The Cost of Discipleship
Sermon preached by
The Reverend Dr Sam Cappleman
9 September 2001
Second Bible Reading Luke Chapter 14:25-33
Large crowds were travelling with Jesus, and turning to
them he said: 'If anyone comes to me and does not hate his father and
mother, his wife and children, his brothers and sisters, yes, even his own
life—he cannot be my disciple. And anyone who does not carry his cross and
follow me cannot be my disciple. Suppose one of you wants to build a tower.
Will he not first sit down and estimate the cost to see if he has enough
money to complete it? For if he lays the foundation and is not able to
finish it, everyone who sees it will ridicule him, saying, "This fellow
began to build and was not able to finish." Or suppose a king is about
to go to war against another king. Will he not first sit down and consider
whether he is able with ten thousand men to oppose the one coming against
him with twenty thousand? If he is not able, he will send a delegation while
the other is still a long way off and will ask for terms of peace. In the
same way, any of you who does not give up everything he has cannot be my
disciple.
There's just been a conference in South Africa on overcoming racism.
Today is racial justice day. A day when sadly many will still struggle for
justice because of racial or ethnic persecution. A day when many will
continue to seek asylum in countries where they believe they and their
families will be safer and free from the hatred and bigotry of racism,
ethnic cleansing and political biases and oppression.
Asylum seekers have been much in the news recently. They often provoke
strong reactions.
On the one hand we sympathise with them as they try to escape oppressive
regimes, on the other it seems like we wonder if things are really as bad as
they are making out and are they just trying to get into the UK because
they've heard it's an easy life.
And before we make too firm a judgement one way or the other, we do well
to recall that God came to us in Jesus as an alien and a stranger whose
parents too had to seek asylum at an early age. A man who in later life
suffered the indignity of a fixed trial by people who had political
expediency at the top of their mind rather than true justice.
Jesus was born in conditions many asylum seekers would identify with:
poverty and obscurity. At an early age His parents had to seek a refuge and
asylum in a foreign country as they feared for Jesus' life - I wonder what
Joseph and Mary's story would have seemed like to an officious Egyptian
immigration official?
He lived most of His adult life as a homeless wanderer with few, if any
real possessions. But perhaps because of His background:
- He always reached out to strangers
- He always was open and welcoming to the unclean and the outcast
- Always accepted people for what they were
- Always identified with aliens and strangers
- and said that what we do for the least of them we do for Him
And it's this same Jesus who, in the gospel reading today, challenges us
about how serious we are about following Him.
Jesus is on the way to Jerusalem and wants His disciples to understand
the > cost of following Him. And the closer Jesus gets to Jerusalem, the
clearer He becomes about the demands of discipleship. And as He got closer
to Jerusalem so the conflicts began to increase and the demands began to
become more explicit.
In the deep South of the USA there is a saying that goes "the preacher
has just changed from preachin' to meddlin'".
You can just imaging the disciples thinking it was fine when Jesus was
just talking about love and harmony—but now He's started talking about
changing lifestyles—that's meddlin'.
Today's passage is tough because it's radical. It uses strong language,
to shock people into understanding what was at stake. It challenges us to
put what we say about our belief in God into action—to put following Christ
before everything else. It's fascinating to read on in Luke and see that it
wasn't the people who'd been marginalised from society that had a problem
with this, the sinners or the outcasts or the tax collectors (or the asylum
seekers)—they all kept coming to listen to Jesus - they weren't put off. The
people who had the most problem were the Scribes and the Pharisees, the
establishment, the well off, the wealthy and the well to do. For them maybe
it was that their material possessions and their status had got in the way
of leading a Godly life, and that's a challenge for us all.
For Luke continually challenges the lifestyle of His listeners and
unerringly points to the cross as the way of life. Challenges that will
sometime put us in conflict with our families and those around us.
Challenges us by saying that following Christ means giving up everything
else.
And to illustrate that point Jesus uses 2 examples, He wants His
followers to sit down and work out what it means. What will be the cost of
following Him.
The first example is that of a someone who wants to build a tower. Jesus
says that it's sensible to work out what it's going to cost before hand -
can we afford it? Can we afford to follow Christ - with all that it entails,
giving up the things of this world for the things of the Kingdom. It's a
challenge to us today: have we got our priorities right? Is Christ really at
the centre of our lives?
The second example is of a King who is engaged in a war. He's under
attack and needs to do something. Doing nothing is not an option. Can He
afford not to do anything? It's a completely different emphasis.
As Jesus heads towards Jerusalem, to an unfair, biased trail and to
crucifixion, His question in this second parable isn't can the disciples
afford to follow Him, can they work out the cost, are they prepared for the
conflict?
His question in the second parable is can they afford not to follow Him,
there is no other way to eternal life?
Is there a real alternative to a life of discipleship in the Christian
life, a way which demands we give all we have, a way which requires complete
surrender to God. It's an all or nothing proposal.
Just like we say in the Covenant prayer:
I am no longer my own but yours. Your will, not mine be done in all
things wherever you place me. I willingly offer all I have and am
to serve you as and where you choose.
Challenging words. Can we afford to follow Christ? Can we afford not to?
Are we prepared for the conflict that following Him might bring, or do we
just want a quiet life?
Are we prepared to
- reach out to strangers as He did
- be open and welcoming to the unclean and the outcast as He did
- accept people for what they are as He did
- identify with aliens and strangers as He did
And in serving God so find our perfect freedom.
Finding that the things we have left behind pale into insignificance
compared to the riches of His kingdom He invites us to share.
His Kingdom is a safe haven, where no one is refused entry. Its borders
are always open to all who, knowing the cost, choose entry.
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