Luke 9:57-62 · The Cost of Following Jesus
Dogsleds And Dogged Determination
Luke 9:57-62
Sermon
by King Duncan
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Beverly Masek is a Native American living in Alaska. Beverly was born and raised in Anvik, a very small village in the interior of Alaska with a population of about seventy people. Anvik is one of the sites on the legendary Iditarod. The Iditarod is a dog sled race where one person runs through blizzards, ice and wilderness for 1,029 miles! The racer is all alone with help from no other human being. Just the dog team. The musher, as they are called, has to provide for himself or herself as well as the dogs. It's the most astounding test of human courage and strength imaginable!

When Beverly was only twelve-years-old, she said, "Someday I'm going to do that." She said that even though she didn't own one dog or a sled. All she had was a dream. Each year Beverly watched as one after another Iditarod musher entered her small town to the ringing of the town bell. Whether it was one in the morning or five in the morning, there was always someone there to ring the bell and greet the weary Iditarod racer. And Beverly thought, "Someday I'd like to hear the bell ring for me." They did ring the bell for Beverly. In fact they've rung it more than once. Beverly has successfully completed the Iditarod run four times!

TV pastor Robert Schuller interviewed Beverly. Here is what she told him, "I have to feed the dogs. I lift the dogs (seventy or eighty pounds) and I weigh only one hundred pounds. You have to be able to take care of the dogs and provide for them year round, it's a commitment of many years. I'm in my eighth generation of breeding my own dogs. Sometimes we run into an icy trail or fresh snow and sometimes it's about forty degrees below zero out there and I still have to take care of the dogs. There are times when I feel like I don't know if I can continue but I have to trust the Lord to help me because every mile, as we get farther into the race, I get more tired and have to rely on my dogs completely. But then again there always is that shining light at the end when I focus on reaching my goal." (1)

WE ALL KNOW THAT ONE OF THE SECRETS TO SUCCESS IN LIFE IS SIMPLY KEEP ON KEEPING ON.

Harry Jamieson was a legendary hardware salesman back in the 1940s. When he was asked how many calls he would make on a prospect before giving up, he replied, "It depends which one of us dies first." Jamieson is reputed to have called on one prospect 125 times before getting an order. Another prospect caved in after a mere 40 calls. He explained, "I cannot help buying from you; your persistence has paralyzed my resistance." (2)

Jesus said to a certain man, "Follow me." But the man replied, "I will follow you, Lord; but first let me go back and say goodby to my family." Jesus replied, "No one who puts his hand to the plow and looks back is fit for service in the kingdom of God." (9:62)

ONE OF THE GREAT SECRETS OF SUCCESS IN LIFE IS THAT OF PERSEVERANCE. People often fail because they quit too soon. They give up before they have a chance to realize success.

John Wesley, founder of the Methodist movement, was one person who discovered that success comes from not giving up. Let me read some excerpts from his diary:

  • Sunday, A.M., May 5 Preached in St. Anne's. Was asked not to come back anymore.
  • Sunday, P.M., May 5 Preached in St. John's. Deacons said, "Get out and stay out."
  • Sunday, A.M., May 12 Preached in St. Jude's. Can't go back there, either.
  • Sunday, A.M., May 19 Preached in St. Somebody Else's. Deacons called special meeting and said I couldn't return.
  • Sunday, P.M., May 19 Preached on street. Kicked off street.
  • Sunday, A.M., May 26 Preached in meadow. Chased out of meadow as bull was turned loose during service.
  • Sunday, A.M., June 2 Preached out at the edge of town. Kicked off the highway.
  • Sunday, P.M., June 2 Afternoon, preached in a pasture. TEN THOUSAND PEOPLE CAME OUT TO HEAR ME.

John Wesley would not give in or give up. Jesus said, "No one who puts his hand to the plow and looks back is fit for service in the kingdom of God."

One of the secrets of a successful life is to simply persevere. We saw this in the Vietnam conflict. Although immeasurably more powerful than North Vietnam, no matter what military or political tactics, short of nuclear weapons, it tried, our government could never impose its will on the North Vietnamese. Even the most intense bombing in the history of the world brought only a tenuous ceasefire that was more often violated than observed. The North Vietnamese succeeded merely by standing fast and waiting. They would not budge. They persevered, knowing that eventually we would tire of our losses. (3) "No one who puts his hand to the plow and looks back . . ." Good things happen when we hang in there and will not be defeated. THIS IS PARTICULARLY TRUE WHEN OUR CAUSE IS JUST AND OUR GOALS ARE LOFTY.

Now, there are some people who ought to give up and quit.

There was a story in the newspapers not too long ago about a robber in Virginia Beach, Va. who ought to be looking for another line of work. This inept criminal walked into the Life Savings Bank and demanded cash. The tellers handed over the loot, but they also slipped in an explosive dye pack with the money. This dye pack burns at about 400 degrees when activated. This poor unsuspecting robber stuffed the loot down the front of his pants and was out the door before he realized something was wrong. Witnesses say they saw "an explosion taking place inside his pants. He was seen hopping and jumping around," police spokesman Mike Carey said. The suspect stripped to his boxer shorts and left his smoldering pants behind. Police confiscated the charred pants but had not yet caught the robber when the story hit the papers. "He's probably sitting around with an ice pack in his lap," said Carey, who speculated the man could be easily identified by bright red dye in the area of his lap. There is a fellow who ought to call it quits. He was not suited for his line of work. (4)

There are times when wise persons cut their losses. However, if your cause is just and your goals are lofty, that is a different matter. Notice that Jesus said, "No one who puts his hand to the plow and looks back is fit for service IN THE KINGDOM OF GOD." If the kingdom of God is your goal, then you should never look back. You should hang in there. You should not quit regardless of your circumstances.

A lifelong marriage is like that. June is the month in which many young men and women head for the altar. Young people need to know that the most important factor in a successful marriage is a commitment that this is for keeps.

A man tells about visiting friends when they received a telephone call from their recently married daughter. After several tense minutes on the phone, the mother told the father to pick up the extension. The newlyweds had had their first big fight. A few moments later the father came back to where his friends were waiting. He tersely explained, "She said she wanted to come home." "What did you tell her?" his friends asked. "I told her she WAS home," her father explained. (5)

Good point. One of the most popular songs in weddings today is titled I WILL BE HERE. It's by Steven Curtis Chapman. The song is a simple declaration by Chapman that no matter what their marriage goes through, he will be there for his wife. Sadly, Chapman was inspired to write this song for his wife after he learned that his own parents were divorcing.

As Chapman says, "Seeing the pain of my parents' divorce caused Mary Beth and I to ask ourselves how we could prevent this in our marriage. We spent many hours together in prayer and through that process came to understand that to love and forgive unconditionally on a daily basis is the only way a marriage can last." (6)

"No one who puts his hand to the plow and looks back is fit for service in the kingdom of God." The imagery is vivid, isn't it?the plowman concentrating on the furrow before him, guides the plow with one hand while goading the oxen with the other. Looking away even for a moment would result in a crooked furrow. Whatever you do, says Jesus, don't look back.

LIFELONG COMMITMENT IS WHAT WE OWE TO GOD. This is the message of this verse. Commitment to Christ and to his people is not to be entered into halfheartedly. As they were walking along the road, a man said to [Jesus], "I will follow you wherever you go." Jesus replied, "Foxes have holes and birds of the air have nests, but the Son of Man has no place to lay his head." He said to another man, "Follow me." But the man replied, "Lord, first let me go and bury my father." Jesus said to him, "Let the dead bury their own dead, but you go and proclaim the kingdom of God." Still another said, "I will follow you, Lord; but first let me go back and say goodby to my family." Jesus replied, "No one who puts his hand to the plow and looks back is fit for service in the kingdom of God." (NIV)

In the early days of the church, countless people lost their lives as martyrs for Christ. Rather than weakening the Christian community, however, the stories of these suffering believers drew multitudes of people to the faith. One of these early martyrs was a young mother named Vibia Perpetua. Perpetua had an infant son to care for at the time, but no records exist of her husband. He may have died young, or he may have abandoned her after she converted. Both were common practices in those days.

Perpetua, a native of North Africa, was just twenty-years-old when she was imprisoned for giving her life to Christ. Fortunately, Perpetua was imprisoned with five other Christians. This small band of believers continued to worship God and uplift one another throughout this ordeal. They all remained strong in their faith, confident that they were doing God's will. Perpetua reported that the suffering she experienced in prison only brought her closer to God, and increased her joy and peace. Twice, Perpetua's father came to the jail and begged her to renounce her faith. He was from a noble, well-connected family, and he could have assured her freedom if she had cooperated. Though it broke her heart to refuse him, she held fast.

The day before they were executed, this tiny band of Christians gathered together and had an agape meal, an honored tradition in the early Church. Then, each of the believers was thrown in the arena with a wild animal. Most of the believers were gored to death, but the crowd protested at the sight of Perpetua's body covered in bloody wounds, so she was removed from the arena and beheaded by a soldier. Somehow they thought this was more humane than death at the mercy of an animal. We may think the story of Perpetua had a tragic, senseless ending, but it was examples of a steadfast faith like Perpetua's that inspired generations of believers after her. (7)

You and I will probably never have our lives physically threatened because we follow Jesus, but doesn't the example of Perpetua stand as a rebuke to the tepid lives we live as followers of the cross? "No one who puts his hand to the plow and looks back is fit for service in the kingdom of God." One of the great secrets of success in life is that of perseverance. That is true whether you are running an Iditarod or teaching a kindergarten class in Sunday School. Perseverance is particularly important when our cause is just and our goals are lofty. There is no loftier goal than that of serving Christ. Beverly Masek ran alone through blizzards for 1,029 miles to win a dogsled race. How far will you go for Christ?


1. POWER THOUGHTS (New York: HarperCollins Publishers, 1993), pp. 138139.

2. PERSONAL SELLING POWER, July/August 1994, p. 29.

3. Gerard L. Nierenberg, YOU'RE THE EXPERT: HOW YOU CAN SOLVE YOUR PROBLEMS IN BUSINESS AND IN LIFE (New York: Berkley Books, 1986), p. 19.

4. The Associated Press.

5. Larry Cunningham (Billings, Montana), READER'S DIGEST.

6. "Play It Again, Sam" by Joan Brasher, ASPIRE, June/July 1997, p. 34.

7. Edith Deen, GREAT WOMEN OF THE CHRISTIAN FAITH (New York: Harper & Row, 1959), 37.

Dynamic Preaching, Collected Sermons, by King Duncan