The Cost of Comfort: Our Souls.

September 6, 2005

Luke 9:23

And he said, “The Son of Man must suffer many things and be rejected by the elders, the chief priests and the teachers of the law, and he must be killed and on the third day be raised to life.”

Then he said to them all: Whoever wants to be my disciple must deny themselves and take up their cross daily and follow me. For whoever wants to save their life will lose it, but whoever loses their life for me will save it. What good is it for you to gain the whole world, and yet lose or forfeit your very self?

This is the main passage that i preached from this week at church. Over the days that I studied and meditated on this, i was challanged beyond measure. In the wake of the Hurricane over the weekend, this passage convicted me in so many ways.

Basically, I get the sense that I (and most likely we) so often sell short the call of Jesus. We have somehow redefined “follow me” as something that is comfortable and somewhat easy that comes with only mild discomfort.

Jesus, on the other hand, defines “following me” as something that requires us to be willing to die for. Literally. The disciples would have heard Jesus say, “I am going to be killed. Come on and join me.” Somehow, we tend to hear Jesus say something much more tame. (Hey, I am at least speaking for myself here, I don’t mean to implicate you too).

I’ve had to ask myself. How far am I willing to follow Jesus? What will I forsake to follow Him? How in my life am I selling this short?

Really, I think the biggest opposition to our following Jesus in the way he calls us is our need and desire for comfort.

Think about it, we live our lives to make us as comfortable as possible. In the process of this, the more comfortable that we are, the “fatter” we get and the harder it is to see and hear the call of Jesus on our lives. That is, to put intentionally ourselves in danger by following Jesus. We don’t do that. What we do is, we do all we can to stay away from danger. However, Jesus gives us a direct call to us to put ourselves right in the way of danger and death (thanks to Tim Keel for that thought).

I read a quote from Rocky III this weekend that really helped things make sense for me. It’s the one where Rocky starts getting really successful and rich and loses his edge and, as a result, loses that “eye of the tiger.”

Mick, his crazy old trainer says something profound,

“The worst thing happened to you, that can happen to any fighter: you got civilized”

I think part of our problem is that we are too civilized. We are so comfortable with our lives that we lose the intensity of what Jesus calls us to. Think about all those “new believers” that you met that were so “on fire” for Jesus, then, they got civilized and became fairly tame.

I think weeks like this, where we have a hurricane shock our world, we are forced to become a bit uncivilized. We are forced to view images of death and pain that we don’t really want to watch. We’d rather suppress it and pretend its not there (like we do with most other things whenever we can – after all, we most often really care about things that have direct affect on us. If it doesn’t affect me directly, I can pretend it doesn’t exist). But, the scope of something like Katrina leaving millions of people homeless does not allow us to ignore it.

We are forced to realize that our personal comfort is not the goal of human life. We are forced to realize that the world is a lot bigger than our little daily, mundane lives.

Of course, a few weeks and months go by and the disaster is no longer on the news and we get civilized again. We go back to “normal life.” Again, our biggest enemy is our own comfort.

It’s my prayer that I live my life as uncivilized as possible. That I would never be wrapped up in my own comfort and that in the name and way of Jesus, I would truly live my life for the sake of others. Not only that, but my community would be a bit uncivilized and we would collectively be more concerned about others before ourselves.

What good is it for me to gain the comforts of the whole world, yet forfeit my very soul?

God, teach me how to deny myself, take up my cross and follow you. I sell myself so short and I daily don’t get what this means. God, help our community to learn the same.

Recent Comments // only me talking would be just plain silly.

  • Dan Benson said...

    1

    09/7/05 8:14 AM | Comment Link |

    Hi Todd,

    Thanks for your thoughts. They apply to a series I’m starting this weekend on fellowship, focusing on the “one another” verses. When I shared some of those — “comfort one another, encourage one another,” etc. — on my blog, you left a comment that it reminded you of the Beach Boys song, “Wouldn’t it Be Nice?” That was so funny and so true.

    Yet as I study these verses, I’ve come to conclude the same as you. We are in a messy business.

    This about real life. We’re not playing church. When the Lord commands us to forgive each other, that assumes there’s something for which we need to be forgiven. And we will have to do it over and over and over. When God tells us to comfort one another, that presumes there’s something going on in our lives for which we need to be comforted. When we’re told to admonish one another, that presumes that there’s something we’re doing wrong in our lives and instruction from Scripture that we’re ignoring and that we need someone courageous enough and loving enough to tell us that. If we’re to encourage one another, that means somebody is discouraged and needs to refocus.

    It’s not warm and fuzzy. It’s life changing.

    Christ knows it’s messy. He’s our example and standard — “as I have loved you, so love one another.” (John 13:34) That’s why he was a “man of sorrows,” and “acquainted with grief” who “suffered and died on our behalf.” He walked the Way of Sorrows — the Via Dolorosa — to the cross, focusing on “the joy set before him.”

    Why should we be any different?

  • Todd said...

    2

    09/8/05 5:44 AM | Comment Link |

    dan, thanks! yeah. messy. hard. and we don’t reall get the “largeness” of it. Your question is so good, why should we be any different. at least, why should we not work our butts off to try our best to live any different. we settle way too much.

  • Scott said...

    3

    09/8/05 1:15 PM | Comment Link |

    This is really good stuff!! Nice job on the “new look!”

  • Tony Myles said...

    4

    09/9/05 12:27 AM | Comment Link |

    There’s some great stuff in here. Especially since you referenced Rocky.

    That said, though, I appreciate this reminder to pursue the Eye of the Tiger… er, Lion of Judah.

    don’t call me Veronica.

  • Todd said...

    5

    09/9/05 5:40 PM | Comment Link |

    Tony, thanks for the kind words. Go Rocky. When is Rocky 6 coming out?

  • chiestand said...

    6

    09/10/05 2:31 PM | Comment Link |

    these are some notes from our Sr pastor, Marty Voltz (EFCA in Illinois) on what it means to follow Jesus. I’ll share them here, since I am typing them up for my journal anyway.

    . Interesting that there is no market for a conference on how to be a following. most conferences are on how to be a leader!!

    * Learn to follow, or you’ll be left behind. We have to leave the past or we get left behind. The kid who refuses to play unless he can be the leader, usually gets left behind. You’ll never learn to lead if you can’t follow. And those who won’t/cant follow, make terrible leaders! For there is much about leading htat can only be learned by following.

    The first and primary call on my life is to follow and the call to lead never cancels or negates the call to follow. No m atter how high we rise in the area of leadership, the call is still to follow.

    I need to learn to follow (Jesus) because if iI insist on leading, I’ll never get to the places God wants to take me. and God is committed to taking me where I need to go in order for me to be who God wants me to be.

    We still try to be the leader…We try to choose and control the affairs of our lives and the older we get we say” what about him?” and God says “what is that to you? YOU follow ME.” The first and primary call is and will always be “come follow me.” He does not always lead us to safe places, but leads us to places we need t go to be what He wants us to be.

    Probably loses impact in the translating, but it was a great message and when the next week found me caring for my mom in the hospital, afraid i might lose her, i remembered “God doesn’t always take us safe places……….”

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