Luke 9:18-27 · Peter’s Confession of Christ
The Call of the Cross
Luke 9:18-27
Sermon
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And he said to all, "If any man would come after me, let him deny himself and take up his cross daily and follow me. For whoever would save his life will lose it; and whoever loses his life for my sake, he will save it." (Luke 9:18-24)

One of my students took the Bell Telephone commercial to heart - "Reach out and touch someone." Last Thanksgiving, he decided that he should talk to his mother and father who were 6,500 miles away. He had to dial a California number, which he did, and from there his call was beamed to a satellite and would be sent down to a receiving antenna on the Marshall Islands. An operator on the island of Kwajalein then would ring his parents’ number and the connection between Minnesota and the Marshall Islands was established. But the "instant intimacy" suggested by the commercial did not quite result because the satellite was in constant use over Thanksgiving; it took him four days to "get through." And when he did, he had the experience that Ray Bradbury suggested in a chapter of The Martian Chronicles ("May 2003 - The Wilderness") when Will, a member of an expedition already on Mars, attempted to talk to his fiancee, Janice, on earth; there was a delay, in each case, between when a person spoke and the person on the other end heard what had been said. "Instead of ‘reaching out and touching’ my folks," said the student, "the 6,500 miles turned into a million miles."

When Jesus prayed to the Father, he didn’t seem to have that problem; he was able, with a couple of exceptions, to establish immediate contact with the Father, even on those occasions when he had a relatively small amount of time to pray. This seems to be one of those occasions when Jesus prayed and reached out and touched the Father, and having been answered and assured by the Father, concluded the conversation and spoke to the disciples the question that Herod had been asking people: "Who do people say that I am?" And when Peter and the disciples answered with those same names - John the Baptist, Elijah, or "one of the old prophets" - he turned the question over to the disciples: "Who do you say that I am?" It was Peter, with typical boldness and bravado, who said, "The Christ of God."

Jesus’ Works Identified Him as the Christ

We know Jesus as the Christ, the Son of God, because we know - in a way, we have seen - what he did in his lifetime on earth. Our sight and knowledge have come to us on the basis of a story that was first told and preached, then written down and read and told over and over again. Millions of people all over the world have heard the story and have believed that Jesus is the Christ, the Son of God and the saviour of the world. And it is all on the basis of the eyewitness reports of the disciples and the other believers. St. John concludes his gospel this way: "There were many other signs that Jesus worked and the disciples saw, but they are not recorded in this book. These are recorded so that you may believe that Jesus is the Christ, the Son of God, and that believing this you may have life through his name."

Peter and the others had not only seen Jesus’ miracles and heard him teach and preach - and perhaps they had heard him pray aloud to the Father even early in his ministry - but they also had been on a mission for the Christ. They were able to do the things he had asked them to do when he sent them out on their first mission. They didn’t reach the conclusion articulated by Peter - "You are the Christ of God" - by starting with a theory or supposition about his identity, rather they identified him by what they had seen him do. They knew what they had seen, and this enlightened their understanding and faith in him.

In July of 1981, six girls in the mountain village of Citluk, Yugoslavia, reported that they had seen a "golden-haired Madonna" who seemed to be "floating over a remote mountain meadow." The government’s official press paid little attention to the first reports but "as reports spread, as many as 30,000 Yugoslav Christians flocked to the area" in the hope of seeing the Madonna. Then the government became alarmed, called the vision "a publicity trick" by the church, expelled eleven people from the party, jailed at least five people, including two Serbian Orthodox priests and a Catholic priest whose parish included Citluk, "for spreading hostile propaganda." But the girls insisted that they had seen the Madonna, and it was their reports of what they had seen - a revelation as far as they were concerned - that stirred up the religious fervor and the gathering of the crowds at Citluk. They simply knew and told what they had seen. The government wanted them to be quiet.

The strange thing about this story in Luke is that it was Jesus who reacted immediately to the "You are the Christ of God" answer and silenced Peter and the disciples until after his death and resurrection. The disciples learned this lesson well, according to St. Luke, because even after they - Peter, James, and John, at least - witnessed Christ’s transfiguration and had their mountain-top experience, they kept their silence. Jesus demanded that silence because his earthly mission involved suffering and death, not merely adulation by the crowds who heard him teach and saw him heal, and certainly not the support and encouragement of those who saw him as a political Messiah who had come to overthrow Rome and free Israel from its enslavement. "The Son of man must suffer many things, and be rejected by the elders and chief priests and scribes, and be killed, and on the third day be raised." Jesus had no illusions about his fate on earth. Five days before his "inevitable death" on May 18, 1981, according to Russell Baker ("Planning for an Eloquent Exit"), William Saroyan telephoned the Associated Press "to issue his last official words." These were: "Everybody has got to die, but I have always believed an exception would be made in my case. Now what?" There was no "Now what?" in Jesus’ prediction of death; his faith was that he would be "raised" from the dead, and then the time would be at hand for his followers to open their mouths and tell the world what God had done for all people in Jesus Christ.

In his book, Ambition: The Secret Passion, Joseph Epstein, editor of The American Scholar, discusses the life of F. Scott Fitzgerald and points out that he went from early success to a second phase where he sold himself out to Hollywood, drank too much and spent too much, and died at forty-three. But after death, he received more acclaim - a kind of third phase for his career

- than he did while have. Epstein writes: "F. Scott Fitzgerald was quite wrong about there being no second acts in American lives, as his own life proves. Fitzgerald’s first act was that of the booming American success; his second act was that of the wilting American failure. What is notable is that the failed Fitzgerald has, over the long haul, become an even greater success than the successful Fitzgerald." ... And Epstein continues:

he made of his failures an elegant thing, next to which his success was made coarse, blatant, gross ... In truth it was nowhere so elegant (because) not much of this (meanness, drinking, etc.) is remembered. What is remembered is the aura of his life, the beautiful young man, the wondrous early success, the elegant defeat more touching than success ... The result has been that F. Scott Fitzgerald has had not merely a second act but a third act to his life. After his death his work was resuscitated and his reputation has gone beyond any bounds it knew even at the height of his early success ... F. Scott Fitzgerald’s failure ... has become an unprecedented success.2

Well, not quite, because there was a man named Jesus whose life had three acts to it, too. In the face of a painful death he could look beyond the tomb to resurrection. Rather than raising the question, "What now?" Christ told his disciples that he would be raised up. And he was.

Charles Rice told the Academy of Homiletics the story of what happened when he went to see the movie Ragtime in New York City just before Christmas (1981). He and his companion were depressed when they left the theatre; the true story of Coalhouse Walker, Jr., the black pianist who was not only frustrated in his attempts to get justice but was annihilated by the police, had taken the joy out of their lives. They walked and found themselves outside the Citicorp Building. They looked in and discovered the choir of St. Peter’s Church singing - Handel’s "The Messiah," it turned out - in the atrium. They went in, worked their way toward the platform from which the choir performed, apparently in the hope of having their spirits warmed by the singing. There by the stage they encountered one of New York’s 30,000 homeless persons, a bag man, and as they watched, he began to rummage through his shopping bag obviously looking for something, and seemingly without hearing what was being sung. Finally, after he had placed various of his belongings on the floor, he found what he had been looking for - half of an old sandwich. He put the things back, straightened up, and began to munch as the choir ended its concert. He finished his sandwich, picked up his bag, and faded away with the disbanding listeners. To Rice and his friend, it must have seemed almost like Ragtime again.

Then the choir began to disperse. As they moved off the risers and the platform, and as their ranks opened up, the sound of the piano reached their ears; the pianist was playing, "Joy to the world! the Lord has come; Let earth receive her King." And then they saw the piano player - dressed in a choir robe - a black man was seated at the piano playing and singing joyfully, "Let every heart prepare him room, And heaven and nature sing." And Rice and his friend knew that all is well again. God still brings about the fulfillment of his intention in Christ. There is always a third act in the lives of those who believe the good news that Jesus is Lord forevermore.

Doesn’t it seem to you that Jesus would have said enough with his death-resurrection prediction for this occasion? But Christ wasn’t done yet; he had one thing more to say: "If any man would come after me, let him deny himself and take up his cross daily and follow me ..." There’s no way of determining if the disciples comprehended what Christ was getting at at that point in their relationship with him, is there? It turned out to be more than a call to commitment; it was a call to total commitment in which they would literally lay down their lives as followers of the Lord. And you and I know that if they were like we are, they might have parted company with Christ then and there.

And Jesus went on to make things worse: "... whoever loses his life for my sake, he will save it." That’s not exactly what the disciples had in mind when they accepted Jesus’ invitation, "Follow me," was it? James Jones found a more acceptable message to preach to his followers, according to James Reston. Nor do his sermons sound anything at all like the speech of Eleazar’s at Massada, when approximately the same number of people that died at Jonestown - only Jews and Zealots at Massada - took their own lives by their own swords so they would not fall captive to the Romans. Jones once thundered:

We want no condescending saviors to come to us with their pity from some judgment hall. That has been pawned off on us too long. I’m here as an example to show you that you can bring yourselves up by your own bootstraps. You can be your own God, not in condescension but in resurrection, in upliftment from whatsoever down-trodden condition you’ve had to endure. Within you rests the key to deliverance ... I came to show you that the only God you need is within you. That’s my purpose in being here.

But, in the last analysis, even in Jonestown - especially in. Jonestown in our time - the disciples and followers of Jim Jones heard almost the same message that Jesus spoke to his disciples, "whoever wants to have his life will lose it; ... anyone who loses his life for my sake will find it." Whether the victims of Jonestown "found" their lives by being faithful (to Jones) until death is only for God to say, but Jesus’ words still hold true for you and me; we find our lives by losing them - daily.

Does something about "dying daily to sin" and "rising daily with Christ" - a daily remembrance and renewal of our baptism - ring through in your ears? Is that "daily dying-rising with the Christ" command intermingled with Jesus’ call to commitment and service? This much we know: we are all called to follow Christ, and we are - in total commitment - to serve him and our fellow humans in the world. But what we don’t realize, or what we push out of our minds and hearts much too often, is that it is only by dying and rising with Christ each day that our commitment to Christ is kept.

Epstein writes again, in a chapter called, "The Great Grey Bog of Failure," and makes an observation which applies to us and the break-down in our commitment to Christ:

The greatest number of failures, the great grey bog of failure, consists of those who are quite willing to pay the price of succeeding, however high it may be, have no scruples of any kind about doing what is necessary, nor any conflicts dragging on their energies, but who are nonetheless denied success. Desire is not wanting in them; some decisive element is (missing.) ...3

Could it be our inability, or our unwillingness, "to deny ourselves and take up our cross daily" that interferes with our commitment to follow Christ and "serve him to the end?" Could it be that commitment is not enough, despite how determined we are to be faithful followers of Christ? And doesn’t this bring us back to where the story-incident began - when Jesus reached out to the Father in prayer and "touched" God and was, in turn, given direction and strength? So we can know that when we reach out to touch God daily - in repentance, prayer, and devotion - God will renew our commitment to Christ and enable us to find our lives by losing them for Christ in a kind of death that is the key to new life. Amen.

CSS Publishing, Lima, Ohio,