The Cost of Discipleship
Transcript
It's good to see you all this morning. My name is Chet. I'm one of the pastors here. Grab your Bible. Go to Matthew chapter 8. We're walking through the book of Matthew.
We're looking at the life of Jesus, specifically as told by one of his disciples, who is trying to present to us who Jesus is and why we ought to love him, serve him, follow him, believe in him. One of the things that happens a lot in movies and TV shows when there's a courtroom scene, specifically if that's one of the main things about the show is courtroom stuff, is that the lawyer that we're rooting for will have been doing poorly. It's not going well for him, you guys. It doesn't look like it's going to work out. And then all of a sudden, they have an idea, and they start asking questions that in some ways seem a little unrelated to the case.
So they start asking these questions, and eventually the defense lawyer, because it's usually a defense lawyer, stands up and says, Objection, Your Honor. What does this have to do with the case? He's badgering the witness. Other lawyer words. And the judge will say, I'll allow it, but you better be going somewhere. And our lawyer that we're rooting for says, I am your lawyer.
I am your honor. Thank you. And then they keep asking the questions, and then eventually they've asked question, question, question. Then all of a sudden, you think we're over here, and they walk over and go, Well, if that's true, then, and they present their case. And this happens in all the great law dramas of our age. Liar, liar, legally blonde, my cousin Vinny.
In some ways, that's what Matthew is doing in chapters 8 and 9. He's showing us something here. Saying, Look at this. Look at this. Look at this. And then he goes, If that's true.
And he walks through something that seems unrelated in some ways, and says, Then this. He does that three times. In chapters 8 and 9. We're going to look at the first kind of set of that. But I just want you to look at the headings first.
I usually don't like the headings. You know, the authors didn't write those in there. If you have a Bible that has the little headings, and the sections are broken up. The author didn't put that there. Other people who printed the Bible put that there to try to make it helpful. Sometimes it is.
Sometimes I disagree with the heading they gave it, and it's like, Why don't you just let the Bible speak for itself, and quit adding your own little thoughts in here. But we're going to use them today. So, if you'll look, it's, Jesus cleanses a leper, the faith of a centurion, Jesus heals many, the cost of following Jesus. That's what we're going to look at today. But then he does it again.
Jesus calms a storm. Jesus heals two men with demons. Jesus heals a paralytic. Jesus calls Matthew. And then there's this question of fasting that's connected to that. And then it does it again.
Girl restored to life. Jesus heals two blind men. Jesus heals a man unable to speak. Harvest is plentiful. Labor is few. And then it goes into this whole discipleship thing.
So he goes, Miracle, miracle, miracle, following Jesus, discipleship. Miracle, miracle, miracle, following Jesus, discipleship. Miracle, miracle, miracle, following Jesus, discipleship. So he's saying, notice these miracles, but his point is over here. So that's what we're going to look at today.
We're going to look at the first three, but then we're going to come back through and go, okay, but here's his point. Y'all ready for that? Doesn't matter. We're going to do it anyway. Let's pray.
Lord, we thank you for your word. We thank you for how good you are. that you are powerful. You do perform miracles and that we can know you and relate to you and have hope in you. So we pray that you would, through your Holy Spirit, help us to understand your word, to believe it and to follow you. In Jesus name. Amen.
Matthew chapter eight, verse one, when he came down from the mountain. So he had just been giving the sermon on the mount, teaching about what the kingdom would look like. And now he's going to begin to kind of apply that and press the kingdom into the world around him. So he says, when he came down from the mountain, great crowds followed him and behold, a leper came to him and knelt before him. Okay. So this is our first story is a leper.
This first picture that Matthew's giving us about Jesus's miraculous power, his authority is this interaction with a leper. Now a leper was anyone who had a skin disease that was contagious. So there's an actual disease we call leprosy, but this also, the term here would have included other skin diseases that were contagious. And skin diseases are painful and awful. They just are. They can be debilitating.
What would have happened here for this person to actually be called a leper meant that they, not only did he have this skin disease, but he was actually kind of included in this group in society. And that was very painful and problematic. So let's, let's talk first about the ailment. He would have had a skin disease that was growing or continuous or contagious, would have had open sores. If it was leprosy, would have slowly began to lose his limbs, would have lost feeling in toes and fingers and extremities like nose, ears can fall off, would have potentially had his skin turn white, would have potentially had open sores.
If you've ever had just really bad sunburn, and think about how much that affected you and how much it hurt and was awful, and you worked to try to get rid of it. For anybody who's had continuous skin issues, it's painful and hurtful. But in their culture, it was beyond that because they didn't have good ways to treat it. And they knew it was contagious. They removed lepers from society. So this is Leviticus 13.
This was the law for those suffering with leprosy. It says, The leprous person who has the disease shall wear torn clothes and let the hair of his head hang loose. And he shall cover his upper lip and cry out, Unclean, unclean. He shall remain unclean as long as he has the disease. He is unclean. He shall live alone.
His dwelling shall be outside the camp. He shall live alone. You lived alone or with other lepers. You wore torn clothing. You were to make your hair look disheveled. And if that didn't work, you were to yell out, Unclean, unclean.
You remember in middle school, when you got a really big pimple on your face and you felt like it would glow in the dark? This doesn't have to just be middle school. This still happens to us as adults. I would pull out a pocket knife and cut my face. I'd rather have like a cut on my face and make up some story than walk around with some giant... Like it's a thing that we feel like people just notice and see.
It hurts us to have just some kind of skin thing. You ever spill something on your shirt? Like I spill stuff on myself periodically and I think, well, I'm announcing to the world that I'm an idiot today. Or, like I'll go out of my way to like go get a new shirt, change my shirt, get my wife to bring me one or something because it's like... And you feel like it's obvious. Leprosy was in their skin.
And they had to yell out, unclean, unclean, that they were marked by this. Separate from the rest of the world. Not only was it physically debilitating, it was socially, emotionally. You can even add in spiritually that you'd be wondering why the Lord had done this. Were you hated by God? You were cast out.
And so this leper pushes his way into a crowd. I don't know if he was yelling unclean the whole time. You ever have a hard time pushing your way into a crowd? Start yelling unclean as you walk through it. I bet people will be like, I don't know what that means, but I'm going to just back up. Makes it all the way up to Jesus and says this, Lord, Lord, if you will, you can make me clean.
Knelt before him. So potentially this was very painful for the leper. We don't know, but maybe he had had open sores on his leg. Knelt before Jesus and says, if you will, you can make me clean. And that is the opposite of the way we usually say that. We usually say, if you can, will you?
If you can do this, will you? He doesn't say that. He says, if you will, you can. I know who you are. I know what you're capable of. And if you're willing, you can do this.
That's actually a really good way to pray. Lord, you can do this. I'm just asking, will you? Jesus stretched out his hand and touched him. The way that's written in the Greek is to make it, it's similar to the way it's written out in the English here. That stretched out his hand is to make that moment last a while.
It's to show how much this happens. So this guy kneels before Jesus. He's a leper. He is unclean, potentially contagious. If you touch him, you become unclean. And Jesus did something that potentially got an audible gasp from everybody in the crowd because he reaches out his hand and touches him.
Which if he's a teacher, he, he ought to know not to do. It's potentially the first time this leper has been touched in who knows how long. Jesus touches him. I will be clean. And immediately his leprosy was cleansed. If Jesus touching him didn't get a gasp, this did.
There's a story in 2 Kings where a guy named Naaman interacts with a guy named Elisha. And Elisha tells him to go wash himself in a river seven times. And it says when he came out, his skin was like a baby's skin. My guess would be this was a similar process. This guy could have starred in a little commercial with how supple and beautiful his skin just became. For those of you who've had braces, you remember when you had them taken off?
And so you licked your teeth like a weirdo? Because they felt so smooth and amazing. I bet this guy was just walking around like rubbing himself. Like you guys feel this. See how nice he felt. Can you imagine when he got to go back and be in society again?
He got to walk into a market. He didn't have to yell unclean. I bet when he came around the corner sometimes and he's startled, there was this reaction to almost yell out unclean because he was used to having to do that when he saw people. And he was like, Oh, no, not anymore. Actually, instead of unclean, you want to hug? When he got to go be back around family, like Jesus just heals him.
Jesus says this, see that you say nothing to anyone. That's a little sad because if I was a leper and then I wasn't a leper, like I, I'm not, I don't even play for the Gamecocks. I want to talk to you all about the Georgia game because it's just such great news. It's wonderful. But if you were a leper and Jesus healed you, you'd want to tell everybody, but he says, don't do that.
Go, show yourself to the priests and offer the gift that Moses commanded for a proof to them. So there was this process when you were unclean, you went to the priest, they would check and see if you had leprosy, they would declare that you had leprosy and you'd have to go on. And there was a process for when your leprosy had kind of run its course, you could go back to the priests and they could declare you clean and there would be this process of sacrifices that you would do. He says, go do that. Again, upholding the law, not getting rid of it. And Jesus says, go practice what you're supposed to practice and be brought back into society.
So Jesus takes someone who was the lowest of the low, cast completely out, was not welcome, was unclean, was marked by this, covered by it, felt it in their skin painfully in any way that you would look at it, emotionally, physically, socially. Jesus heals him. And then Matthew just moves on. He's going to tell us another story. So the second picture he's going to give us is this story about him interacting with a centurion and healing the centurion's servant.
So he says this, when he had entered Capernaum, so he came down from the mountain, met a leper outside of the city where the leper was supposed to be. And then he went into the city. When he had entered Capernaum, a centurion came forward to him, appealing to him, Lord, my servant is lying paralyzed at home, suffering terribly. And he said, I will come and heal him. So the centurion comes.
Now a centurion was a Roman officer. The Romans were occupying Israel, which was the land that God had given to his people. The Romans had conquered them. They were occupying them. He was not well liked. He was powerful, but he would not have been well liked or well received among Jewish people.
Not only was he a Gentile, which they weren't supposed to eat with, weren't supposed to interact with, weren't supposed to have at their home. He was a Gentile, which meant he was unclean and he could make Jewish people unclean so they would have avoided him. But he wasn't just a Gentile. He was a centurion, which was a person of power who would quell rebellions, who had authority over the Jewish people, which they didn't feel like was a just or right authority. And he's a powerful person, but he comes to Jesus. And in Roman society, he was highly, would have been highly looked up to, well off, wealthy.
So Jesus interacts with someone very low and someone very high, back to back, even though the Jewish people would not have appreciated or liked the centurion as a centurion, although this one, we find out in other gospels, is an okay guy and has done, is fairly well received among Jewish people-ish. So he said, my servant is lying at home paralyzed, suffering terribly. So it would seem like the servant was able-bodied at some point. He would have to have been. And we don't know if he got a disease that slowly debilitated into being paralyzed or if he had an accident. It was just some sort of physical calamity.
He fell off a roof. He got run over by a wagon, crushed by a rock. We don't know, but he's suffering. So now he's paralyzed. Feet are crushed. Legs are crushed.
They aren't working. He's got some kind of disease. He can't move, but he's in pain. So the centurion comes, shows love for his servant and says, my servant is lying at home paralyzed, suffering terribly. Jesus said to him, I will come and heal him, which is interesting because as a Jewish person, he shouldn't go to a Gentile's house, but he says he will because he's Jesus and he does what he wants. And the centurion replied, Lord, I'm not worthy to have you come under my roof, but only say the word and my servant will be healed.
For I too am a man under authority with soldiers under me and I say to one, go and he goes and to another, come and he comes and to my servant, do this and he does it. He comes and says, my servant's suffering. Jesus says, I'll come with you. And then he has the audacity to say, no, no, no, no, no. Like if you did this and Jesus said, I'll come, I'd just be like, sounds great, let's go. He says, no, I'm not worthy for you to come under my roof.
He lowers himself, he humbles himself and then he says, he not only humbles himself, he exalts Jesus. He says, look, I know what it's like to be in charge. I tell someone to go, they go. I tell them to come, they come. I tell them to do this, they do it. All you have to do is say the word.
This is, this is beautiful understanding on the centurion's part as to who he's talking to. That's the way Jesus responds. He says, when Jesus heard this, this is verse 10, he marveled and said to those who followed him, truly I tell you, with no one in Israel have I found such faith. he looks at the people with him and says, hey, this Gentile gets it. Y'all see this centurion that y'all dislike? He knows who I am. He's the first person who's talked to me like I'm in charge of everything.
Bingo, 1,000 points to the Gentiles. Like he, he said, I hadn't seen this. The Jewish people don't, don't understand. I hadn't seen this in Israel because what you would usually think with someone who heals and performs miracles is that they are close to God and they are a conduit for God's power, God's authority, that they work in submission to God and that he runs his power and authority through the conduit, which means he's got to be there. He's got to touch. He's got to do whatever for God to work his authority through it.
But the Gentile says, you're not a conduit. You're in charge of everything. We've been working to try to get a power pole moved. We've been making some phone calls trying to see if we can get a power pole moved potentially. And as we've made these phone calls, if we got a hold of the person who is absolutely in charge of dominion, as high as you could go up, when we talked to him, we would say, will you say the word and have this moved? Not, get in your truck and come move this power pole.
Because they don't move the power pole. They're in charge. Someone else moves the power pole who gets paid hourly or whatever. Like they, they get to make a phone call and that's what he says. You're in charge. Just say the word.
And Jesus goes, he says he marveled. It's the only time that says this about Jesus. Jesus' mouth popped open. He said, all right. Nobody else understands that. You're the first person who's acted like you know who I am.
Truly, I tell you, with no one in Israel have I found such faith. I tell you, many will come from east and west and recline at table with Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob in the kingdom of heaven while the sons of the kingdom will be thrown into the outer darkness. Gentiles are going to understand this. Gentiles are going to make it to the kingdom. But those who should understand this, the Jewish people will be cast out.
That's what he says. In that place, out in the outer darkness, there will be weeping and gnashing of teeth. And to the centurion, Jesus said, go, let it be done for you as you have believed. And the servant was healed at that very moment. All right.
The Bible doesn't say this. But let's just for a second think about that servant. Paralyzed, suffering greatly, in a lot of pain. Maybe he was told the centurion is going to go see if he can find this person to heal you. The centurion's going to go get help. And you would be thinking, hopefully he does that.
You would be honored that the centurion cared enough about you to do that, that he would humble himself to him, run an errand and go try to do this for you, that he was going to try to find help. But you'd be waiting for the healer to show up. And then, while you are suffering greatly, laid up somewhere, in excruciating pain, and your legs do not work, immediately, instantaneously, you're better. Now, I feel like if that were me, I was laying in excruciating pain, and suddenly, all the pain was gone. I would be like, oh, I'm dead. I just died.
That's the only way that works. Like, you can slowly, gradually have pain get better. You can shift, and maybe it gets a little lessened. You can take some medicine, and then over time, realize it's not as bad as it was earlier, but we don't have instantaneous, amazing fixes. But you'd have been like, maybe you just wiggled your toes.
You'd have gotten out of your bed. You'd have looked back and seen if your body was still there, because you don't know how this works. You've never died before. You'd walk into the other room. Everyone would look shocked to see you, and you'd be, that's either because I'm walking or I'm a ghost. Can you imagine?
Do you know who met the centurion when he came walking back to his house? I'm guessing this guy. Maybe the first chest bump in unrecorded history as he celebrated that his legs work again. Again, all that was made up, but it was an instantaneous healing of a paralytic and Jesus has displayed his power. Next story. When Jesus entered Peter's house, so when outside the city, inside the city, now inside a home, he saw his mother-in-law laying sick with a fever and he touched her hand and the fever left her and she rose and began to serve him. that evening they brought to him many who were oppressed by demons and he cast out the spirits with a word and healed all who were sick and this was to fulfill what was spoken by the prophet Isaiah.
He took our illnesses and bore our diseases. So the third picture that Matthew gives us is that he heals Peter's mother-in-law who's laying in bed sick with a fever and having healed somebody from leprosy and having healed somebody from being paralyzed. This one feels a little more trivial but isn't that good that Jesus works in the normal regular sick? We don't know how feverish she was. Maybe she was really bad off but he walks in, he touches her hand, she's fine and goes and starts cooking. That's the way that served reads it.
It seems like it includes food. Maybe I'm just reading that in there because that sounds great. She goes and begins to serve and she's healed and then it says he sits there the rest of the evening and he heals. Anybody who's brought to him, he casts out demons we're going to talk more about that but we believe that there are evil spiritual forces that actually harm people and that Jesus is in charge of them. He casts out demons and he heals all who are sick and then Matthew says he did this, this is the point, he did this to fulfill what was spoken by the prophet Isaiah. He took our illnesses and bore our diseases.
Alright, so Matthew said this story, this story, this story. We're going to go back and I want to point out something that Matthew, that has happened in all these stories that has been included as we've walked through and then where Matthew takes this when he begins to talk about following Jesus. So let's look at the leper. Jesus has this interaction with the leper and then he tells him, go practice the sacrifice, not only have I healed you, but go practice the sacrifice, go to the priest and walk through what they tell you. Well in Leviticus 13 it tells us, here's what you do with a leper and in Leviticus 14 it says, here's what you do with a leper when he's no longer a leper and what they do is, they show up, he has to get two birds, some scarlet yarn and some hyssop, they kill one of the birds, then they cover the other one with the blood and the hyssop and they tie the yarn to it and they set that one free.
One of them is a sacrifice that dies, one of them is a sacrifice that carries the uncleanness away. This is the same thing, same type of practice that they do on the Day of Atonement. It's actually what Jesus does for us that he dies for our sin to atone for our sin to pay for our brokenness and our iniquity and he rises from the dead and carries our sin away. So what Jesus tells this leper is it's not just, what Matthew's showing us is it's not just this physical thing that happens but this also connects to what Jesus is ultimately going to do. So in this story of the leper we see sacrifice.
The next day, the next week, you can go ahead and show that, the next week, this comes into the story, the next week, they would have come back and actually had a sacrifice to atone for sin. So it's not just that he's healed physically but that Jesus cures us and makes us clean. Not physically, not just physically, but spiritually. That he went from being unclean to clean because he met and interacted with Jesus. So they would have sacrificed the two birds, they would have waited the week, then they would have had a sacrifice of a lamb to atone for sin.
The second story is of this interaction with the centurion. Centurion comes, he shows faith, says, when Jesus heard this, he marveled and said to those who followed him, truly I tell you, with no one in Israel have I found such faith. I tell you, many will come from east and west and recline at the table with Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob in the kingdom of heaven. So what overshadows this, what is inserted into this, what Jesus even kind of changes the subject from healing to this meal in the kingdom. That Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob are in the kingdom and that the Jewish people would have thought, okay, when I die, I get to go join them at the table.
And what Jesus says is centurions will be sitting at that table. People from the east and from the west will be sitting at that table. But there will be people because of a lack of faith who should have been there who won't. The sons of the kingdom who were supposed to share in that meal will be cast out. Jesus takes what would be just a physical thing and he brings it all the way into the kingdom. And he says they'll be cast out into utter darkness where there is weeping and gnashing of teeth.
Do y'all believe what Jesus believes? That there is an eternity for those who have faith and trust Jesus and know who he is where you share in all the blessings of Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob where you're gathered around the table and that there's an eternity for those who do not see him for who he is, do not understand who he is where there is weeping and gnashing of teeth, where there is heartbrokenness and bitterness and pain so much so that people are grinding their teeth. So Jesus takes what we would want to make just a story about how, look at how he heals and he pulls it all the way into the kingdom and says, I'm telling you, this is what it's about. And the third story, Matthew ends by quoting Isaiah 53, 17.
This was to fulfill what was spoken by the prophet Isaiah. He took our illnesses and bore our diseases. So Isaiah 53 says this. This is the one that he's translated. Again, Matthew knows Hebrew so he just translates it into Greek as he's writing this. It says, Surely he has borne our griefs.
That's what he translates took our illnesses. And he has borne our diseases. He's carried our sorrows and that's what he translates bore our diseases. So you can translate borne our griefs and carried our sorrows the way that Matthew translates it. It's a perfectly fine translation. He took our illnesses and bore our diseases.
And what Matthew's doing is he's kind of stradding the line for us. He's saying, Matthew uses real physical terms, diseases, illnesses. But when we translate Isaiah 53 because of the way it goes, it keeps going into further, it talks about sin and iniquity and the spiritual things. And so we just translated a perfectly fine way to translate it, which is griefs and sorrow. And what Matthew's doing is he's saying, this Isaiah 53, this suffering servant is who Jesus is. That when he heals people, it's to show you that he's this servant who has come to not just carry away physical things, but ultimately what that continues to say, which is spiritual things.
We esteemed him stricken and smitten by God and afflicted. He was pierced for our transgressions. He was crushed for our iniquities. Upon him was the chastisement that brought us peace and with his wounds we are healed. All we like sheep have gone astray. We have turned everyone to his own way and the Lord has laid on him the iniquity of us all.
All our sin has been placed on Jesus that he keeps going in that passage and talks about him as being like a sheep led to slaughter, that he is this sacrifice that will take our sin and our uncleanness and he will bring us in and make us okay that he'll give us his righteousness. So Matthew is saying, do you see what he does when he interacts with people on earth? Guess what? He's going to do that at a cosmic, eternal level. He is this servant, this king. We would be tempted when it says he took our illnesses and bore our diseases in verse 17.
We would be tempted to think that just means that he took them away, he sent them away, but it says he bore them, he carried them. It means that Jesus took all this on to himself. So you have this picture of the sick mother and in front of it Matthew puts the suffering servant. He says, this is what this is about. This is who Jesus is. This is what he has come to accomplish.
That our sin would be placed on him, that it wouldn't just be our physical things that he takes away. And then Matthew does something that again, when you read this whole chapter, it's miracle, miracle, miracle, following Jesus, miracle, miracle, miracle, following Jesus, miracle, miracle, miracle, following Jesus. So he goes from this to following Jesus because he's about to say, your honor, I'm about to make my point. Verse 18. Now when Jesus saw a crowd around him, he gave orders to go over to the other side and a scribe came up and said to him, teacher, I will follow you wherever you go.
All right. Scribes were people who knew how to read and write. They would have studied the law. They would have known the law. They would have helped interpret the law. They were well thought of.
They were in a higher social class. So if you moved out of the way for a leper, you might also move out of the way for a scribe, but for completely different reasons. The scribe comes up to him. Jesus is telling him, hey, we're going to get on boats and leave. And the scribe says, teacher, rabbi, I'll go with you where you're going. sweet. Sounds nice.
Jesus has been recruiting disciples so far. He's only got some fishermen. Scribe sounds good. Here's what Jesus says. Foxes have holes. Birds of the air have nests, but the son of man has nowhere to lay his head.
That's it. The next verse is another disciple as he changes the story to something else, another interaction that Jesus has. Maybe that response makes perfect sense to you. I'm a little confused by it. I had to look at it a bunch. Scribe comes and says, I'll follow you wherever you go, which is what you think that Jesus wants people to say to him.
That's an appropriate response. We would encourage that from this stage. Follow Jesus. You should do that. If someone came down at the end and said, I want to follow Jesus wherever he goes, I think we would say, that sounds great. Not.
Foxes have holes and birds of the air have nests, but the son of man has nowhere to lay his head. Now go think on that and go sit back down. Answer me these questions three. Like it sounds like a riddle. Like what has happened here? But I think because Jesus can see into our hearts, you see this scribe, it seems as if he comes up and his hope is that by following Jesus, he will advance.
He sees this big crowd. Here's a good teacher. I'll come and this will be a good new promotion in life for me. And Jesus looks at him and cuts right through it. He says, buddy, foxes and birds are better off than I am. I'm about to go sleep on a rock.
You want to come? There is no advancement or promotion that way. There is no greater wealth that way. You get on that boat, things aren't great. It gets harder from here, not easier. It gets worse, not nicer.
You want to come be homeless? Let's roll. It's aggressive. He cuts right to, I think, the heart of the issue with this scribe. He keeps going. And another disciple, this is someone who would have been trying to follow him or has been following him, said to him, Lord, let me first go and bury my father.
Seems like a really, genuinely, perfectly fine request. Now, there's some debate. I'm going to explain the debate real quick and then I'm going to tell you why I don't think it really matters. Some people say, that means his father just died and he's got 24 hours to bury him as is Jewish custom. So he's saying, I'm going to come to the other side but let me go bury my father.
Some people think that it's just a phrase they use which means, I'll follow you as soon as my dad passes and I can handle all of that. So basically, let me tend to my father as he ages, handle all of that, make sure I get the inheritance set up, make sure all that works out and then, I'll follow you. Here's Jesus' response. Jesus said to him, follow me and leave the dead to bury their own dead. Now, I would like to think that it's just kind of in the excuse realm of like, let me tend to my dad as he ages and the reason I would like to think that is because Jesus' response is very aggressive because if this man just came up and said, my dad just passed, may I bury him and Jesus said, no, get on the boat.
It feels like that's harsh but I think Jesus is doing the same thing with the scribe that he's doing with this guy and that's why I think it doesn't really matter. I think Jesus is cutting to the heart of the issue and proclaiming his supremacy in both instances. We want to look at this. We want to look at these stories. We want to look at the story of the rich young ruler and we want to ask the question. Rich young ruler, Jesus interacts with a guy who's super rich.
Jesus tells him, sell everything you have and he says the guy went away sad because he was really rich. And we ask, wait, does that mean I have to sell everything I have in order to follow Jesus? We read this one and go, does that mean we're supposed to all be homeless? Like I've got to live worse than birds? We read this and go, does this mean we can't tend to our parents or bury them? It's wrong for Christians to go to funerals?
No, I don't think so. I don't think that's what Jesus is teaching because I don't think he directly ever teaches that. I actually think it's not that bad. I think it's way, way, way, way worse. Because I think that whatever you most value, most treasure, whatever it is that you would put in between you and Jesus and say, Jesus, I'll follow you if this gets to happen or Jesus, I'll follow you as soon as I get to take care of this. That's the thing that Jesus is going to look at and say, maybe not.
How about no? How about instead of coming to me with conditions, you just understand who I am and realize it's worth it. How about you actually, if you had your eyes open, saw that I can banish leprosy because I'm going to take it down to myself, saw that I can heal a paralytic without even going over there, explain to you that there is a kingdom where there will be a table set where those who have faith will be welcome no matter where they come from or who they are. And there is a kingdom where outside of it is darkness and weeping and gnashing of teeth. There is a kingdom where those who are in are welcome and joyous and there is an eternity for those who do not understand who I am where they will be crushed and it will be overwhelmingly painful and dark.
How about you understand that I'm the one who came to take away sin and iniquity, to die, to redeem your soul and how about instead of coming to me with conditions, you just come. I think Matthew tells us these stories and says, look at who Jesus is and then he goes, so, are you going to follow him or is it only under the condition that it works out well for you? Are you going to follow him but just as soon as? You know, I really feel called to this but I'm going to have to wait until my kids get out of school. You know, I'd really love to be that generous. I really would, Jesus.
I would do that but I really just got to take care of this first. God, as soon, you know, I would sell everything, I would give up everything but my dad really expects me to take over this business. He really wants me to handle this and you know, I'm not supposed to dishonor him and Jesus just says, how about you just follow me and understand who I am? We don't know how they responded because that's not the point. The point is, how are you going to respond? You're not in charge of them.
You won't be held accountable for whether or not Jesus' response to them affected what they did and what they didn't do. You'll be held accountable for what you do or don't do. You're not in charge of their excuses. You're in charge of yours. You're not in charge of the responses of people in general in America or the people that hang out in your group. You're in charge of yours.
Some of you have something right now that you're saying, I really would follow Jesus but I'm going to have to be able to keep this. You know what Jesus' response to that is? No follow. Deal's off. No negotiating. Do you know why?
He loves us. He dies for our sin. He takes away our leprosy. He heals us from our inability to heal ourselves. He welcomes all those who just trust Him and He loves us enough to not let us have the stupid thing that would get in the way. Do not sit in here and believe that Jesus is the God who can get rid of leprosy, who's the King of the kingdom that welcomes people for eternity.
Don't sit in here and believe that He can banish paralytic, He can heal a paralytic at a word. That He's the one that takes away sin and then let something temporary and small or the opinions of someone else keep you from being hell-bent on following Him. Do not let something get in the way. There's some of you in this room who need to become a Christian and you need to do it right now. You need to repent of sin and you need to run to Jesus faster than you've ever run to anything else, to anyone else and you need to say save my soul. No conditions.
Take it all away. Give me everything. Give me nothing. I don't care. Give me you. You don't need to walk to Jesus and say I'll follow you if.
You just need to run to Jesus and say I'm yours and actually begin to follow. There's some people in this room who you say I am a Christian. You would be listed as the one that says a disciple said to Him. So you'd say I'm a disciple. Okay, well they're here. A disciple said to Him let me do this then.
Jesus said no. There's some of us in this room who are disciples who need to go to Jesus and just lay the thing down. What is it? What are you holding on to? What are you frustrated with Him about? What do you think He ought to give you?
What do you think He owes you? He owes you nothing. He's died for you. He's given everything. Everything that you own now belongs to Him. There's some of you now who need to give up fear and become missionaries.
You need to begin to pursue your co-workers and your classmates and your neighbors. There's some of you in here now who need to let go of your wallets who need to let go of your time. There's some of you in here now who need to let go of your children. Keep parenting. Sure. But Jesus doesn't owe you anything when it comes to them.
He's given you everything when He died on the cross. There's some of you that need to let go of your spouse and let them be a sinner that you're married to and not your savior and your hero and the person that you have to do everything for and that everything has to work out in order for you to continue to trust Jesus. We've got to lay it down and just walk to Him and say, clean slate, I'm yours. He's good. And He's better than everything else. And if He wants to take away your sickness, if He wants to take away the pain, if He wants to fix it, He can say the word.
But sometimes He doesn't want to. If He will, He can. Sometimes He just wants you and you just don't get to set the terms. Some of you need to be group leaders. Some of you need to go into full-time ministry. Some of you need to plant churches.
Some of you have been called to be missionaries and you need to go. There's some people who are supposed to be missionaries in Columbia, South Carolina. There's some people who are supposed to be missionaries where they work right now. But some of y'all have been told to go to another country where you don't know the language and you don't know the people and you're supposed to go and sleep outside and you need to go. Don't stay here another year if you're supposed to go. If you're supposed to be a part of a church plant, go.
If you're supposed to submit to the call to not make any money and go be a pastor or go be whatever, go do it. If you're supposed to lead a group, go do it. If you're supposed to be committed to your group and you're supposed to win, you say you're going to bring some food, bring some food and quit making excuses and have your wallet and your heart open, do it. But don't sit with something in the way. He's too good and he genuinely saves sinners and he really can banish leprosy and he can make it to where we can walk and he can give us hope and he can give us life but he died for us and he owes us nothing.
And Lord, help us if we let something silly stand in the way and then we're out where we're weeping and gnashing our teeth and Lord, help us if we let our neighbors go somewhere where they weep and gnash teeth and we never told them anything. God, forgive us. In a minute, we're going to take communion where we celebrate that we actually believe that Jesus died for sinners and his blood was shed for us and his body was broken for us and we need to really genuinely consider is there something that is keeping us from actually following Jesus and repent and then take communion because we're free and forgiven for all those who will run to him and place faith. That centurion didn't know the law.
He didn't have anything to offer. That leper didn't have anything to offer. That paralytic wasn't even there. But we need to walk up and just say, Jesus, I trust you. Help me and be forgiven and free. Where you are, pray.
Ask the Lord to help you see it. Ask the Holy Spirit to show it to you. Repent. And then let's take communion as people who are redeemed by Christ, saved from our sin and our brokenness and given hope in him. Let's pray.
Lord, help us to follow you. Too often we put something in the way. We say we see what you're capable of and who you are that we understand your glory and your goodness and then we let something so small stand in the way of us just following. We ask for your help. Your Holy Spirit would empower our obedience. May we trust you and know who you are.
And God, if there are people in this room who have never surrendered to you that are standing far off, may they see that you die for sinners, that you love them, that you welcome them, that you are the king and that only you will sit on the throne. We ask all this in Jesus' name. Amen.