Matthew 16:21-28 · Jesus Predicts His Death
For Those Who Are Auditing the Class
Matthew 16:21-28
Sermon
by King Duncan
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Pastor Tony Evans says his wife has for years audited classes at Dallas Seminary. Some of you know what that means. When you audit a class, you go and sit in the classroom, but there are no outside requirements. You don’t have to study. You don’t have to take any tests. You get the information but you don’t have the burden of actually passing the class.

Tony Evans goes on to say, “Many Christians come to church on Sunday mornings and audit the sermon. They go to class, have textbook in hand, sit in their regular seat, and listen to the professor. But all they want to do is audit the class. They don’t want to be expected to do any homework. They don’t want to pass any tests that God sends their way to check their understanding. These Christians will pay the money to take the class but they don’t want to have to meet any requirements. They also don’t expect to receive a degree and diploma from the school.”

Then he adds, “As long as my wife audits her seminary class, she will have no credit on her transcript. There will be no graduation ceremony and nobody will ever hand her a degree. As long as you audit your Christian life, there will be no passing grades, there will be no divine recognition, and there will be no experience of your calling.” (1)

Our text for the day is addressed to anyone who might be auditing the class called “Christian Faith.” It is a continuation of last week’s text in which Jesus asked his disciples, “Who do you say that I am?” And Simon Peter answered, “You are the Messiah, the Son of the living God.”

When Simon said this, Jesus replied, “Blessed are you, Simon son of Jonah, for this was not revealed to you by flesh and blood, but by my Father in heaven.” Then Jesus goes on to say about Simon, “And I tell you that you are Peter, and on this rock I will build my church, and the gates of Hades will not overcome it. I will give you the keys of the kingdom of heaven; whatever you bind on earth will be bound in heaven, and whatever you loose on earth will be loosed in heaven.” Then he ordered his disciples not to tell anyone that he was the Messiah (Matthew 16:18-20).

Today’s lesson follows that one immediately. From that time on Jesus began to explain to his disciples that he must go to Jerusalem and suffer many things at the hands of the elders, the chief priests and the teachers of the law, and that he must be killed and on the third day be raised to life.

At this, that amazing disciple Simon Peter takes Jesus aside and begins to rebuke him. Now imagine that for a moment. Peter has just confessed that Jesus is the Messiah, the Son of the living God, and with his next breath he begins to rebuke Jesus. “Never, Lord!” he said. “This shall never happen to you!” Of course, Peter was well-meaning. He loved Jesus and didn’t want him to suffer and die.

Well, you know what Jesus did in response. He turned and said to Peter, “Get behind me, Satan! You are a stumbling block to me; you do not have in mind the concerns of God, but merely human concerns.”

Then Jesus spoke words to his disciples that need to be heard by everyone who thinks that following Jesus is a course that can be audited: “Whoever wants to be my disciple,” Jesus said to Peter and the other disciples, “must deny themselves and take up their cross and follow me. For whoever wants to save their life will lose it, but whoever loses their life for me will find it. What good will it be for someone to gain the whole world, yet forfeit their soul? Or what can anyone give in exchange for their soul? . . .”

I suppose there are few ideas in this world that have been misconstrued so badly as that of carrying a cross. Someone has a lazy husband. Not somebody in our church, of course, but down at the [Baptist] church, a woman has a lazy husband and says a friend, “Well, this is just my cross to bear.” Or someone has a painful case of arthritis and they say with a sigh: “It’s just my cross to bear.” Somebody’s favorite television program is canceled, “Well, I guess this is my cross to bear.”

Now we can feel for a person with a lazy husband or any kind of painful disease or whose television show was canceled. But this is not what it means to take up your cross and follow Christ.

Neither does it mean wearing a cross as a piece of jewelry. I don’t mean to be judgmental, but we see crosses hung on the neck of people who have no concept of what it means to bear the cross of Jesus. Garret Fiddler, a guest columnist in the Yale Daily News, noted the irony of the cross as a piece of jewelry: “Really,” he writes, “the cross does not belong on the Christian; the Christian belongs on the cross.” (2)

Taking up your cross and following Christ means that you are willing to live the Christ-life regardless of the costs. Those costs might include financial sacrifice, rejection by your peers and a host of other major and minor deprivations. But you’ve made a commitment to be a disciple of Jesus Christ and you are determined to the best of your ability to keep that commitment, so help you God.

We live in a time in which people are reluctant to make serious commitments whether to their marriage, their family, their employer or any of their relationships.

One guy said his secretary liked to yammer on the phone with friends. One day he was about to interrupt her chat to tell her to get back to work, when she looked up at the clock and put an end to the conversation. “Sorry, I have to hang up now,” she said. “It’s time for my break.” (3)

Some of you have known employees like that. We are becoming a generation that finds making a commitment difficult.

A famous Japanese statesman of the World War II generation, once was describing the loyalty of the Japanese people to their Emperor during those years. “We do not worship our Emperor,” he said. “We love him completely.”

One day a Japanese commander at Port Arthur called for volunteers to cut barbed wire entanglements which were posing an obstacle to advancement by the Japanese army. The commander said, “You will never come back, nor can you carry a gun. You will take your place and cut one or two wires and then fall dead. Another will take your place and cut one or two wires more. But you will know that upon your dead body the armies of your Emperor will march to victory.”

Total regiments volunteered for these sure‑death parties. This statesman added, “If you Christians loved your God as we Japanese love our Emperor, you would have long ago taken the world for Him.” And who could deny the truth of that statement? With that kind of commitment, any objective is attainable. But such commitment is rare in today’s world.

The missionary movement gave earlier generations of Christians role models of the kind of devotion that Christ is talking about when he said we are to take up a cross.

Albert Schweitzer, the great missionary‑physician, told about his decision to leave family and friends behind and go serve in Africa. Schweitzer was a brilliant pianist and scholar, and had a promising career in front of him in Germany. Life was good. But one morning he woke up and realized he felt compelled to give something back to the world. He finally decided what he was called to do to be a missionary doctor. His friends thought he was crazy. In his autobiography he describes the battles he fought over this, how family and friends reproached him and tormented him for the folly of his enterprise. They came to the conclusion that he was not quite right in his head and treated him with what he called “affectionate ridicule.” (4) Yet Schweitzer as a missionary doctor became one of the most highly respected figures of his day.

We don’t have many role models today of that kind of radical discipleship.

Author Max DePree tells about a friend of his. He says his friend is great at running the “ninety-five-yard dash.” Think about that for a moment. Normally runners are good at the 100-yard dash. But this guy was good at the “ninety-five-yard dash.”

“That is a distinction I can do without,” says Max DePree. “Lacking the last five yards makes the first ninety-five pointless.” (5) Christ needs disciples who will run those final five yards.

It is committed people who make a difference in our world. We do not have to be the most brilliant or the most talented persons to serve Christ. We don’t have to be in a high profile position. We simply need to make a stand from time to time.

Rosa Parks is one of the most famous names in civil rights history. In 1955, Parks refused to give her bus seat to a white man. She was arrested for her defiance.

In her book Quiet Strength, Parks writes: “When I sat down on the bus that day, I had no idea history was being made I was only thinking of getting home. But I had made up my mind. After so many years of being a victim of the mistreatment my people suffered, not giving up my seat and whatever I had to face afterwards was not important. I did not feel any fear sitting there. I felt the Lord would give me the strength to endure whatever I had to face. It was time for someone to stand up or in my case, sit down. So I refused to move.”

In an interview about that historic day, Parks corrected some misconceptions: “People always say that I didn’t give up my seat because I was tired, but that isn’t true. I was not tired physically, or no more tired than I usually was at the end of a working day. I was not old, although some people have an image of me as being old then. I was forty-two. No, the only tired I was, was tired of giving in.” (6)

Rosa Parks was an unlikely person to make a real difference in the world, but when she decided not to give in to an unjust request, she did just that and she changed the world! Some people with far more opportunities than Rosa Parks let those opportunities slip through their fingers.

The Spanish poet, Oretaga, was talking one day about a very famous French impressionist artist by the name of Gauguin. Gauguin achieved success early in life. He was famous even in his younger days. But then he did what many people do who achieve great success in their early life. Gauguin decided to lean back and rest on his laurels. As the years passed by, Gauguin became very non-productive in his art and he ultimately attempted suicide. Oretega said of Gauguin, “His creative energies degenerated into hobbies.” (7)

What a great statement: “His creative energies degenerated into hobbies.” That happens to talented people who are not committed.

Some people make a hobby out of their faith. It is something that they can take or leave according to their current level of interest. They are simply auditing the class. It is not something to which they have committed their lives.

But why, someone might ask, should we make a life-long commitment like that in the first place? It is because God has made that kind of commitment to us. We love because He first loved us.

Pastor Jeff Richards tells a remarkable story about a physician named John. Some years ago, just as he was beginning his medical career, John developed a serious heart problem. He became a likely candidate for a fatal heart attack. His close friends began to pray for him, but the harsh prospect of a massive heart attack was hard for John to handle. He began to feel sorry for himself. He became somewhat angry with God. “How could God let this happen to me? How? At the beginning of my career? I worked so hard, prepared so well to be a good doctor, and now this. It isn’t fair!”

One morning, as John was brooding in his office, his father, who was a retired doctor, suddenly rushed in. Excited, his father said, “John, get on that phone right now and call the hospital. Tell them we are on our way! Tell them to get ready to operate on us immediately!”

“Operate on us?” John said. “Dad, what on the earth are you talking about? You’ve lost me! What do you mean, ‘operate on us?’”

His father said, “John, my career is over, and yours is just beginning. I have many great hopes and dreams for you. I’ve been studying about transplants, and I want us to go the hospital together today, because I want to give you my good heart!”

Obviously John was stunned. He hugged his dad tightly. Together they cried. That special moment touched John so powerfully that for the first time, his hope was restored. He decided to quit feeling sorry for himself and to find another solution to his dilemma. A short time later, John was able to have a bypass surgery and he was healed. Today he is a successful physician. He didn’t have to have a transplant. He didn’t have to take his father’s heart. His experience, though, provides an apt metaphor for the love our Heavenly Father has for us. (8)

When Christ asked his followers to take up a cross, he knew that is where his life would end. He could not ask his followers to give their lives if he held his back. Christian faith is really not for those who are determined to audit the course. The Father wants to do great things through us and He can do great things through us if we are willing to give Him our all. Some unknown author once put it like this:

Isn’t it strange that princes and kings
And clowns that caper in sawdust rings
And common people like you and me
Are builders for eternity?

Each is given a bag of tools,
A shapeless mass, a book of rules;
And each must make ’ere life is flown,
A stumbling block or a stepping-stone.

What are we doing with the tools God has given us? It all depends how invested we are in this thing called discipleship. Are we simply auditing the course, or are we taking up our cross daily and following Jesus?


1. Tony Evans’ Book of Illustrations (Chicago: Moody Publishers, 2009).

2. John Ortberg, Who Is This Man? (Kindle Edition).

3. James R. Maxwell in Laughter Really Is the Best Medicine: America’s Funniest Jokes, Stories, and Cartoons (Editors of Reader’s Digest).

4. Mark Schwehn and Dorothy Bass, Leading Lives that Matter.

5. “Leadership Is an Art,” Leadership, Vol. 15, no. 3.

6. Rosa Parks: My Story (Puffin Books, 1999) and Today in the Word (Spring 2002), p. 19.

7. Edward Markquart, http://www.sermonsfromseattle.com/series_a_christ_brings_division.htm.

8. http://www.faithcheyenne.org/_pdfs/The%20Ministry%20of%20Reconciliation_03142010.pdf.

ChristianGlobe Networks, Inc., Dynamic Preaching Sermons Third Quarter 2014, by King Duncan