountains and caves and holes in the ground. And all these
having gained approval through their faith did not receive what
was promised because God had provided something better for us so
that they apart from us should not be made perfect.
Those dear people endured never really seeing the reality
that we see and they were just folks like us. They went through
all kinds of things. They conquered kingdoms, performed acts of
righteousness, obtained promises, shut the mouths of lions,
quenched the power of fire, escaped the edge of the sword, from
weakness were made strong, became mighty in war, put foreign
armies to flight, women received back their dead by resurrection,
others were tortured, not accepting their release in order that
they might obtain a better resurrection. Others experienced
mocking and scourging and chains and imprisonment. They were
stoned. They were sawn in half. They were tempted, put to death
with the sword. They went around in sheepskins, goatskins,
destitute, afflicted and ill treated. And they never vacillated,
never vacillated.
Why? One chapter earlier, "My righteous ones shall live by
faith and if he shrinks back, My soul has no pleasure in him but
we are not of those who shrink back to destruction but those who
have faith to the persevering of the soul." True believers can
face death victoriously. If you really know Christ you can. I
can. We may not feel now that we can, and that's a good
expression of our humility, but in the hour of our need God will
provide what we need.
You see, salvation is not an experiment. Salvation is a
life-long commitment. Salvation is not "try Jesus," see if He
works. Salvation is a life-long transformation. Those who would
tell us that a person can become a Christian without becoming a
disciple do a great disservice to Scripture and they do a great
disservice to people who then live under the illusion that they
can be saved without following Christ in obedience. They can be
saved without giving up all they are and have and ever hope to be
unconditionally to Christ. That's tragic.
And I say, as I said at the very beginning of this brief
series, we had better get the gospel message straight. We can
mess up on some things, not on this...not on this. Eternal souls
are at stake.
Someone wrote, "I could not work my soul to save, that work
my Lord has done. But I would work like any slave for love of
God's own Son."
I trust that's your heart, that you're a disciple who
follows Christ. If not, then you better examine yourself to see
whether you're genuinely in the faith.
© 1997 Grace to You Added to the
John MacArthur Collection located at:
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