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Chosen no: R-5425 a, from: 1914 Year. |
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The Cost Of Discipleship
--APRIL
19.--LUKE
14:25-35.--
"Whosoever will save his life shall lose it; whosoever will
lose his life for My sake shall find it."--Matthew 16:25.
IT WAS at the close of the Great Teacher's
ministry. Vast multitudes were following Him, all, according to the
requirements of the Law, going up to Jerusalem
to keep the Feast of the Passover, at which Jesus foreknew, that He would die
as the antitypical Passover Lamb. Occasionally in the journey He would turn and
address some of the multitude. Today's lesson gives us some of His teachings.
It was the custom of teachers in those days to accept disciples, or
pupils--those who considered them great teachers and desired to learn of them
and profit by their instruction. To this day Christians claim to be the
disciples, or followers, of Jesus, claim to be giving heed to His word and seeking
the blessing which He promised to His faithful followers.
The terms of discipleship which Jesus set forth,
it will be noted, are very different from those proclaimed by some who profess
to be His mouthpieces, His ministers. They sometimes proclaim that it is a
sufficient sign of discipleship for persons to arise in a congregation and
declare that they desire the prayers of God's people. Such are counted
converts. To get them to take even this step requires the holding out of
inducements. Sometimes the inducements are of a commercial kind--greater
business prosperity to the merchant, greater favor with the employer for the
clerk, an entrance into society or a better prospect of political preferment.
If we contrast these methods with the words of
Jesus in this lesson, we shall perceive that the vast number of [R5425 : page 91] nominal Christians have been,
so to speak, inveigled into professing something that they never intended to
profess. Many are entrapped into professing Christianity who never became
Christians, according to the Master's conditions of discipleship, and who
hearken not to His Word.
"If any man come unto Me and hate not his
father, and mother, and wife, and children, and brethren and sisters, yea, and
his own life also, he cannot be My disciple. And whosoever doth not bear his
cross, and come after Me, cannot be My disciple." Surely there is no
excuse for us to misunderstand such plain terms and conditions. The Master did
not say that only His disciples could ever gain
everlasting life. His general teaching was that the whole world is lost,
estranged from God and without the right to everlasting life. But He came to
die, "the Just for the unjust," that all of the unjust might have the
opportunity of returning to Divine favor. He did not say that none but His
followers would have such an opportunity of future life. Those who so declare
are adding to the Word and helping thus, eventually, to confound themselves.
What Jesus did teach
was that He would in due time be "the true Light, which lighteth every man
that cometh into the world." The world had already existed for 4,000 years
before Jesus came, and no one will dispute that those who died previous to His
coming had no opportunity of knowing Him and being His disciples. Yet He died
to bless them, as well as to bless all who have been born into the world since.
This blessing of the world, He declared, is to be accomplished by His Kingdom;
and He told them plainly that His Kingdom was not of this world, age, or epoch,
but of a future period. For the time being He was merely inviting disciples,
and not attempting to reach the world. [R5426
: page 91]
The disciples were invited to become joint-heirs
with Jesus in His Kingdom, that they might sit with Him in His Throne and
participate with Him in His great work of human uplift--Restitution of all that
was lost in Adam and redeemed at Calvary. He
told them plainly that only through much tribulation would they be able to
enter the Kingdom class; that the tribulations would prove their love of
righteousness, their loyalty to God; and that God had purposely made the way so
narrow that only the few, the very choicest of humanity in God's sight, could
find it--a very few walking in that way to its further end of glory, honor and
immortality.
With this view clearly before our mind's eye,
there is a reasonableness in the hard terms of discipleship. Only those willing
to comply with such terms, and thus to demonstrate their love and loyalty to
God, could properly be entrusted with the great power, glory and honor which
will be granted to the Kingdom class, in association with the Redeemer, as soon
as it shall have been completed. Let us examine these words carefully,
meanwhile measuring ourselves--not our flesh, but our spirit, our intentions,
our desires.
Well did Henry Ward Beecher say respecting this
statement made by the Master: "Never was there before, and never has there
been since, I apprehend, such a speech made to those that professed to be
willing and desirous to follow another." And probably a parallel statement
is found in Matthew's Gospel (10:37): "He that loveth
father or mother more than Me is
not worthy of Me." The word hate is apparently used in contrast with love.
To be a disciple of Christ, then, means that we must love supremely the Lord
and the principles for which He stands, so that love for others would
comparatively be hatred.
This proposition in its very start signifies a
cutting-off --so far as the man is concerned, the will, the purpose --of every
other love that would conflict with our love for the Lord and with our
obedience to His will. Our earthly loves are to be counted as nothing in
comparison. We are to be ready to sacrifice at the Lord's command every earthly
hope, aim, object, and to lay down our lives willingly, gladly. Such as
manifest a devotion of this kind can be trusted with anything. Of these the
Lord speaks, saying prophetically, "They shall be Mine, saith the Lord, in
that Day when I (come to) make up My Jewels."--Malachi
3:17.
The fact that Jesus was of this character
Himself, and placed the Father's will above all other considerations, is an
assurance that all amongst His joint-heirs in the Kingdom will have the same
mind, the same spirit. He assures us that the Kingdom will not be a selfish
one, but the very reverse. The kings and princes and judges of that Kingdom
will be not only irresistible in power, but incorruptible, unbearably. With
them the Divine standard will be first, in the absolute sense.
Such devotion to the Lord as is here described
will necessarily at some time or other mean the severing of many earthly ties.
It means that the followers of Jesus will be thought a peculiar people; and
that many will think their course strange, unnatural, insane. Hence, as St.
Paul said, we are counted fools all the day long for Christ's sake--because we
preach the Wisdom of God and the Love of God in preference to the wisdom of
humanity and the love of humanity. Of such St. John writes, saying, "As He was, so
are we in this world"--ostracized, misunderstood; reproved, slandered.
Only those who can stand such an experience can be winners of the crown to
which Jesus referred, saying, To him that overcometh I will give a crown of
life, and permit him to sit with Me in My Throne.
Who is sufficient for these things? asks the
Apostle. And he furnishes the answer: "Our sufficiency is of God";
and in the promises--"My grace is sufficient for thee; My strength is made
perfect in weakness"; and again, "I will never leave thee, nor
forsake thee."
DEFINITION
OF CROSS-BEARING
Adding to the severity of the terms, Jesus
declared, "Whosoever doth not bear his cross and come after Me, cannot be
My disciple." It is not enough that we should start out with a courageous
intention, a bold acknowledgment of Jesus, and a bold profession of
discipleship. After we have been faithful in taking our stand on the Lord's
side, we must be proven. Not merely those who have a little enthusiasm at the
beginning, but those who shall demonstrate their worthiness by their
faithfulness will be accounted worthy, and will be finally accepted by the
Lord. Cross-bearing must be a daily matter. Our crosses are those oppositions
of the world, the flesh and the Devil which conflict with the Divine will as
laid down for us in the Lord's Word. The only proper sentiment is that which
the Master expresses, saying, "Not My will, but Thine."
As an admonition to all not to undertake
discipleship without mature deliberation, our Lord gave a parable of a man who
began to build a tower, laying the foundation, but who was not able to complete
it, and thus wasted his effort and made himself ridiculous, foolish. Another
illustration was that of going to war without adequate preparation--an
undertaking which would result disastrously. All the followers of Christ set
out to build characters and to "fight a good fight." Whoever enlists
under the banner of Jesus takes his stand against Satan and sin, and must
expect to have a hard battle, and not to receive the victor's crown, nor to
hear the words, "Well [R5426
: page 92] done,"
except by faithful perseverance in well doing.
What a blessing it would be if all who espouse
the cause of Christ would do so with a full, clear understanding of what they
are doing and with the fixed determination to go onward in the good way, not
even to look back! The cause of Christ would be much further advanced amongst
men; and while their number would be much smaller, their influence and power in
the world would undoubtedly be much greater.
"SALT
IS GOOD, BUT--"
Salt has preservative qualities in connection
with whatever it touches. It also serves to bring out the flavor of our food.
In olden times it was used as a symbol of faithfulness, loyalty; and it is said
that even yet some of the Arabs would be faithful to death to any person in
whose home they had eaten salt. To them it seems to mean a pledge of loyalty.
Jesus used salt as a symbol, representing His
own loyalty to God and the loyalty which all of His followers must have, and
not only so, but which they must maintain. If salt lose its value for seasoning
purposes, it is useless for anything else. It will not serve as a fertilizer,
for it has an opposite effect. It is absolutely useless except for its intended
purpose. So the Christian has a special purpose in the world--to be a
preservative power, to have, as it were, antiseptic qualities, and to draw out
all the good qualities of those with whom he is connected. This is the mission
of the Christian in respect to the world. If he fail in this, he has failed in
the purpose for which he was called, and is of no particular value in the
Lord's service.
"He that hath an ear to hear, let him
hear," said Jesus, in conclusion. All of His followers are to take heed to
these words. Whoever neglects them despises the One who gave them, and will
surely fail of a blessing that might otherwise have been secured. But as for
the world, "ears they have, but they hear not; eyes have they, but they
see not." We are not to measure the world by the same standards that we
measure ourselves and all who profess to be the followers of Jesus. The world's
highest standard is the Golden Rule. The Christian's highest standard is
self-sacrifice, doing God's will at any cost.
W.T. R-5425a : page 90 - 1914r