Luke 9:57-62 · The Cost of Following Jesus
Keeping the Main Thing the Main Thing
Luke 9:51-62
Sermon
by Arley K. Fadness
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They were 5,000 feet in the air in a two-seat Cessna when sud­denly the pilot slumped over. It happened not so long ago near Mount Hope, Indiana, to an 81-year-old passenger who was flying to Indianapolis for lunch. When his 52-year-old friend and pilot unexpectedly died, the elder passenger realized he knew nothing about flying and a lot less about landing! In the next twenty min­utes you can bet he gave his total attention to the voices on the radio and the instructions given to him. Another pilot nearby coached him and gave him a "crash course" (pardon the pun) in flying a two-seat Cessna and most importantly in landing. He circled the airport three times and came in, bounced a few times, and landed in a soggy field. Incredibly there was no damage except a bent propeller.

If this happened to you or to me today, our number one priority would be determined very, very quickly! It would not be the time to call out for a pizza, or to scan Field and Stream magazine, nor to casually call a friend on one's cell to plan an outing to attend a ball game. The main thing and the only thing would be to land that Cessna and not crash!

Stephen Covey in his book, First Things First, a New York Times best seller for several years, says the issue for life is just that — first things first! So the compelling question coming out of our gospel reading from Luke 9 is this: How does one keep the "main thing" the main thing in one's life? And just what is the "main thing"?

One day, right after Jesus had been snubbed and spurned by the people in a Samaritan village, someone came up to him and promised, "I will follow you wherever you go." A bit later, Jesus says to another person, "Follow me." But the person excuses him­self, "Lord, let me first go and bury my father." Jesus turns to an­other, "Follow me." But he answers, "Excuse me, Jesus, I will fol­low you, but first let me say good-bye to my family." Jesus' re­sponse is uncompromisingly direct — appearing insensitive, "Let the dead bury the dead; but as for you, go and proclaim the king­dom of God ... no one who puts a hand to the plow and looks back is fit for the kingdom of God" (vv. 60, 62). Jesus knew that a farmer who looks back when plowing his field instead of forward at the chosen guidepost, will plow a very crooked furrow.

Jesus heard many excuses in his short three-year ministry. Some excuses were lame. Many were laudable. Some were frivolous. Many excuses were admirable. It's hard to think of a better excuse than to take care of one's family. In our modern life, family is in disarray with nearly half of all marriages ending in divorce, cus­tody battles, deadbeat fathers, abuse, incest, and neglect running rampant. What could be a better, a more admirable task than to care for one's family?

How many times have you and I said, "My family is first"? The most righteous, respectable, and acceptable statement politi­cians, CEOs, and others make when changing careers is, "I'm quit­ting so I can take more time for my family."

I wish Jesus would have contrasted "following him" with a lame excuse. But family — that's an admirable, lofty, sterling ex­cuse. But it's not family first — it's the kingdom first! How do we keep the main thing the main thing?

The Bible is full of excusers who were called to do God's bid­ding. Gideon excused himself and complained that his family was poor and that he was the least in his family. Moses excused himself because he was not eloquent in speech and thus tried to disqualify himself from leading the Hebrews out of bondage from the land of the Egyptians.

Jeremiah said he was too young. My excuse when I sensed a leading into parish ministry was my lack of speech ability and how would I survive Greek? The amazing thing is that God is able to use us excusers once we get beyond our excuses. When we live in our baptismal covenant and are bathed in God's grace in Christ we can say this to one another, "Let me hear your excuses and I'll tell you mine, and we'll travel together a bit with them and eventually we'll get to the real issue."

What is the real issue? Consider the little boy playing hide and seek. He ran quickly and found a remote cabinet in the house. This ought to be the best place of all, he thought, as he climbed in and closed the door. He remained absolutely quiet. But his sister saw his shoelace sticking out under the closed cabinet door, followed it, and found her brother. Excuses like shoelaces are to be followed and eventually they will take you to the real source and issue.

A man I knew did not worship. He was a member of my parish and he always had excuses. I followed his "shoelace" and found out one day that he had been hurt by someone in the church and that festering wound was the source of his excuses. Often the "shoe­lace" trail leads to fear or grief or guilt or a hurt. If someone fol­lowed your "shoelace" or mine where would it lead? Our excuses hiding behind our heart's cabinet doors are cover-ups and need to be exposed.

Dive into the gospels most anywhere and you will find Jesus asking someone to follow. The Greek verb is akoloutheo. I was raised in a Christian tradition "to believe" and not necessarily "to follow." Dr. Ernest Campbell, who once served as pastor of River­side Church in New York City made this statement:

It began innocently enough — a friend recommended a book by Jon Sobrino. The Salvadorian Jesuit blew most of my ducks out of the water. He threw a hat down on my scrabble board and messed up many of my combi­nations. He forced me to contend for the ground that I had claimed. The question Jon Sobrino put to me I must share with you: "Are you following Jesus, or believing in Christ?"1

Harry Wendt of Crossways International asks:

If akoloutheo represents a dominant motif ... why, then, do we hear so little about following Jesus in the church today? I've been in, with, and around the church for more than fifty years. Not when I was in communicants class; not when I joined the church: not when I became a candidate for the ministry; not when I was ordained; and never in any of my services of installation. Always the questions have dealt with belief. "Do you believe in God-Father, Son, and Holy Spirit? Do you believe in the veracity of the Scriptures and the Westminster Con­fession? Do you believe in the unity and purity of the church? Do you believe in Christ?" It isn't hard to an­swer that ... but when someone asks, "Are you follow­ing Jesus?" — this can get to be expensive. This ques­tion has to do with my lifestyle, my attitudes, my val­ues, my surrender.2

For me it is easy, painless, and comfortable to confess I be­lieve in God, Father, Son, and Holy Spirit as I do constantly in the three creeds, in relational sharing of my faith, and in my preaching and teaching. But hold it. I live in a beautiful log home in the lovely Black Hills. I own three automobiles, have closets stuffed full of clothes, have a good pension, and all the amenities of life one might want or think one needs. Am I following Jesus in a world of hunger and deprivation? Am I following Jesus when I deplete the earth's resources? Am I following Jesus if I am not washing my neigh­bors' feet in love, compassion, and generosity?

I was taught in my confirmation instruction Ephesians 2:8-9: "For by grace are you saved through faith...." But what about Ephesians 2:10? "For we are what God has made us, created in Christ Jesus for good works, which God prepared beforehand to be our way of life!"

Of course we are never saved by works, we are saved for works. It seems that those works are that we follow Jesus, our crucified and forgiving Savior. If the question, "Are you following Jesus or believing in Christ?" seems unfair or artificial because the two are inseparable. Theoretically, yes, they are inseparable but pragmati­cally, no. We separate them all the time. I suggest if we must sepa­rate them let us err on the side of following. Harry Wendt says, "One can believe without following, but one cannot follow with­out believing."

"Come follow me," Jesus says over and over in the gospels. "Let the dead bury the dead; but as for you go and proclaim the kingdom of God...."

In 1 Kings 19, Elijah not only anoints Elisha as his successor but also allows Elisha's request to "Let me kiss my father and my mother and then I will follow you." Jesus is less tolerant and in­sists on first things first. He keeps the main thing the main thing.

One practical way to put first things first is to begin to live by the compass and not the clock. The clock represents our appoint­ments, our commitments, schedules, goals, and activities — what we do and how we manage our time. Often we are overscheduled and time that originally was a gift has become a tyranny. The com­pass on the other hand represents our direction, vision, values, prin­ciples, conscience, purpose, and mission — what we feel is truly important as God leads our lives. What is the main thing? But to earnestly seek to follow Jesus and proclaim the kingdom to all in word and deed.

John Wesley, the great founder of the Methodist church wrote in 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 Elses. Deacons called a special meeting and said I couldn't return.

Sunday p.m. — Preached on street. Kicked off the street.

Sunday a.m. — Preached in meadow. Chased out of the meadow as bull was turned loose during service.

Sunday a.m. — Preached out at the edge of town. Kicked off highway.

Sunday p.m. — June afternoon, preached in a pasture. Ten thousand people came out to hear me.3

Jesus says, "No one who puts his hand to the plow and looks back is fit for service in the kingdom of God." It's about first things first. Amen.


1. George S. Johnson, Beyond Guilt (Minneapolis: Augsburg/Fortress, 2000), pp. 19-20.

2. Harry Wendt, 2008-2009 Workshop and Resource Catalogue (Washington, DC: Crossroads International), p. 3, president's message, "Believing Vs. Following."

3. Source unknown.

CSS Publishing Company, Sermons for Sundays after Pentecost (First Third): Veni, Spiritus Sanctus, Veni, by Arley K. Fadness