Luke 9:18-27 · Peter’s Confession of Christ
The Life We Prize
Luke 9:18-27
Sermon
by Various Authors
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[Jesus said] If any[one] would come after me, let [them] deny self and take up [their] cross daily and follow me.

Our family was skiing in Colorado with some friends. I rode up a long chair lift with a stranger who turned to me saying, "The name’s Clyde; I’m a plumber from California. I'm out here to meet women and have fun. What’s your work?"

I answered, "Fire insurance," the response I frequently give when I want to have some fun with an unsuspecting stranger.

He questioned, "Fire insurance? Who do you work for?"

"The Lord," I responded.

"Who?"

"The Lord. I’m a preacher."

If we had not been fifty feet off the ground, Clyde would have jumped out of the chair. I reassured him, "Relax; enjoy the ride."

After a few moments of silence he asked, "Is there any hope for a guy like me?"

I answered, "Certainly." Then I simply described the wonderful time our family and friends were having because of the way Christ had built our lives and our relationships.

When we stood at the top of the lift, Clyde went left, I to the right. Clyde yelled, "You’ve given me a lot to think about!"

According to the words of Jesus in Luke 9:23, we find the life we prize, first, through self-denial; second, through self-surrender; and third, through self-discovery. As we prepare in these moments to celebrate holy communion, we seek to meet Christ and to hear his Word for our lives.

1. Self-denial. In me there is that which must die. Many of my attitudes, actions, desires, and thoughts dishonor God and stifle the life God desires to awaken within me. My very nature is to twist, to curve, and to bend events to my own benefit. This self-centeredness constitutes the most serious sin besetting me, for I rebel against God and distort life. So Jesus said, "Deny yourself." Jesus’ words convict me; I am guilty of excluding Jesus from areas of my life where I harbor dishonesty, lust, and bitterness. To deny self primarily means to die to all within myself which is not consistent with the Word and the love of Christ.

Christ’s call is that I be crucified with him so "it is no longer I who live, but Christ who lives in me." (Galatians 2:20) I have to be willing to go to the Cross in self-denial; I reluctantly do so. Even then I rationalize taking back my own schemes. When I compromise God’s commandments, I leave a mark, often invisible, on everything I touch. But eventually these flaws show up as my apparently self-sufficient life begins to fall apart.

As Jesus emptied himself and went to the Cross, so I must die to all within myself which is not of him. Paul said, "If we have been united with him [Christ] in a death like his, we shall certainly be united with him in a resurrection like his." (Romans 6:5) Christ’s call to deny self means to turn away from all that is less than God’s best for me.

2. Self-surrender. Jesus calls me to take up my cross daily. This means to surrender myself to him, trusting him to forgive my sins and to strengthen my life. Such unconditional commitment to Christ is difficult because I want to keep control of my life; I don’t want to entrust myself to Christ’s management. This self-surrender has to be "daily" because Christ looks for a consistently deeper giving of myself to him.

As self-denial is to die to sin, turning from my rebellious ways, so self-surrender is to live to Christ, obeying his will. Taking up my cross does not primarily refer to bearing problems and difficulties. It means identifying with Christ’s way of sacrificial love for God and his people. In that commitment Christ gives me the strength to bear my burdens.

Jesus said, "For whoever would save his life will lose it; and whoever loses his life for my sake and the gospel’s will save it." (Mark 8:35) In such self-surrender I find life handed back to me complete and promising. In committing myself to Christ amazing opportunities and new dimensions of strength open to me.

As we prepare to observe the Lord’s Supper we remember how on the very night when Jesus initiated this sacrament, he prayed that God would take the cup of suffering from him. Then he prayed, "Nevertheless not my will, but yours, be done." (Luke 22:42) Here we see the act of self-surrender to which Christ gave himself and to which he calls us.

One evening when our two children were in junior high school, I made a special point to be home with my family. I am one who has to struggle to turn from the pressures of my work and to love my wife and children according to their needs. On that particular evening I decided to bless my family with my presence. In reality I needed them. With a magnanimous spirit I exclaimed, "I’ll do the dishes."

Everyone shouted, "Great!" and disappeared.

"Count it all joy" (James 1:2), I kept telling myself as I got the dishwasher loaded and started.

Then our daughter Lynn remembered she needed some sewing material for a class in school the next morning. She asked, "Dad, could you take me to the store?"

"Oh sure," I answered, tugging on my snow boots.

When we returned, our son David pushed his page of math problems in front of me. They gave me a headache just to look at them. I reminded myself of Paul’s admonition, "Be filled with the Spirit ... always and for everything giving thanks." (Ephesians 5:18, 20)

Then I realized that it was garbage night. Thanks to Charlie and Martha Shedd who had conducted a family enrichment seminar at Covenant, I had accepted the assignment of putting the garbage out two nights a week. I went from bedroom to bedroom emptying the waste baskets and then dug the hair out of the bathroom sink drain, crawling under the kitchen table to get a discarded gum wrapper. Finally I got all that lovely stuff collected and out to the curb.

By then the evening was over; I had not played a game of checkers or anything else that I wanted to do. It would have been easier to have worked in my office. I felt sorry for myself. I went in to say good night to the kids. Lynn exclaimed, "Dad, it has been a wonderful evening!"

David said, "You do good work, Pops! I’m amazed at how patient you’ve been tonight."

Surprised, I gave thanks. Denying myself, surrendering myself in sacrificial love for others has never come easily for me. But that evening I caught a glimpse of the life I prize.

3. Self-discovery. Jesus said, "... and follow me." Jesus’ call to discipleship involves self-denial, self-surrender, and selfdiscovery. In the Christian life we forfeit, commit, and find.

C. S. Lewis in his sermon, "The Weight of Glory," helps us see that to deny ourselves, to take up our crosses in order to follow Christ, does not mean we become zeros; we become more complete persons according to the loving plan of the Creator. We seek to attain to the maturity, stature, and "fulness of Christ." (Ephesians 4:13)

After the seige of Rome in 1849, Garibaldi, the Italian patriot proclaimed:

Soldiers, all our efforts against superior forces have been unavailing. I have nothing to offer but hunger, thirst, hardships, and death.

Those Italian soldiers rose to the occasion, liberated their people, and established a nation.

In a similar manner, Christ’s call to sacrificial commitment releases the heroic dimension of the human personality, giving ultimate consequence to our lives. The Spirit of God turns our weaknesses into strength, stiffens our resolve, and gives us courage to bring the hope of Christ to others.

At the Innsbruck Olympics in 1976, Bill Koch was a surprise winner of the silver medal in the grueling, thirty-kilometer cross-country ski event. Koch said he had the thrill to become an Olympian only through self-denial and commitment. So in the Christian life Paul said, "[We make] every thought captive to obey Christ." (2 Corinthians 10:5) The Christian life is a call to discipline, dedication, and discovery. "One thing I do ... I press on toward the goal for the prize of the upward call of God in Christ Jesus." (Philippians 3:13, 14) Christ offers us the highest challenge for our living.

In the observance of the Lord’s Supper we discover the life we prize as we die to the sin within us, as we surrender ourselves in trust to Christ’s leading, and as we become alive to the full dimensions of the divine image in which we have been created. Paul writes, "We were buried therefore with him [Christ] by baptism into death, so that as Christ was raised from the dead by the glory of the Father, we too might walk in newness of life." (Romans 6:4)

A loving husband and wife adopted a baby boy. These new parents had died to themselves and had found life through loving the child entrusted to them. Their son, named Fred, grew strong in the riches of Christ’s love. When Fred was in his twenties, he learned the identity of his natural father who remained a hateful person. Inner fear and hurt surged into Fred’s spirit as he came to know the man who had been his father.

Then Fred learned that his natural father was dying from heart disease. He wanted nothing to do with his father who continued to be spiteful. Yet the son wanted to forgive and to be forgiven. Fred shared his struggle with his small group fellowship. They patiently helped him to give up his fears and hurts, entrusting himself to Christ. As Fred lived by faith in Christ, he loved his father by faith, seeing his father in the light of God’s image no matter how dim that image seemed.

Through prayer, friends helped Fred to see himself going to his father and finding reconciliation. Fred finally went to his father’s bedside. The son said, "Dad, I love you and I ask you to forgive me for any way in which I have hurt you."

The father shouted, "Why don’t you go back to your fancy living and just leave me alone!" Fred had the choice of whether to quit and to give up or to go to the Cross and to die to any claims for himself. He identified with Jesus’ humiliation and suffering. He went back again to a father who could only be more and more spiteful. Suddenly one day when Fred walked into the room, his father broke into tears. The father and son embraced for the first time in their lives.

The father said, "Son, I’m dying; I need help." During the days that followed the son was able to help his father come to know Jesus Christ and to trust him in life and death. Fred knew that his own strength had not enabled him to find reconciliation with his father. Fred had been able to deny himself, to surrender himself, and to discover the life he prized.

- James R. Tozer

CSS Publishing Company, Take, Eat and Drink, by Various Authors