Luke 9:57-62 · The Cost of Following Jesus
Jesus’ Four Surprising Road Rules for the Missional Highway
Luke 9:57-62, Luke 9:51-56
Sermon
by Leonard Sweet
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Road Trip!

It’s more than a bad coming-of-age movie comedy (2000). For late teens and twenty-somethings, it is a coming of age rite of passage, even an initiatory pilgrimage into adulthood. Whether it is a short trip from a small town to a big city for the weekend, a coast-to-coast marathon to see the USA in a small over-packed car, or a backpacking Euro-rail adventure, a road trip is a first step in finding our own unique life path. Even for adults and the aged, there is nothing like a road trip to get us out of our familiar, comfortable ruts, and give us a new perspective on the world.

Yet road trips don’t come with guarantees of safety and success. Road trips come with potholes and pitfalls, genuine dangers, and encounters with the unknown and unpredictable. Sometimes Road Trips can end up as Road Kill. In March of 2013, a Seattle man named Richard Swanson, trying to dribble a soccer ball 10,000 miles (16,000km) to Brazil in time for the 2014 World Cup and raise money for a football charity, died after being hit by a pickup truck on the Oregon coast. Just this past week (16 June 2013), a 16 year old boy from Victoria was killed while participating in the Ride to Conquer Cancer marathon. The fatal accident happened in Arlington, Wash., just north of Seattle, when the kid was riding with his mother and uncle in the cancer fundraiser. He attempted to pass a group of cyclists and spilled onto the road and was run over by an oncoming car. “On the road" adventures are not safe. They can end up as "road kill" stories.

In this week’s gospel text Jesus starts off on the ultimate road trip — his journey to Jerusalem and to the cross. The world views this journey as the epitome of a “bad trip” — a trip that ended in Jesus’ betrayal, rejection, torture, and death. In other words, here was a “road trip” than ended up as “road kill.” But Jesus’ disciples — whether in the first century or the twenty-first century — view this Jerusalem road trip as something quite different: the start of a great missio Dei story — the triumph of Christ’s mission in the world, the journey that transformed the life paths of all subsequent generations who have followed Jesus.

In our text this morning Jesus reveals four surprising road rules. Here they are in brief. But each one will be explored a little more fully as we go through the story:

1) To be on the road with Jesus isn’t a breakneck superhighway to success and superiority, but back-alley pathways and appalling byways of sacrifice and service.

2) There is no road map, only road pals a relationship with the One who is The Way.

3) Traveler Beware: The Road is Filled with Robbers and Dangers.

4) You Can’t Drive Forward without a Rear View Mirror, but the Front Window Faces Forward, not Backwards. You pay your debt to the past by investing in the future. What you owe the past is to own the future.

1) The fact that Jesus’ journey to Jerusalem was not going to be down some familiar beaten pathway of life was evident from the beginning. Galilean Jews almost invariably traveled the longer, more circuitous route through the TransJordan to reach Jerusalem. In this way they completely by-passed all Samaritan regions. Samaritans and other Jews had a long established “Hatfield and McCoy” type feud that simmered hot and periodically boiled over into outright violence. Samaritans simply never accepted the precedence of Jerusalem and its Temple as the center of Jewish life and faith. They worshiped in their own territory at a shrine on Mt. Gerizim. They also interpreted certain scriptures differently and had alternative expectations of the Messiah than Jerusalem Jews.

Yet Jesus chose to travel through the Samaritan regions as he started out on his road trip to Jerusalem. Jesus chose to invite and include this ostracized group at the outset. And they rejected him. No room at the inn. We don’t want any. Guess what? Go away!

No wonder James and John responded with a recommendation for fire and brimstone. Like any good “feud,” the desire for revenge, to get in the last lick, fueled their first response.

James and John didn’t realize that as followers of Jesus they were not on a road to revenge. They were on a road to redemption. Jesus’ journey to Jerusalem wasn’t a superhighway to superiority. It was a sacrificial pathway to service. Rejection was part of the scenery. Retaliation was never even on the map. To follow Jesus to Jerusalem, to be a disciple on the way with the one who is “The Way” means taking that slap across the face and then offering the other cheek.

Disciples don’t call down fire that burns. Disciples call down fire that heals and fire that fills with the Spirit, as “tongues of fire" came on those filled with the Spirit (Acts 2:1 4). Disciples don’t call down fire. Disciples call up and call upon the name of Jesus.

2) As Jesus’ road trip continued he encountered others who thought they might come along for the journey. The first wanna-be follower claimed the desire to follow Jesus “wherever you go.” Jesus’ surprising response reveals that there is no established roadmap for disciples. Disciples don’t know where they are going — they only know who they are going with. Followers of Jesus don’t know where they will spend their lives. They only know how they will spend their lives: serving Christ. On a road trip there is always some bad news. Construction delays. Bridges collapse. Flat tires. Flooded roadways. Lost luggage. Credit card declined. But committed travelers keep going.

3) One of Jesus’ most shocking statements is found in today’s gospel text. A potential follower requests permission to first go and “bury my father.” This seems one of the most basic, decent, honorable acts a child might offer to a parent. Yet Jesus offers an intentionally shockingly different course of action: “Let the dead bury their own dead, you go and proclaim the kingdom of God.”

To follow Jesus may require disciples to fly in the face of conventional wisdom and established expectations. The road trip to Jerusalem is not a standard stroll or ride on a one-trick pony. It is a rough ride. It can be a roller coaster ride. You can expect huge highs and gut-churning lows. But the good news of the kingdom of God, the gospel that Jesus’ life brought to completion, ultimately triumphs over any bad news. Death itself no longer has the last word. Death no longer is life’s final act.

4) Finally, Jesus faced another disciple who promised to “follow” if only he could first return home and say a proper goodbye to his family. This would-be follower wanted to retrace his steps backwards before daring to start out for Jerusalem with Jesus. But you cannot start a journey until you get out the front door. You cannot face forward while you are looking over your shoulder. This is the power of the image of the Pillar of Salt: Lot’s wife could not stop looking back and she shed so many tears of goodbye she cried herself into a pillar of salt. You cannot walk backwards down the stairs and expect to get higher. As disciples travel the road to Jerusalem with Jesus we must face forward, no matter how harsh the view.

So here, one last time are Jesus’ Four Surprising Road Rules:

1) To be on the road with Jesus isn’t a breakneck superhighway to success and superiority, but back-alley pathways and appalling byways of sacrifice and service.

2) There is no road map, only road pals - a relationship with the One who is The Way.

3) Traveler Beware: The Road is Filled with Robbers and Dangers.

4) You Can’t Drive Forward without a Rear View Mirror, but the Front Window Faces Forward, not Backwards. You pay your debt to the past by investing in the future. What you owe the past is to own the future.


COMMENTARY

This week’s gospel text marks the end of Jesus’ Galilean ministry and the beginning of the fulfillment of his mission in Jerusalem. Yet even as Jesus sets out on his divinely orchestrated, once and for all mission, Luke’s narrative takes care to draw definite parallels between the prophets of the past and Jesus’ words and actions. At the Transfiguration, Jesus had discussed his impending “departure” with Moses and Elijah (9:31). That departure is now defined as being “taken up” (“analempsis”), an image that would immediately bring to mind Elijah’s own miraculous ascension (2 Kings 2:10-11). Luke’s readers would also undoubtedly recall that it was just before his ascension that Elijah passed on the Spirit to his disciple Elisha, even as Jesus’ “ascension” will make possible the coming of the Holy Spirit upon his disciples.

While John the Baptist had “prepared the way” for Jesus’ mission and message, the disciples are now sent out to prepare the way for the journey to Jerusalem. The Galilean ministry might have come to a close, but Jesus’ itinerant lifestyle continues, making it necessary for him to rely upon the hospitality of others to facilitate this trek. Surprisingly, Jesus and his disciples do not skirt the Samaritan region by taking the more commonly traveled TransJordan route to Jerusalem. Not only do they travel through the Samaritan lands; they actively seek out the hospitality of the inhabitants.

There is nothing that could have emphasized the antagonism between Samaritans and other Jews more blatantly than the announcement that Jesus was on his way to Jerusalem. At the heart of the rift between Jews and Samaritans was the centrality of Jerusalem and the Temple faith it represented. Samaritans disdained Jerusalem and the Temple. They worshiped instead at their own shrine at Mt. Gerizim. Thus while this Samaritan village is invited to welcome and host Jesus and his message, it is hardly surprising that “they did not receive him.”

Obviously, however, these Samaritans are not the only ones who do not grasp the purpose of Jesus and his mission. James and John, incensed by the village’s rejection, and apparently more than a little smitten with their own sense of authority, suggest they take an example from the prophet Elijah’s playbook (2 Kings 1:10) and rain heavenly fire down upon the inhospitable Samaritans. Although James and John had heard Jesus foretell his own rejection, betrayal, and death, their first face-to-face with that unfolding reality elicits this over the top response.

Luke’s text now makes it clear that while Jesus may embody some familiar prophetic parallels, he is not simply an Elijah redux. Where Elijah brought down God’s wrath upon the wicked Jesus offers mercy to those who reject him. James and John are “rebuked” for their violent suggestion even as Jesus “rebuked” and cast out other violent demons. Jesus’ journey to Jerusalem is a journey towards salvation, not destruction.

As Jesus continues on his way he is approached by a series of would-be disciples — ones who would travel with him on this momentous journey. Even as Luke’s narrative had just revealed a radical distinction between Jesus and Elijah, he now offers another connection between the two. In 2 Kings 2:1-6 Elijah’s disciple Elisha is three times instructed by his master to stay behind, to quit following. Yet all three times Elisha refuses and continues to follow Elijah into ominous situations. Nothing deters Elisha’s commitment to follow. Here in Luke’s text Jesus is approached three separate times by would-be disciples, but the challenges incurred by obediently “following” are apparently too daunting.

The first “someone” who approaches Jesus vows to follow Jesus and to go “wherever you go.” Jesus’ response takes the form of a wisdom saying as it emphasizes two aspects of his mission and journey. First, as the scene at the Samaritan village had just demonstrated, the “wherever” Jesus is going to can change at any moment. Rejection and the refusal of hospitality could change the trajectory of his travel at any time.

Secondly, “wherever” Jesus ended up it was not “home,” for he was homeless. Nazareth had run him out on a rail. Capernaum had been left behind. And he was headed towards the ultimate rejection in Jerusalem. Although Luke does not record the would-be disciple’s response, the lack of an affirmative “Let’s go!” suggests the opposite decision.

The second potential disciple is invited by Jesus to “Follow me.” But instead of dropping everything and taking off this candidate makes a completely reasonable, indeed honorable, request, to “go and bury my Father.” Honoring one’s father and mother were unquestioned components of Mosaic Law. Likewise even Roman law emphasized the obligation of grown children to obey and honor the family patriarch. The final obedient act of such an honor system would be burying one’s father. Yet Jesus’ shocking response to the would-be disciple’s request suggests that in the kingdom of God unusual behavior will be called for. Following Jesus, proclaiming the new reality of God’s kingdom, takes priority over all the old systems and customs. The living Lord has more authority than the old law.

The third individual to approach Jesus in this unit, like the first, spontaneously offers to follow Jesus. But even as the offer is made it is hedged with a “but.” Again the request seems perfectly reasonable and right. It honors family, friends, and community commitments and connections by taking time to say goodbye. But again Jesus distinguishes between the common conventions of the day and the new demands of the kingdom.

This request to say goodbye also enables Luke to make one final connect/disconnect between Jesus and Elijah. Elisha was called to follow Elijah while he was plowing. But when he begged permission to go and “kiss my father and mother and then I will follow you” Elijah granted him that moment (1 Kings 19:19-21). Jesus’ journey to Jerusalem is a journey towards something wholly new and is a response to a divine demand that trumps all previously known conventions.

To follow Jesus is to take a completely new path .

ChristianGlobe Networks, Inc., Leonard Sweet Sermons, by Leonard Sweet