Luke 14:25-35 · The Cost of Being a Disciple
A Young Man's Vow
Luke 14:25-33
Sermon
by Richard Hasler
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A young man awakens in the morning and hears the birds singing. He realizes how fortunate he is. It is summer time and he is back home in his father’s parsonage in Gunsbach, Germany. Recently, he has been reading about Jesus’ call in the gospels:

“Whoever does not carry the cross and follow me cannot be my disciple.”

“From everyone to whom much is given, much will be required.”

Whoever would save his life shall lose it, and whoever shall lose his life for my sake and the gospel shall save it.”

What do these verses from the Bible mean?

This young university student, named Albert Schweitzer, decided that day Jesus’ words had spoken to him personally. He had lived a privileged life. God had given him many gifts. What should be his response?

The young student resolved to continue his studies. He gained a doctorate in philosophy and later one in medicine. He was a yawningly brilliant student, and he planned to continue his academic studies until the age of thirty, when he would study medicine and become a physician. He came across a missionary magazine in 1904 and noticed that the Paris Missionary Society was looking for a missionary doctor to work in their Congo mission.

Schweitzer wrote in his autobiography: “My thirtieth birthday, a few months later, I spent like the man in the parable who ‘desiring to build a tower, first counts the cost whether he have wherewith to complete it. The result was that I resolved to realize my plan of direct human service in Equatorial Africa.”[1]

As he planned to enter the mission field, his family and close friends attempted to persuade him otherwise, telling him he would be wasting his enormous gifts in Africa. His wife, Helene, served as a nurse by his side for many years. Eventually, she had to leave him and return to Europe because of poor health. From time to time Dr. Schweitzer returned to Europe where he was honored for his achievements at Lambarene.

 Schweitzer was not without his critics who complained about his primitive hospital and its poor sanitary conditions, but the African people loved him and continued to come to him for medical services. During World War II he was prohibited from traveling because of wartime conditions.

Schweitzer was noted for his organ music, especially for his mastery of Bach, but he also was acclaimed for his knowledge of the construction of the organ itself. For example, Pierre van Passen recalled, “How Dr. Schweitzer once came to Autopen (Holland) to preach the Christmas sermon when I was a guest at the manse. He arrived on a Monday and Christmas fell on a Saturday. We did not see the great man all week, until finally passing the cathedral and hearing the organ, we found Dr. Schweitzer covered with dust and sweat, up in the loft busy cleaning the pipes. On Christmas he not only preached the sermon, but also played the organ to the astonishment of the churchgoers who upon entering the cathedral, looked up with amazement when they heard the prelude and said, ‘Is that our old organ?’ ”[2]

In the scripture passage, Luke 14:26-33, Luke had Jesus speaking to the disciples and to the large crowds following him. These people were unaware that Jesus was going to Jerusalem not just to celebrate the Passover but also to die upon the cross. Jesus never pulled any punches, but he told them bluntly that they were not in it for a “joy ride.” If they really wanted to be his disciples and not just followers, they should be prepared to suffer, and perhaps even die in following him.

Jesus undoubtedly shocked those who followed him to learn that they must “hate” their family. Ordinarily, Jesus exalted the family, but in this instance although loving our family was a legitimate loyalty, there was a loyalty that superseded loyalty to the family, namely loyalty to God. Did they realize what they were doing in following Jesus on this occasion? He was going to the cross and nothing was greater than what he was doing. Not family, not their possessions, not even their very lives.

Two stories Jesus told to illustrate what he had in mind, one involved building a “tower” the other pertained to preparing for “war.” In a vineyard, the owner would build a tower so that he could see if thieves had invaded his vineyard and if roaming animals might be a threat. Likewise, when war was imminent; one did not prepare in a haphazard way, but rather took careful count of the size of the enemy and what it would take to overcome such numbers.

Did many of the people that followed him that day, really know what was involved? They were not going to a picnic, or even a celebration, but if they followed him they were going to a cross. The people seemed to be enthusiastic enough but for the wrong reasons. They were expecting a “joy ride.” Jesus sought to correct this misapprehension. They didn’t understand the seriousness of discipleship. He was going toward Jerusalem. It would be costly, even dangerous.

Tom Wright put it this way: He asked us to imagine we were on a serious expedition when our leader reminds us “that we are ‘forging a way through a high and dangerous mountain pass to bring urgent medical aid to villagers cut off from the rest of the world.’ ‘If you want to come any further,’ the leader says, ‘you’ll have to leave your packs behind, from here on the path is too steep to carry all that stuff. You probably won’t find it again. And you’d better send your last postcards home’ this is a dangerous route and it’s very likely that several of us won’t make it back.’”[3]

We may not like to hear these words, but we know why they must be said. Such was the situation in Jesus’ day.

In our own time, no one has explained Christian discipleship better than the German theologian and pastor, Dietrich Bonhoeffer. In his book titled The Cost of Discipleship he explained what he means by “cheap grace” and “costly grace.”

“Cheap grace is the preaching of forgiveness without requiring repentance and baptism without church discipline. Cheap grace is grace without discipleship, grace without the cross, grace without Jesus Christ, living and incarnate.”

“Costly grace is the treasure hidden in the field; for the sake of it a man will gladly go and sell all that he has. It is the pearl of great price to buy which the merchant will sell all his goods. It is the kingly rule of Christ, for whose sake a man will pluck out his eyes which causes him to stumble; it is the call of Jesus Christ at which the disciple leaves his nets and follows him.”[4]

We all want to be in control of our lives, believing that is what is best for us. But the opposite is really true. God is the one we should trust above all others.

Fred Buechner recalled a time in his life when everything seemed out of control, and he did not know what to do. “I remember sitting parked by the roadside once, terribly depressed, afraid about my daughter’s illness and what was going on in our family, then out of nowhere a car came along down the highway with a license plate that bore on it the one word out of all of the words in the dictionary that I needed most to see exactly then. The word was trust.

Later on he learned that the owner of the car, as Buechner guessed, was a trust officer in a bank. Later, Buechner mentioned this incident in an article he had written. The trust officer traced his address and one day appeared on the doorstep with the license plate. Buechner now keeps the battered license plate on a bookshelf in his home “as holy a relic as I have ever seen.”[5]

What does the Bible say? “Blessed is the one who trusts in the Lord, whose trust is in the Lord (Jeremiah 17:7). “When I am afraid, I will trust in you” (Psalm 56:3). “Cast all your anxiety on God because God cares for you” (1 Peter 5:7).

John Wesley made it a practice to recite the following pledge for forty years at the New Year’s Eve Watch Night service:

I am no longer my own
but yours.
Put me to what you will,
rank me with whoever you will.
Put me to doing…
Put me to suffering.
Let me be employed for you
or laid aside for you
Exalted for you or
Brought low for you.
Let me be full
Let me be empty
Let me have all things
Let me have nothing!
And now O Father,
You are mine and I am yours.
So be it. And the covenant I am
making on earth,
Let it be ratified in heaven.
Amen
.[6]

We all have the need of wanting to be in control of everything. Perhaps we all would be better off if things were out of our control. We have seen that Wesley learned this lesson early in his career, and he reminded himself at the beginning of each new year at the Watch Night service.

In the Bible we have the example of Abraham and Sarah going out from their home not knowing where they were going. David looked to the hills whence came his strength. Joshua and Caleb were not discouraged from their spying expedition in Canaan because the enemy looked bigger than the armies of Israel.

Closer to home, I once had the privilege of helping to lead a seminar for young pastors. The main leader was Phil, our executive presbyter. He had had a heart attack in the prime of life. During one of the discussion periods Phil shared what effect the heart attack had upon his ministry. His heart attack made him realize that he had been trying to do too many things at the same time all by himself. He finally decided, in his words, ‘to resign as “the manager of the universe.’’ Since then, he trusted God to control his life. He had peace when he came to realize that he did not have to accomplish everything by himself.

Albert Schweitzer, Fred Buechner, John Wesley, and Phil Bembower learned this lesson, and we must learn it too if we are to become true disciples of Jesus.

Amen.


[1]. Albert Schweitzer, Out of My Life and Thought, An Autobiography: (New York: A Mentor Book, Henry Holt and Company, Inc., 1949), 70.

[2]. Ibid.,191.

[3]. Tom Wright, Luke for Everyone (Louisville, Kentucky: Westminster John Knox Press, 2004), 180.

[4]. Dietrich Bonhoeffer, The Cost of Discipleship (New York: A Touchstone Book, Published by Simon & Schuster, 1995), 44-45.

[5]. George Connor, Compiler, Daily meditation with Frederick Buechner (New York, Harper San Francisco, A Division of HarperCollins Publishers, 1971), 326.

[6]. Leonard Sweet, A Cup of Coffee at the Soul Cafe (Nashville: Broadman & Holman Publishers, 1998), 167.

CSS Publishing Company, Inc., The last days: Cycle C sermons for Proper 18, Ordinary Time 23, Pentecost 13 through Christ the King Sunday on the Gospel texts, by Richard Hasler