Category: Followership (Page 3 of 6)

Which Cross are You Carrying? Suffering or Love?

Suffering

This is a follow-up to my post, Take Up Your Cross. In the previous post, I made the confession “I no longer believe taking up your cross is all about suffering. I find it has so much more to do with grace, humility, hope and love.” God has been churning that confession in my heart. As such, I believe it deserves expounding. 

As Christians, we are familiar with Luke 9:23 “If any of you want to be my follower, you must turn from your selfish ways, take up your cross daily, and follow me.” Most often, the most familiar teaching attached to this verse has to do with the suffering associated with following Jesus – and how we have to choose to partake in His suffering (i.e. taking up our cross.) We made suffering “the way” of Jesus. 

I would suggest there is a greater lesson to be understood. I am not discounting any sermons associated with this passage or the fact that we are called to join Jesus in His suffering. However, we, or at least I, have often missed the bigger picture of Jesus’ instructions for following Him.

Does Following Mean Suffering?

Every time Jesus talks about others hating us or suffering as His followers (Matthew 10:22Matthew 24:9John 15:19-22 and Acts 9:16) He tells us it will happen as a result of following Him. I believe the reigning choice, is not to suffer, but rather to follow Him, which will inevitably include suffering. Most specifically, I suggest we may have been focusing on an outcome, when in fact the focus is on being His follower. Suffering will come, but after the choice to follow.

He never gave us the choice to suffer, except in following Him. Nor does He command us to suffer. He doesn’t say, “Follow me by suffering”. He never commands suffering, but tells us, if you choose me you will be hated and suffer. He also assures trials and tribulation. He doesn’t say we can avoid it, or that we can choose when, where or what. He is clear suffering will come. So suffering isn’t the choice, but taking up our cross is. Remember “If”?

I’ve been praying and meditating on what the practical and visible choice of taking up our cross looks like. I’m convinced it’s love. Jesus said love God, love others, love each other, and make disciples. I’m confident that our choice to love others is the cross Jesus meant for us to take up. Here’s why. Like I mentioned in the previous post, Jesus made it a habit of turning what we thought we knew on its ear. He routinely changed how we interpreted following God. The cross is no exception. He took an instrument of pain, suffering, and death and turned it into a vehicle of love, forgiveness, and life. Since His crucifixion, the cross hasn’t been seen the same way. We even wear them on chains around our necks!

Love, Not Suffering

Jesus didn’t come for the sake of suffering. He came for the sake of love. What happened to Him while on earth as a man should never overshadow why He allowed it to happen to Him. It was because of His love for us. Telling us to take up our cross has little to do with suffering. Instead, He asks us to choose to turn from our selfishness, love others (that is taking up our cross) and follow Him. Loving those that are lovable is easy, but try loving those that aren’t. It feels a lot like cross bearing when we have to CHOOSE to love someone we don’t want to love, or feel is undeserving.

Our choice is not to suffer. Our choice is to love God and love others, which sometimes brings suffering. Suffering is not the way of His followers; love is the way of His followers. We choose daily to love God, and everyone else that we come in contact with, regardless of how we feel about them. And every day we choose which cross we will bear.

Are you carrying the cross of suffering? Or are you carrying the cross of love?

Take Up Your Own Cross…

…then, when it becomes too heavy, ask someone to help you carry it.

Your Cross

photo credit: theramp.org

In the past I’ve struggled to understand what Jesus meant in Luke 9:23 when He said, “…take up his cross daily…” I get the sharing in suffering with Jesus part, and the theology behind it, but I’m no longer content with just knowing the theology. I need to know the deeper, soul stirring intimacy of daily taking up my cross with Jesus. I’ve read The Ragamuffin Gospel and it’s helped me understand a little. I no longer believe it is all about suffering. I believe taking up the cross has so much more to do with grace, humility, hope, and love.

At my core, I believe community is necessary. Even imperative. Because of that, I feel confident that cross carrying is a gospel-centered community event. For some time, I did not have the scriptural grounds to support my belief. However, it made sense to me.

Jesus’ Cross

In meditating on the moment where Jesus carried His cross to Calvary, God paused my heart. When Jesus fell under the crushing weight of His cross, a man named Simon of Cyrene, lifted it and carried it with Him.

Jesus undoubtedly could have carried the cross for days, unabated. But there is something so profound happening here, that if missed, will cause us to struggle unnecessarily and significantly. What Jesus said in Luke 9:23, He explains and demonstrates in Luke 23:26 at the moment Simon carries His cross.

In their culture, it was disgraceful to carry a condemned man’s cross. Jesus would have known that. But, just as with everything else, Jesus turned what was known on its ear. God the Son could have carried His own cross. However, Jesus knew we were not capable of such a feat. So He carried His cross in the flesh, as a man. Jesus the man was broken and weak from exhaustion and blood loss. Jesus the man NEEDED Simon to carry His heavy burden with Him. In that moment, Jesus showed us communal cross bearing is the way for His followers. We are not made or called to carry our cross alone. Jesus is there. And He has provided His people. We pick up ours and other’s crosses. We do it together and we call it church and community and grace and love.

Your Cross

If Jesus expected us to carry our cross alone, He would have done the same. But He didn’t. And He does not expect us to go it alone. Jesus provided us with the accounting of His own need for help in carrying His cross. Now we have the confidence that our Savior knows and understands just how hard it can be to be alone. And even more so, He showed us the importance of community stepping up and in, to lighten our burden.

Whether you ask for help, or are Simon for another, rest assured that Jesus does not want us to allow others to suffer alone, or for you to go it alone.

“…when it becomes too heavy, ask someone to help you carry it.”

The Pursuit of Conviction

conviction

used from theimageofchrist.com

Understanding conviction, as an opportunity for Christians to draw closer to God, can be a challenge. It has been for me, and I am confident it has been the same for others. If you are not familiar with conviction, it is a work of the Holy Spirit. We are brought by the Holy Spirit to the realization of how God sees us; sinful and defiled, in need of saving, and with the ultimate intent for us to seek repentance.

Conviction is the vehicle by which the Holy Spirit draws us to God. Guilt is a tool of the enemy to keep us ashamed and separated from God. Guilt can play a part in conviction, but it is not the primary agent. I have written about guilt in the past. You can read more HERE.

While the purpose of conviction may be understood; the idea of conviction, and the feelings of shame that accompany it, make it difficult to pursue. However, if you desire wholeness and genuine intimacy with God; pursuing conviction must become an integral part of your walk with Jesus. Conviction is a path to wholeness.

It is important to understand the difference between allowing only moments of conviction, and choosing to pursue it. When we make a habit of accepting less than the pursuit, brokenness will occur.

You Become Blind

When you do not pursue conviction, it becomes more difficult to discover hidden sin. Drunkenness, angry outbursts, and watching pornography are obvious sins. When you treat someone harshly, or drink too much at the office party; saying a prayer to ask forgiveness and guidance, from the Holy Spirit, would be logical. These are moments of conviction. When we fail to pursue conviction, we will easily miss less obvious sins. We relinquish our ability to see those hidden sins. Behaviors that reflect selfishness, lustful thoughts, or secretly, harbored anger toward someone, are not as apparent and will be easily overlooked.

You Become Numb

When you become blind to less blatant sins, you tend to become numb to hurting others, especially when it doesn’t directly affect you. You will develop an indifference to how your behavior impacts others. It is in these deeper issues of the heart, where pursuing conviction will reveal indifference, and those less blatant sins. You may even notice that you have hurt someone. However, failing to pursue conviction leads you to ignoring your sin. Eventually you will notice your sin less and less; until numbness becomes your norm.

Pursuing conviction is not about finding things in your life to feel bad about. The pursuit is about allowing the Holy Spirit to lead you into freedom. It is about pursuing the righteousness of God, so desperately, that nothing is off limits to Him. Your pursuit will invite Him into every part of your heart and life, for the purpose of purging and cleansing anything that may separate you from Him.

Pursuing conviction simply means pursuing the heart of God for what is good and right. It is about desiring forgiveness and allowing Him to conform you to His will. It is about obeying Jesus’ commands to love each other, love God, and love others. It is not about making you feel guilt and shame, but rather beckoning you to Him so that you become cleansed and whole. When you live a life in pursuit of conviction, what you are doing is living a life in pursuit of righteousness and the Father. And the truth of this is, any pursuit that you believe you initiated, is actually your response to God’s pursuit of you. His Holy Spirit offers us conviction. It is always God pursuing us.

So, how do we live in the pursuit of conviction, or better yet, how do we respond to God’s pursuit of us through the impartation of conviction. One of the best ways to do this is through the study of what are called the Spiritual Disciplines. Below is the list of disciplines that Dallas Willard and Richard Foster provided. You can read more about these disciplines HERE. Willard and Foster divided them into two categories.

Letting Go (Disciplines of Abstinence)

These practices allow us to give up, or let go, of certain things for the purpose of gaining something new in God. The disciplines of abstinence are:

Solitude – Spending time alone to be with God.

Silence – Removing noisy distractions to hear from God.

Fasting – Skipping a meal(s) to find greater nourishment from God.

Frugality – Learning to live with less money and still meet your basic needs.

Chastity – Voluntarily choosing to abstain from sexual pleasures for a time (those pleasures that are deemed morally right in the bond of marriage) to find higher fulfillment in God.

Secrecy – Avoiding self-promotion, practice serving God without others knowing.

Sacrifice – Giving of our resources beyond what seems reasonable to remind us of our dependence on Christ.

Engaging (Disciplines of Activity)

These practices are about making the decision to engage in activities that grow us deeper into Christ and nurture and strengthen us in Him.

Study – Spending time reading the Scriptures and meditating on its meaning and importance to our lives.

Worship – Offering praise and adoration to God.

Prayer – Talking to and listening to God about your relationship with Him and about the concerns of others.

Fellowship – Mutual caring and ministry in the body of Christ.

Confession – Regularly confess your sins to the Lord and other trusted individuals.

Submission – Humbling yourself before God and others while seeking accountability in relationships.

As we seek to lead a life in response to conviction, we would do well to pray the same prayer David offered in Psalm 139. He asked, “Search me, O God, and know my heart! Try me and know my thoughts!” Surely this is a dangerous prayer to our hidden sin, but as we seek to draw near to God, He is true to keep His promise to draw near to us. May each of us ultimately recognize the Love of the Father, as found within the pursuit of conviction.

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