Luke 9:57-62 · The Cost of Following Jesus
No Reserves, No Retreats, No Regrets
Luke 9:57-62
Sermon
by Bill Bouknight
Loading...

The Reverend Sam Jones was a great Methodist preacher over in Georgia. His style was unusual. Often he would engage the congregation in dialogue. One Sunday morning he said to his people, "Let's pretend that the church is a locomotive. What part of that locomotive would you like to be?" One man held up his hand and said, "I'd like to be a wheel that just helps rolls that train down the track." Someone else said, "Brother Sam, I'd like to be the whistle on that locomotive that sounds God's praises throughout the land." Another person said, "Preacher, I'd like to be the coal, and just burn myself up for Jesus' sake."

At that point Sam Jones broke out in a huge smile and said, "Now you're talking. Brothers and sisters, we've got too many whistles and wheels in the church now; what we need is more coal."

Sam Jones was talking about commitment, the willingness to be used for Christ's sake. The most important thing about the commitment cards that churches hand out isn't the amount of money they provide. Their real importance is that they measure commitment.

The pollster George Gallup says that his surveys reveal that fewer than 10 percent of Americans are deeply committed Christians. Though 44 percent attend worship on a typical Sunday, less than one in four is really committed to Christ.

There is a consumer mentality among many people who go to church, an attitude of "I'm here to be served. What do you have for me? If you stop pleasing me, I'm gone."

That reminds me of a beautiful young woman who was married to a wealthy but elderly gentleman. One day he asked her, "Honey, if I lost all my money somehow, would you still love me? I mean, if I lost my mountain chalet, my yacht, and even my French villa, would you still love me?" "Of course I would," she cooed, "and I would miss you, too."

Our emphasis today is commitment. In our scripture lesson for the day, Jesus sees the cross looming in front of him. He knows he has some sunshine followers around him whose discipleship is more than a quart low on commitment. So, he tries to teach them some hard facts of life. Jesus tells them and us three things about Christian discipleship: the costs are high; the time is now; and the way is forward.

Let's look at each point.

First, The Cost Are High.

In verse 58 of Luke, chapter 9, Jesus says, "Foxes have holes and birds of the air have nests; but the Son of man has nowhere to lay his head." Jesus and his disciples could not even stay at a Motel 6 or Econolodge. Often they slept out under the stars. Discipleship is not for the soft or pampered; it involves sacrifice and self- denial.

I'm almost ashamed to say that out loud. Look around and tell me where you see sacrifice. Most of us ride the gravy train. Few of us have missed any meals lately except as a dieting exercise. I'm ashamed to talk about sacrifice when I'm aware of what some Christians are facing in other parts of the world. The evangelist Matta Boush is in a Sudanese prison serving a thirty- year sentence for evangelizing. In some Islamic countries today you can receive the death penalty if you convert someone to Christianity. In China, Xie Moshan has spent 26 years in prison for illegal preaching.

All of us have seen Mormon missionaries riding their bicycles, wearing dark pants, white shirts and ties. Let me tell you more about their life-style. They do not see their families during the two years of their mission service. They are allowed to call home only on Christmas and Mother's Day. Their work day begins at 6:30 AM with an hour of Bible study and prayer. Then they work until 9:30 PM. They have about an hour to do laundry and study scripture before lights out. This is their schedule six days per week. No TV or movies or dates for two years. We have seen young men with multi-million dollar pro basketball contracts put all that on hold until they fulfill their mission obligation.

Now, we United Methodists have some serious theological differences with the Mormons, but I can't deny the commitment of their young missionaries. Perhaps that commitment is a key reason why their numbers are growing so rapidly.

If Jesus is our Lord, there ought to be some sacrifice and self-denial in our lives. The beauty of tithing is that it requires some degree of sacrifice. If in addition we give a significant part of our time and talent, then in a small way we sip from that cup of commitment which Jesus drained all the way to its bitter dregs.

If Jesus is our Lord, there ought to be some sacrifice and self-denial in our lives. Where is yours? Where is mine?

The Second Thing Jesus Said About Discipleship Is This: The Time Is Now.

In verse 59, a would-be follower says to Jesus, "Let me first go and bury my father." But Jesus responds, "Leave the dead to bury the dead." Now that sounds rather harsh and insensitive. But there is no suggestion here that the elderly father was seriously ill or even directly dependent on the son. The would-be follower just wanted to stay where he was a few more years until the old man died.

Jesus told him that he should not allow a future death to delay him from serving now. Time is of the essence. There is an urgency about now.

Last weekend I watched the final minutes of a football game between the Georgia Bulldogs and the Alabama Crimson Tide. It was a thrilling squeaker won by Alabama. I remember a key play. The Alabama quarterback threw a high, hard pass to a receiver. It bounced off his outstretched hands, up into the air, and then landed in the hands of a Georgia linebacker. But linebackers aren't accustomed to catching passes. He tried to hold on but it slipped through his fingers. In disgust he fell to his knees and pounded the turf.

Opportunities come that way--so quickly, often without warning. You either rise to the challenge or it passes, never to return.

I remember an extremely profane man whom I had determined to witness to, but before I got around to it, he had taken another job and I saw him no more.

I know a young father who has for years regarded Sunday as his day for hunting and fishing. Now his son is about 8 years old. The father's chance to be a spiritual influence on that boy is about over. It passes so fast.

Life rolls along, alternating between mundane hours of boredom and awesome moments of eternal significance.

A wife craves some sign that she is more important than her husband's job, until it's too late.

Someone with low self-esteem longs to hear some particular person say, "You're really special," until it's too late.

A child hears a parent say, "Let's report your watch as stolen so the insurance will cover it." We wait to hear someone say, "But that would be wrong," until it's too late.

As Omar Khayyam taught us in "The Rubaiyat:"

"The Moving Finger writes, and having writ,
Moves on; nor all your piety or wit
Shall lure it back to cancel half a line,
Nor all your tears wash out a word of it."

Jesus taught us that time is of the essence, for we shall not pass this way again.

The third word about discipleship is this:

The Way Is Forward.

In verse 62 we read, "No one who puts his hand to the plow and looks back is fit for the Kingdom of God." Jesus was no farmer but he knew that plowing requires that one's eyes be fixed ahead, immediately ahead in case of rocks, and frequently all the way toward some distant landmark so that the furrow is straight. Most people are forever glancing over their shoulders, worried about something in the past, some mistake, some sin, some missed opportunity.

Many of us Christians keep glancing back at false gods we never totally renounced.

The pastor James Moore of Texas tells about an elderly man whom he heard at a banquet. This man, with a broad grin and a twinkle in his eye, said, "I know I'm old because there are three things I can't remember: I can't remember names, I can't remember faces, and I can't remember the third thing I can't remember."

There are three things that every Christian must forget: sins which God has forgiven, failures whose lessons have been learned, and the false gods we served before we met Jesus.

Our Lord wants us to focus our attention on the opportunities and challenges in front of us. If we are alert, we will notice the troubled person who needs a good listener and the colleague who needs an introduction to our Savior. We will see the principle that needs defending and the underdog who needs befriending.

Every day has its Kingdom tasks. We must be alert enough to see them and faithful enough to complete them.

So, there you have Jesus' guidelines for discipleship--the costs are high; the time is now; and the way is forward.

Let me close with a story about commitment. In 1904 William Borden, heir to the Borden Dairy estate, graduated from a Chicago high school as a millionaire. His parents gave him a trip around the world. Traveling through Asia and the Middle East, Borden was given by God a burden for the world's suffering people. Writing home, he said, "I'm going to give my life to prepare for the mission field." When he made that decision, he wrote in the back of his Bible two words: "No reserves." After graduating from Yale, he turned down numerous high-paying jobs and headed to seminary. At that time he entered two more words in his Bible: "No retreats."

After completing studies at Princeton Seminary, Borden sailed for China. On the way he stopped in Egypt for some additional training. While there he was stricken with cerebral meningitis and died within a month. perhaps you are thinking: what a waste! William Borden didn't think so. Shortly before he died he entered two more words in his Bible. Now the statement read: "No reserves, no retreats, no regrets."

Success for a Christian is to be able to say at the end of the line, "I have fought the good fight; I have finished the course; and I have kept the faith."

No reserves, no retreats, no regrets.

ChristianGlobe Networks, Inc., Collected Sermons, by Bill Bouknight