Luke 9:51-56 · Samaritan Opposition
Unconditional Commitment
Luke 9:51-62
Sermon
by Lori Wagner
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Anyone ever visit a water park? It’s that time of year when people flock to parks and stand in hour-long lines to go down the biggest, best water slide in the entire region. You wait and you wait until finally you get to the top of that slide, look down, and….panic! It looks like a long, long way down. You look back. The line is thick and there’s no way you can turn back. You’ve got to go ahead, close your eyes, and risk it, despite the paralyzing fear! Maybe you’ve experienced something similar when you were young, the first time you climbed the steps to the high diving board. Or maybe for you, it’s the log flume or the roller coaster. We love the excitement and novelty of doing exciting and somewhat dangerous things. But when it comes down to the moment of truth, we often want to chicken out. That’s where true commitment to following through is the only way to go.

I’ve heard the same fear from some expecting parents. That phrase, “you’re never ready,” is often quite true. As the months go on, and the time for the birth approaches, parents can start to panic!  What if I’m not a good parent! My entire life is going to change. This is going to hurt! Can I really pull this off? When the moment comes, it’s too late to turn back. But once that baby is born, its little eyes melt parents’ hearts, and all of that fretting and worry is soon forgotten. You go forward and commit to a lifetime of parenting along with all of the responsibilities that go with it gladly. Your life does change. But I don’t know any parent who would say, it wasn’t entirely worth it.

Now that said, committing to the wrong things can get you into a lot of trouble. Sometimes, you can be on the road to a very bad decision, realize your mistake, and turning back is entirely the right thing to do. Unless you can’t!  And sometimes that can happen. Anyone who has seen Jurassic Park remembers the line, “Do you know what you’re committing to?” Because sometimes, there’s truly no turning back, and you have to be committed not only to your decision but to the responsibility that goes with it, the outcomes, and the consequences.

Today’s scripture story is about commitment –the commitment to discipleship, to following Jesus, with all of the danger, responsibility, and difficulties that go with it. He has come to the time of reckoning in his ministry and he’s on his way to Jerusalem. The road ahead is not going to be easy. Anyone going with him at this point will be committing to a very difficult life indeed, and Jesus does not hide this fact. He very bluntly lets whoever wants to follow him know what life as his disciple will truly be like.

Jesus is not into sugarcoating discipleship. He doesn’t say, come along with me. You’ll get a great salary, awesome benefits, lots of perks, excellent food, 5-star hotels, and a gym membership. He says, life with me is like being perpetually on the run. You can’t stop to rest, you’ll be constantly watched and pursued. You may be in danger. Many will reject you and give you no place to sleep at night. We move from place to place. You must be entirely committed to the journey, so much that you’ll spend most of your time away from your family and friends. You will need to give your time and energy entirely to this mission. And then you’ll be rejected by nearly everyone.

Sounds like a great job, right?

I once passed a firehouse that had a sign outside on the lawn, and it read something like this:

Fire Fighters Wanted:

Hard Labor, Low Pay, Odd Hours, Cool Ride

While it was meant to be amusing, the sign also spoke the truth!  And yet, ask a firefighter in any town, and you’ll find a community loving volunteer who is proud to serve and who loves the camaraderie and satisfaction of saving homes and lives.

Think of the health care workers, exhausted, who worked long hours in terrible conditions in the midst of a dangerous Covid shut down.

Think of the teachers who went back into the schools, or the ones who administered the first tests.

We commit to what means a great deal to us. When we are serious about what we want to do, we will find no excuses for not doing it. We leap into dangerous situations all the time, when we are committed to the mission and purpose of what we are doing.

We all know this. No one commits to a semi-marriage. No one commits to partial parenting. No one commits to winning a race by refusing to practice. No one commits to college and blows off their grades. What we care about, we commit to, and what we truly commit to, we will go through anything to follow through.

This is the challenge that Jesus is presenting to anyone wanting to follow him, especially during this vital time near the end of his ministry.

How serious are you about doing this? Jesus might have said. What does it take to come with me?

Unconditional commitment. No half-way. No sort of disciples. You’re in or you’re out. Look ahead, not behind. Once you come on the road with me, there’s no turning back. Can you look ahead and not back? Can you leave your friends and family? Can you risk danger, little sleep, rejection, and discouragement? Do you know what you’re committing to?

If you do, “The train leaves at 9:02. If you’re not on it, you’ve lost your shot.”

We most often look at Jesus as a kind, loving, gentle person, and he certainly was. But he was also tough as nails and blunt as he could be. He had to be.

Jesus knew that true discipleship is not an afterthought or a fun excursion, and definitely not a walk in the park (maybe Jurassic Park!). It’s a serious occupation, driven by mission, and fraught with the unexpected.

Today too, this hasn’t changed. Anyone looking at the state of the church today knows how much work it will take to continue to carry out the mission that Jesus intended –to bring the gospel to the world at large.

In our culture today as well…..if you are truly a disciple of Jesus….truly committed to the mission of the gospel, you too will experience discouragement, rejection, dismissal, or worse. For discipleship is not an easy road. It’s a life-long mission that will challenge you and change you.

Discipleship with Jesus is a risk.

NO guarantees.

No certainties.

No security.

No plan.

All it requires is for you to let go of your expectations and your past, and to forge into the future, trusting upon Jesus to lead you into wild and woolly places, where you have never been before.

Are you ready to sign up?

Go ahead.  I dare you.

ChristianGlobe Network, Inc., by Lori Wagner