00:00
00:00
00:01
Transcript
1/0
Please turn in your copies of
God's Word to the Gospel of Luke. The Gospel of Luke, chapter 9,
beginning in verse 57. Context, of course, is that Jesus
has set his face toward Jerusalem because his time has come. And
so we read, as they were going along the road, someone said
to him, I will follow you wherever you go. And Jesus said to him,
foxes have holes and birds of the air have nests, but the son
of man has nowhere to lay his head. To another he said, follow
me. But he said, Lord, let me first
go and bury my father. And Jesus said to him, leave
the dead to bury their own dead. But as for you, go and proclaim
the kingdom of God. Yet another said, I will follow
you, Lord, but let me first say farewell to those in my home.
Jesus said to him, no one who puts his hand to the plow and
looks back is fit for the kingdom of God. So ends God's word, let
us pray. Lord, we ask that as your word
is proclaimed, that you would give us hearts and a faith that
does not shrink away or look back. Help us even now by faith
to look to Christ and to his word. Help us to receive it as
those who would be his disciples. We pray this in Jesus' name,
amen. On April 9th, 1945, only a month
before Allied victory was declared in Europe, Dietrich Bonhoeffer
was sentenced to death. Bonhoeffer was a German pastor
and theologian who was part of the Confessing Church. They were
called the Confessing Church because they resisted persecution
and they held fast to the truth through their creeds and confessions,
just like we do as a church. At the time, Adolf Hitler had
made the Antichrist's claim to be head of all of the German
churches, while the Confessing Church rejected this claim. And
as you would expect, they were persecuted. Dietrich Bonhoeffer,
in particular, was accused of being associated with the July
20th plot to assassinate Hitler. And so he was tried and executed
and hanged. But among the writings that Bonhoeffer
left behind was his challenge to the notion that the call to
be a follower of Christ was something easy or comfortable. He called this idea cheap grace,
about which he wrote the following. Cheap grace is the preaching
of forgiveness without requiring repentance, baptism without church
discipline, communion without confession, absolution without
personal confession. Cheap grace is grace without
discipleship, grace without the cross, grace without Jesus Christ
living and incarnate. Well, in contrast to this cheap
grace, Bonhoeffer wrote about grace that is costly. He writes,
such grace is costly because it costs a man his life. And
it is grace because it gives a man the only true life. It
is costly because it condemns sin. And it is grace because
it justifies the sinner. Above all, it is costly because
it costs God the life of his son. You were bought at a price. And what has cost God cannot,
what has cost God much cannot be cheap to us. Above all, it
is grace because God did not reckon his son too dear a price
to pay for our life, but delivered him up for us. Costly grace is
the incarnation of God. Now, to be clear, in case there's
any misunderstanding, Bonhoeffer is not saying that grace is costly
in the sense that it has to be earned. No, then it wouldn't
be grace at all. Rather, he's saying that as recipients
of God's costly grace that cost him the death of his son, well,
there is a cost that we pay as we follow his son, as his disciples. And that, in many ways, is the
message of our passage this morning. The context, of course, is that
Jesus is on the road to Jerusalem. He said that the time has come
for him to go to Jerusalem. We've been told how he set his
face like flint to go there. He's on a direct path to suffer,
to be handed over, and to die in order to fulfill all of the
requirements of our salvation. And as he's on that path, he
encounters three different men. Each of these men in their own
way express a certain desire to follow Christ and to go after
him. However, Jesus challenges each
one of these men in a way that exposes perhaps their unwillingness
to truly count the cost of his discipleship. He tells the first
man that to follow me means that you'll be homeless. He tells
the second man that he can't bury his father. He tells the
third man that he can't kiss his wife and kids goodbye. Now
Jesus' words here seem unusual, don't they? Shocking. And that's
because they are. Now we need to rightly understand
Jesus' words. Jesus here isn't laying down a universal set of
commands for Christians in all times and places. And we know
that because, well, we know the church in Acts buried Stephen
after he was martyred. Paul spent time saying his goodbyes
to the Ephesians. And the Philippian jailer certainly
wasn't forbidden from seeing his family. So Jesus isn't speaking
literalistically here. He's speaking in hyperbole, which
is shocking and deliberately exaggerating kind of language.
And so these commands are to be read much in the same way
that we read Jesus' commands, that we are to hate our parents.
Is Jesus calling us to sin by hating our parents? No, that's
not his point. It's exaggerated language calling
us to examine our deepest commitments, to make us think, and to make
us count the cost of following him. And so through Jesus' words
in each of these encounters, we learn the true cost of following
after him. When you commit to follow Christ,
You do so on his terms, not on your terms. You don't get to
write up a contract and argue for your terms and expect him
to meet you halfway. No, when you follow Christ, you
follow him on his terms. And he does not promise you an
easy life. A blessed life, yes. Eternal life, yes. But first
he calls you to follow him through paths that may be difficult,
that may even involve suffering for his name. And whether we're
here this morning and whether we've been disciples for a very
long time, or whether we've just set out on our road following
Jesus, all of us need to hear Jesus' words. All of us need
to consider his words, and therefore count the cost of discipleship. Well, in order to follow him,
a disciple of Christ must first prepare to suffer like him. Second, to prioritize his kingdom. And third, to persevere without
turning back. Well, in the first encounter,
Jesus teaches that his disciples must prepare to suffer like Christ. Luke tells us in the opening
verse that this encounter takes place as they're going along
the road. So going along the road is the
background, it's the context on which this, on the stage on
which this drama unfolds before us. It's the context of all of
these conversations. Again, you recall from last week,
Jesus is on the road from Galilee through Samaria to Jerusalem. And he's going to Jerusalem not
to attend a conference or a pastor's conference or something like
that. He's not there to see old friends or to have a party. No,
he's going to Jerusalem to be rejected, to suffer, and to be
handed over. And as he's walking along this
road to Jerusalem, a man walks up to him and says in verse 57,
I will follow you wherever you go. This is certainly a commendable
offer, is it not? To follow Jesus wherever he may
go. Now, Luke doesn't really tell
us much about this man, but interestingly, Matthew does. Matthew, in his
gospel, tells us that this man was a scribe, and he actually
addresses Jesus as teacher. So perhaps this indicates the
issue with this man. It seems this man was willing
to sit under Jesus as a student might sit under a teacher. He
was willing to learn from Jesus. And often men like this who were
scribes, in order to get their MDiv or their PhD, they would
find a rabbi of good repute and they'd follow him for a time,
they'd shadow him, and then when their internship was over, they'd
kind of have their qualifications and then they'd move on, maybe
be a rabbi for someone else. And so perhaps this man is thinking
this kind of way. But Jesus makes clear that he's
no mere teacher or rabbi. to simply follow and then move
on after you've gleaned a little bit of learning. No, following
him will mean much more than shadowing him with pen and paper
and hand. Following Jesus will be costly,
because Jesus isn't just one more rabbi. And his message,
which is the gospel, which is the religion of Christianity,
is not just one more teaching or philosophy or idea. But you
hear people talk that way, don't you? I mean, if people hear you're
a Christian, and if they don't go the one way of outright rejecting
you and ridiculing you, they kind of go the other way, don't
they? Where they say, oh, that's nice for you. Yeah, you know,
I tried Christianity once. I tried all the different religions.
And I like Jesus' teachings. He's got some good words. But
it just wasn't for me. I tried it, not for me. Well,
you don't try Christianity, Jesus says. Christianity is not an
ice cream flavor that you can pick out and taste and put back.
No, you follow Christ, either with total commitment or you
don't follow him at all. Well, Jesus, perhaps sensing
that this is the issue with this man, responds to him saying,
foxes have holes and birds of the air have nests, but the Son
of Man has nowhere to lay his head. Now, this was actually
a proverb that was used to speak of Roman soldiers. The life of
a Roman soldier was one of traveling very often, not really traveling
in luxury, traveling with really nowhere to lay their heads, moving
from one spot to the next, building these temporary camps. And that's
what Jesus' mission has been like. Jesus tells the man, he's
homeless. Birds can make their nice nests
and they can fluff it up with twigs and straw and fluff and
different things, pieces of fabric. Foxes have cozy little dens,
but the son of man has nowhere to lay his head. And thus Jesus
says, to follow me means you will be homeless. And we need to understand Jesus'
words here in context. Why does, Doesn't Jesus have
anywhere to lay his head? Well, it's not because he really
likes camping or he loves the outdoors and he likes looking
up the stars. It's not because it's wrong for his disciples
to own houses. No, the reason he doesn't have
anywhere to stay is because he is being actively rejected by
his own people and those around him. You remember how just in
the previous passage, the Samaritans would not receive Jesus. In other words, they would not
show him hospitality. When Jesus came into town and
they heard his message and they heard of his suffering messiahship,
they'd rather have him sleep on a park bench and then leave
the next day rather than give up their spare bedroom. Jesus'
words also recall the wider context of his whole life in his ministry.
Recall how Luke tells us at his birth, there was nowhere for
him as a baby. There was no room in his family
home, so he had to stay in a stable or a cave with animals. And even
when he gets to Jerusalem, the city of the king, the city of
the king will not receive their king. As John says in the opening
of his gospel, he was in the world. Who was in the world?
The one through whom the world was made. Yet the world did not
know him. He came to his own, and his own
people did not receive him. And so what Jesus is teaching
this man, isn't that Christians can't own homes or be comfortable
or that kind of thing. Rather, it's that if you are
to follow me, you must be prepared to suffer like me. If I have
been rejected, so will you. To follow Jesus means more than
sitting at his feet as a student would a good and wise teacher.
It's more than sticking a fish on your bumper. or even simply
what you choose to do on a Sunday morning. Now, following Christ
requires the complete reorientation of your entire life. He claims
all of your life. It means total commitment to
him, and it means even being ready to suffer and to die for
his namesake. Jesus wants us to know this,
not to discourage us or to dissuade us from following him, He tells
us this in order to prepare us. Listen to what Ryle says. Grace,
by the way, and glory in the end shall be given to every sinner
who comes to him. But he would not have us ignorant
that we shall have deadly enemies, the world, the flesh, and the
devil, and that many will hate us, slander us, and persecute
us if we become his disciples. He does not wish to discourage
us, but he does wish us to know the truth. The choice to follow
Jesus will mean rejection by the world. Sometimes we get so
surprised when, really, Hollywood isn't treating Christians fairly?
Or our politicians are doing this thing or that thing against
us? Jesus warned us that should be the norm. That should be the
norm. They rejected me, they will reject
you. Most of you know what that's
like, being rejected by the world. Some of you have been rejected
by family members, sons and daughters, people you've raised, you've
bore in your womb. You've been rejected by an unbelieving
spouse, by cousins. Some of you have been rejected
in the workplace and even now you're dreading tomorrow because
you know you're going to be sitting alone munching your lunch by
yourself, ostracized, separated, cast aside by your co-workers.
You're left out of office parties and other engagements because
you won't do what others want to do or they think you're bigoted
or strange. And when we think of Christians
and the other side of the globe being burned out of their homes
and having their businesses destroyed and taken from them by the government,
it can be easy for us to say, well, what I'm facing isn't persecution. That's persecution, not what
I'm suffering. When you're in the middle of
it, and you're facing this reality of being rejected, and to the
point where you're dreading that family picnic or dinner, and
you're dreading getting out of bed in the morning to go to work,
trust me, believer, you are suffering persecution. That is exactly
what Jesus is talking about. Make no mistake, it is persecution,
and you are suffering, and you are paying the cost of bearing
Christ's name. All of us are to count the cost.
Some of us even now are paying that cost in great ways. And
if you are, if you are, let me encourage you with the words
of the Apostle Peter. He writes, beloved, Do not be
surprised at the fiery trial when it comes upon you to test
you as though something strange were happening to you, but rejoice
insofar as you share Christ's sufferings, that you may also
rejoice and be glad when his glory is revealed. If you are
insulted, For the name of Christ, you are blessed because the spirit
of glory and of God rests upon you. You see, Christ not only
places his name upon us, that puts a target on our backs for
the world of flesh and the devil, but he also gives you the grace
to endure that. And he reminds you that although you are cursed
by the world, there is a voice that speaks louder and it is
a spirit's testimony that you belong to Christ and that the
spirit and God rests upon you. And so, beloved, as contrary
as it is to our flesh and our minds at times, rejoice when
you suffer, in knowing that because you suffer with Christ, you will
also share in his glory when it is revealed on the last day. The one who would follow Christ
must first prepare to suffer for his name. Secondly, the disciple
of Christ must prioritize the kingdom. That's what Jesus teaches
us in the second encounter. Well, as Jesus goes along the
road, he meets another man. But this time, it's actually
Jesus who initiates the conversation. He approaches the man and he
says, follow me. However, the man responds, Lord,
let me first go and bury my father. This seems like a fairly reasonable
request here. This guy just wants to have a
funeral for his father. But notice how Jesus replies.
He says in verse 60, leave the dead to bury their own dead,
but as for you, go and proclaim the kingdom of God. So Jesus
tells this man that he shouldn't bury his father. If he is to
be his disciple, he must prioritize the proclamation of the kingdom
above everything else. Now, some people who perhaps
find Jesus' words here just a little bit too shocking would argue
that, well, you know, Jesus isn't telling him that he can't bury
his father. In fact, the man's father is
still alive, and really the man's just making an excuse, and really
what the man is saying is, I'll follow you in five or 10 years,
you know, when maybe my aged father finally does die. Now,
that certainly would make Jesus' words a lot less shocking. But
therein lies the problem. Jesus' words throughout this
passage are designed to be shocking, and there's no escaping that.
This man's father has just died. The funeral hasn't happened yet.
This man is asking Jesus for a day, two atop, so that he can
take care of arrangements. And Jesus says no. He tells the
man, let the dead bury their own dead. The point is that those
without kingdom priorities are to take care of such matters.
He's saying let the spiritually dead bury the physically dead.
How can Jesus say something like this? How can he tell this man
essentially not to bury his father, something that was wrapped up
with honoring one's parents, and therefore wrapped up with
the entire Ten Commandments and the law that people were to follow?
Well, again, Jesus here is not setting down a universal command
that we are not to bury our dead. In Acts, Jesus' disciples will
bury Stephen. Even Ananias and Sapphira will
get a decent burial. So Jesus' words are not understood
as universal commands, but as specific commands for this specific
point in time. We've been told that it is the
time for Jesus to go to Jerusalem. That's the context behind all
of this. And the background for the rules
that Jesus gives here are rooted in the Old Testament and the
rules given to the high priest. In the Old Testament, as shocking
as it sounds, the high priest, not only was he not allowed to
go to funerals, he was not even allowed, permitted to attend
the funeral of his own parents. And so with this command, Jesus
is linking his own ministry and the work of his kingdom with
that of the high priest of old. His ministry has the same kind
of singular focus, holiness, priority, and urgency as the
high priest of God. It is time to go to Jerusalem
to fulfill the exodus, and nothing will get in the way of that mission,
either for himself or for those who would follow him. Well, if that's the specific
explanation of Jesus' command here to this man, what does this
have to teach us about the nature of our own discipleship? Well,
Jesus is not saying that we shouldn't care for our parents. He's not
telling us that we can't bury our dead. No, the principle he's
teaching with this shocking language is that in all that we do, we
must prioritize his kingdom above all else. Commitment to Christ
must take priority in your life. It is to take priority over your
finances, over your relationships, over the use of your time, over
your recreation, and yes, even over your family. The question
that you must ask your own heart this morning is this. Is Christ
and is his kingdom the priority in your life, your home, your
marriage, your child-rearing, what you do with your time and
in your relationships? Are all those things subordinated
to him? Or is there something else that
takes priority? And there are so many things that vie for that
place of being first in our hearts. There are so many things that
distract us from serving Christ and his kingdom. There are so
many things that push their way forward. And our remaining sin
will always be tempted to take those things and to place them
first. Whether it's sports, or work, or hobbies, or simply the
love of pleasure, or laziness. And for some who count that cost,
it will be too much. They'll give up something for
Christ, but they won't give him everything. And to those, Christ
will say those chilling words, even though you may gain the
whole world, you will lose your own soul. But for those who say,
yes, Lord, you are first, I submit to you in all things, Well, then
he promises blessing, not only blessing in this age and this
life, but ultimately blessing an eternal life. And so, beloved,
seek first the kingdom of God and his righteousness, knowing
that even if you are to lose all of the things that this world
counts precious and dear, even if you are to lose your own life,
what you stand to gain is Christ and his kingdom for eternity. The third thing Jesus teaches
us is that to be his disciple, we must persevere without turning
back. Well, now a third man comes up
to Jesus and offers his services, offers to follow him. He says,
I will follow you, Lord, but let me first say farewell to
those at my home. Now, certainly this, if nothing
else was, this is a reasonable request from a man who's perhaps
a father and he wants to say goodbye to his wife and kids
just to give them one last hug before he departs. But Jesus
shocks us again. He says, no one who puts his
hand to the plow and looks back is fit for the kingdom of God. Well, this seems even more harsh
than the request to simply bury your father. In fact, this guy
seems to have Old Testament precedent. The Old Testament passage that's
the background of this is what we read earlier in the calling
of Elisha by Elijah. Elijah finds Elisha plowing in
the field, and he comes to him and he calls him, and Elisha
asks if he can say goodbye to his family first, and Elijah
seems to permit that. So this guy's request is rooted
in what he was taught in Sunday school, but Jesus, teaches that
his discipleship is even more serious than that of Elijah's.
Jesus will not permit something that Elijah allowed. His ministry
at this point in time has a greater urgency than Elijah's. His face
is set like flint to go to Jerusalem, so there is no place for turning
the face to kiss one's wife and kids farewell. Interestingly,
Jesus even picks up on the imagery of the plow that Elisha abandoned
and burned. And he says, no one who puts
his hand to the plow and looks back is fit for the kingdom of
God. Imagery here, of course, is that
of someone plowing a field. In order to plow a field with
animals, you need to keep your eyes and your gaze dead ahead
in order to keep your furrow straight. If you turn or if you
look behind you, it can't be done and you'll make a mess of
your field and you won't be able to sow for harvest. And again, Jesus is making applications
specific to his time. He's not saying that we can't
say goodbye to people. We have to be in too much of
a rush to say goodbye to people. We know that Paul spent a long
time with the Ephesians saying goodbye to them. Many of the
prophets had long goodbye speeches to the people. The spiritual
point that Jesus is teaching us is that we cannot claim to
follow him while also claiming to follow the world. We cannot
walk after him and look back affectionately to sin and to
our old ways. This language of looking back
is deliberately chosen, and it's language really rooted in so
many cases in the Old Testament. Think of how many times the Bible
gives us an example of this. Remember Lot's wife, how she
looked back at Sodom and she was turned to a pillar of salt.
I remember reading that as a child and just thinking, well, I know
if I was there, I'd want to see the fireworks. I'd want to see
what was happening. It seems a bit cruel of God. Well, that's
not what's happening. She's not looking back to see
a fireworks display. She's looking back in her heart.
She's looking back to Sodom and she's shedding a tear because
she's missing the time that she had there and all that that city
meant to her. She was turning from God and
that's why she was judged. Remember Israel, how they looked
back to life in Egypt. They remembered the leeks and
the vegetables and they remembered the meat pots. They didn't remember
the chains and the whips and the idolatry. The point that
Jesus is making is that you cannot follow after two things at once.
You cannot plow straight ahead and also look back longingly
to the things of the world. Well, beloved, in what ways are
you tempted to look back? Like Lot's wife, in what ways
are you looking back to Sodom, looking back to the world? Maybe
before you came to Christ, you lived in God's providence, you
lived for a long time in sin, and perhaps you tread deep furrows
and paths leading back to that sin. And so even now as a believer,
there's ways that those paths entice you back and call you
back. Are you looking back to those things with fondness and
affection? Or maybe you grew up in the church
and you were spared from a lot of the outward experience of
the things of the world and you didn't get to make those same
kinds of sins and mistakes. And yet there's still a draw
behind you. There's still a draw from the
world. And it's telling you that you're missing out. Your parents
have made you miss out. Your church has made you miss
out. You've let yourself miss out. And it's wooing you and
it's ticing you to look over your shoulder and to look back
with longing. Well, dear Christian, On the
one hand, be warned of what God says in his word. As Jesus says,
the one who looks back is not fit for his kingdom. In Hebrews
10, he says, my soul has no pleasure in the one who shrinks back.
God does not delight in the one who shrinks away. These are serious
words, words of judgment. But then secondly, he goes on
to say in Hebrews, But we are not of those who shrink back
and are destroyed, but of those who have faith and thus preserve
our souls. How do we keep from looking back? How do we keep from going back?
How do we stand firm in our faith and keep looking forward when
we feel the tug on our heartstrings towards sin and the flesh and
the devil? How do we stand firm and preserve
our souls when sin, it feels like, has us in a lasso and it's
pulling us and tugging us away or trying to pull the feet from
under us? Well, the author of Hebrews says it's through faith.
We are those who have faith and thus preserve our souls. And
it should be no surprise that what follows in the book of Hebrews
from chapter 10 is Hebrews chapter 11, which is all about those
who persevered through faith. And really, that entire chapter
isn't a testimony about them. No, it's their testimony to God
and to Christ and the one who sustains his saints. And finally,
the author of Hebrews concludes his point at the beginning of
chapter 12 with this exhortation. Therefore, since we are surrounded
by so great a cloud of witnesses, let us also lay aside every weight
and sin which clings so closely. Let us run with endurance the
race that is set before us, looking to Jesus, the founder and perfecter
of our faith, who for the joy that was set before him endured
the cross, despising the shame, and is seated at the right hand
of the throne of God. So we see the way we persevere
without looking back is by looking forward to Jesus and to what
he has done. And so beloved, look to Jesus,
consider him, consider what he has done for you, how he set
his face like Flint to go to Jerusalem, how he put his hand
to the plow and he set his face like Flint dead ahead and he
never looked back, he never took his hand from the plow. He lived
a completely righteous and obedient life, ever looking back to the
world's enticements, all the way to the cross, so that he
would not only be our righteousness before the Father, but also our
sacrifice to make us right before God. And because he did this,
and because he completed his journey, his exodus, therefore
we have the assurance that all that was necessary for our salvation
and to pay for our sins has been dealt with, It's all been accomplished. And therefore there is nothing
else for us to do to earn our place in God's presence. We simply
walk in his footsteps behind him. He is the trailblazer. He
is the author and finisher of our faith. We simply ride into
heaven on his coattails. He is the one who has gone before
us, who has opened the way. And so look to Christ. I look
to the cross. Consider how much he loves you,
dear Christian, and how much he has shown his love in dying
for you, even when you were his enemies. See his love, be filled
with his love, and then say in faith, in the words of the hymn,
all the vain things that charm me most, I sacrifice them to
his blood. I let us then in faith prepare
to suffer for Christ's sake. but doing so with joy, knowing
that as we share in his sufferings now, we will share in his glory
later. As his disciples, let us prioritize
his kingdom before all things, knowing that as we seek first
his kingdom and his righteousness, he will provide for all of our
needs. And then finally, as his disciples,
let us persevere without looking back. In the same way that Jesus
set his face towards Jerusalem, let us set our face towards Jesus,
the one who for the joy that was set before him endured the
cross, despising the shame, and is seated at the right hand of
the throne of God. Beloved, set your eyes upon Christ
and never look back. Let's pray. Or we thank you for sending your
son. We thank you for what Bonhoeffer
called that costly grace of sending Christ, of his life of obedience,
his life of suffering, wherein he did not even have a place
to lay his head. Or he was rejected. He suffered
and he died. But in doing so, he opened up
the way for us to be in union with him and thus with you. And
Lord, help us, therefore, to follow as his disciples. Give
us the grace that we might suffer well. Give us the grace that
we might put you first and your kingdom ahead of ourselves. And
help us, Lord, to keep our fix, keep our gaze fixed upon Christ
and upon his kingdom. We pray these things in Jesus'
name, amen.
The Cost of Discipleship
Series Luke
| Sermon ID | 92423133319321 |
| Duration | 35:31 |
| Date | |
| Category | Sunday - AM |
| Bible Text | Luke 9:57-62 |
| Language | English |
Documents
Add a Comment
Comments
No Comments
© Copyright
2026 SermonAudio.