Cairo: Jesus in Egypt & God's Unusual Leaning
God seldom gives us all we need to understand, but He always gives us what we need in order to obey. The story of Jesus in Egypt as a boy offers a...
2 min read
Wayne Stiles
:
Nov 5, 2015 10:00:18 PM
How can you do what you should do when you’d rather do anything else? We know this marks the difference between success and failure. We struggle with the how.
(Photo courtesy of Unsplash.com)
Long before Jesus lugged His cross down the Via Dolorosa, He had issued a command to all who would follow Him:
If anyone wishes to come after Me, let him deny himself, and take up his cross and follow Me. —Mark 8:34
The Christian life follows the life of Christ. And Jesus’ life ended literally carrying a cross all the way to His death.
We all have our own Via Dolorosa. We walk it two steps at a time.
Following Jesus involves a denial of your will. Godly self-denial means more than refusing yourself something.
We all want spiritual growth until we realize what growth requires of us. When the strain of love and submission hit home, many people stack their crosses in the corner and choose to exit the Via Dolorosa. But cross-bearing isn’t an elective in the Christian life, nor does it give us extra credit. Jesus said a cross comes to “anyone” who follows Him.
That includes me. That includes you. We are fastened to our cross.
If denying self speaks to our wills, then taking up our cross refers to the actions we do from that decision. When the people of Jerusalem saw Jesus dragging His cross, they knew He was headed to death. Jesus carried a literal cross. Our crosses are metaphorical. And yet they demand a literal application.
What is the difficult, daily obedience the Christian life requires of you? That’s they cross you bear all the way to death.
(Photo courtesy of Unsplash.com)
These two steps—denial of our wills and acceptance of God’s will—sum up what it means to follow Jesus every day. In fact, Mark wrote Jesus’ command, “follow me,” in such a way in the original language that it represents a continual, “daily” action (Luke 9:23).
This daily two-step with Jesus characterizes what Paul later explained as a living sacrifice. We live lives committed to the death of self, to the renewal of our minds, and to God’s will rather than our own (see Rom. 12:1-3; Phil. 2:3-11; 4:8; Col. 3:1-10).
How can you do what you should do when you’d rather do anything else? Jesus gave us the secret to success in two steps.
Then He modeled His own words for us.
Tell me what you think: What helps you do what you don’t want to do? To leave a comment, just click here.
Click here to leave a comment.
God seldom gives us all we need to understand, but He always gives us what we need in order to obey. The story of Jesus in Egypt as a boy offers a...
Roads are often built for one reason, but God uses them in our lives for another altogether. The Appian Way in Rome proved this so in the life of the...
Two gardens in the Bible, Eden and Gethsemane, provided the settings for two choices that brought opposite results. The Bible wildly contrasts these...