The cost of Discipleship
“DON’T QUIT”
Luke 14:25-35
A Life of
Discipleship
Salvation
costs you nothing, but discipleship will cost you everything. Salvation occurs
in a moment. Discipleship takes a lifetime. Salvation is something that God does
for you. Discipleship is something you do with God. Sadly, many only preach a
life of decision, not a life of discipleship. The result is then people hit
hard times, life doesn’t seem to be working, and they become disillusioned with
Jesus rather than devoted to Jesus. (Mark Driscoll)
Discipleship
Defined:
A disciple is one who believes in Jesus, worships Jesus, serves Jesus, follows
Jesus, and obeys Jesus. Yes, believes in Jesus, but doesn’t just believe in
Jesus, lives a life in light of that belief.
Jesus
is not a salesman. In Luke 14:25–35, Jesus describes the cost of discipleship
with some of the strongest, most straight forward language that he uses at any
point during his ministry. And he wants to be absolutely, brutally honest with
us about what it means to truly be his disciple.
Do not quit. We live in a world
filled with quitters. If it gets hard, quit. If it gets hard, it must not be
God’s will. If it costs you something, then quitting is acceptable. People quit
on God, they quit on their marriages, they quit on their children.
Some
of you continually look for the path of least resistance. Everything that matters is hard. Everything that matters is costly.
Everything that matters will hurt. And Jesus says, “Do not quit.”
Point one DON’T QUIT!!!!!
(Read in Luke 14:25–27)
·
No
one teaches about love as much and as well as Jesus. No one demonstrates love
like Jesus.
·
What is Jesus
saying?
He’s saying that a relationship with him needs to be in an altogether different
category far above and beyond every other relational commitment we have.
·
Jesus uses the word
“hate.”
o The gold standard commentary on Luke: “The call to hate
simply means to love less. The image is strong, but it is not a call to be
insensitive or to leave all feeling behind. Following Jesus is to be the
disciple’s first love. This pursuit is to have priority over family members and
one’s own life, which means that other concerns are to take second place to
following Jesus.”
·
You will face
relational pressure as a disciple of Jesus to quit being his fully devoted
follower from those that you love.
o Your parents
o Your spouse
o Your Kids
o Your brother or
sisters
·
Who is it that you
would choose over Jesus?
·
Jesus’ hardest days
were lonely. Family, friends turned their back on him.
·
If need be, you have
to pick up your cross and follow me.
o Its disrespectful to
use the cross for our problems
o To carry the cross
was a dead man walking
It’s a consumer
culture.
You don’t like this church, you go to that church. You don’t like this
preacher, you go to that preacher. You find someone to give you what you want,
not what you need. How many churches have you been to? How many decisions have
you made? How many paths of least resistance have you chosen? How many times
have you already quit? How many ways have you already quit?
You’re going to die. You are going to
die. It may be soon, it may be a while, but you’re gonna end up in a box. So don’t waste your life. Make your death
count. Don’t quit! Don’t quit on Jesus. Don’t quit on your spouse. Don’t quit
on your kids. Don’t quit on our church. Don’t quit on the opportunity God sets
before us. Do not quit.
Point two: DON’T QUIT!!
Read (Luke 14:28–30)
·
Some of you have
committed to far too much. Some of you have got to learn to say no. You’ve got to
get over your fear of man. It’s better to do one or two things to completion
than seven things to incompletion.
o Jesus says, “Before
you start something, do your homework. Make sure you got a plan
·
Do not raise your
hand unless you’re ready to see it through to the end.
o Some of you need to
say yes less. And all of us need to do our homework.
o We need to evaluate
our life.
§ “What am I capable
of?
§ What can I afford?
§ What can I do?
§ What are my
priorities?
§ If I raise my hand,
I need to see it through to completion.” Do not quit.
·
Getting married is
easy. Fifty years is hard.
Jesus
is making this clear up front. It’s about the rest of your life. Jesus doesn’t
want a percentage of your time, a percentage of your money, a percentage of
your devotion. He wants all of you, all the time. No one makes the kind of
request that Jesus does and no one has the right to. Jesus says if we don’t
count the costs, we will be those people who get halfway into our ministry,
halfway into our business, halfway into our marriage, halfway into our family,
and quit. And it’s an embarrassment. And don’t blame everyone else. Don’t make
excuses. Own it and do not quit. Do not quit. And don’t quit on Jesus and don’t
quit as a Christian
Point Three: DON’T QUIT!
Read (Luke 14:31–33)
·
What have you
already quit on?
o Is your life a
series of motivated moments and quitting?
·
Disciples don’t quit.
One of the root words for “disciple” is the same root for “discipline.” A
disciple is disciplined.
o Getting married is
easy. Staying married is hard.
o Getting’ saved is
easy. Being sanctified is hard.
o Makin’ babies is
fun. Raising ‘em is work.
o That’s life. That’s
the way it is. And Jesus isn’t gonna lie to any of us and say, “Come to me and
it’ll be easy.
My life was horrible
and painful, and then I met Jesus and now everything’s perfect.
·
THAT’S A BIG FAT
LIE!!!!
A true testimony is
this: “My life was pretty hard and I met Jesus. It’s gotten a lot worse, but
he’s worth it and one day I’ll be with him.”
·
The Last Point: DON’T QUIT!
Read (Luke 14:34–35)
·
We’re supposed to be
like salt.
o We’re supposed to be
preserving for his kingdom.
o We’re supposed to
enhance life for others
·
Some of us are just
worthless.
·
So how’s it going?
Does your life make a difference?
·
Does it count?
·
Who are you serving?
·
What are you giving?
·
Where are you
pouring yourself out?
·
What kind of legacy will you leave?
·
It’s not just accept
Jesus and go to heaven when you die. It’s being a disciple along the way.
That’s really important. And so many Christians do so little for the one who
gave so much.
·
How’s your Bible
reading?
·
How’s your prayer life?
·
How’s your
repentance of sin?
·
How’s your
Spirit-filled zeal and devotion?
·
How’s your financial giving?
·
Where are you serving?
·
Who are you helping?
·
What are you accomplishing?
·
What are you completing?
·
Or have you already quit?
You
need to be in community. The truth is you and I will not make it to the end alone.
We’ll not see this life of opportunity and obligation to completion all by
ourselves. I’ve seen it over and over and over and over and over and over and
over. Where did they go? They’re not coming anymore. Oh, now they’re not even
walking with Jesus. Oh, now their life is falling apart. Oh, now their marriage
is falling apart. Don’t quit.
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