Follow me
ID
na008
Langue
EN
Durée totale
00:22:21
Nombre
1
Références bibliques
inconnu
Description
inconnu
Transcription automatique:
…
Follow me.
With a view to drawing attention to the path of true discipleship, it may be profitable
for us to look together at the 9th chapter of Luke's Gospel, verses 1 to 6, but 12 were
called together, commissioned, empowered, and sent forth to preach and to demonstrate
the Kingdom of God.
Verses 7 to 9 gives the impact upon Herod of this testimony.
Verse 10, the return of the apostles.
Only one short sentence described their service.
They told Him all that they had done.
There's a salutary thought here for all who serve.
We must give an account of our stewardship to our Lord.
May we ever remember we are under His authority.
Let us act as to Him in all our service, that the light of the coming judgment sit before
us.
He took them and went aside privately into a desert place.
How different this is from being under the public eye.
Yet it is here in the Lord's company that we get His appraisal of all, and obtain needed
adjustment, refreshment, and resource for further service.
Verse 11, He, the Lord, is the object of attraction.
The people followed Him.
Well for us if our service brings Him into provenance.
Alas too often we parade ourselves, our ability, our work.
True service hides the servant and exhibits the master.
Those who followed Him experienced the compassion which filled His heart.
In all this He proved to the disciples and to the needy multitude His sufficiency.
He is the master of every situation.
On this occasion His bounty was not exhausted.
Ample was His provision in feeding the five thousand.
There were twelve baskets left over.
The twelve tribes of Israel shall prove that sufficiency in the coming day.
Verses 18 and 19 give the consensus of public opinion as to His person.
Verse 20 though, gives faith's confession.
Peter answering said, the Christ of God.
Verses 21 to 22, the shadow of the cross pressed upon His spirit, and this He intimated to
His own.
His disposition of mercy was to be slighted.
The crucifixion would be Israel's answer to that mercy and to the confession of who
He is.
Yet amidst this foretelling of His rejection was the portent of His triumph and He said
be raised the third day.
Verses 23 to 27, it was just then that our Lord opened out the path of true discipleship.
That path is possible only to such as have some heart appreciation of His glory and to
such as would share His rejection now.
Our Lord is now rejected and by the world disowned.
Thus He appeals, if any man will come after me, is he my attraction?
Is it himself I want?
Any other reason for my taking the path of discipleship will wane sooner or later and
I shall be but another wreck by the way.
Let him deny himself.
Self-abnegation is an outstanding mark of the true disciple, not I but Christ.
And take up his cross daily.
What a sight to see a man carrying his cross.
That man is finished with the world and the world is finished with him.
The cross is not the ordinary trial of everyday life, though the disciple will experience
that too.
Perhaps someone says under pressure, I have a heavy cross to bear, but that is not the
thought here for our Lord says let him deny himself and take up his cross daily and follow
me.
He has been crucified here and he invites us to make the cross ours.
Identification with a crucified Christ is another mark of true discipleship.
The language of such a one would be, I am crucified with Christ.
Such a one passes judgment upon himself.
He confesses that God's judgment of sin in the flesh expressed in the cross of Christ
is the judgment that he himself deserves.
He thus takes sides with God against himself.
He would also say, God forbid that I should glory save in the cross of our Lord Jesus
Christ by whom the world is crucified unto me and I unto the world.
Galatians 6 verse 14.
For such a man, losing his life, having no recognition in that world which crucified
his Lord will be a comparatively simple thing.
He will count and keep on counting everything but loss.
We notice that our Lord said, for my sake.
Said the disciple Paul as he assessed gain in this world to be loss, for the excellency
of the knowledge of Christ Jesus my Lord, for whom I have suffered the loss of all things,
and do count them but done that I may have won Christ.
Galatians 3 verse 8.
Gain or loss for the disciple is governed by his affection for and his appreciation
of Christ.
Whilst the rigors of the path, rejection and loss here are clearly indicated, there is
nonetheless abundant encouragement.
So the Lord Jesus points on to the day of triumph and glory when he shall receive his
rightful place.
If in that day those who deserted the path here shall meet with shame from him, surely
it is true that loyalty to Christ now will receive its reward then.
Follow me, the cross now, the glory then.
Verses 28 to 36 are an encouragement to discipleship.
A sight of the coming kingdom is given to the disciples to afford present encouragement.
The Lord graciously gives to his own the light of the day of his glory, that their faith
may be strengthened in this world where they constantly meet with contrarian testing.
Unless they are enabled to move on in the way, in fidelity of heart to him, knowing
that all will eventuate in triumph, blessing and glory, their rejected Lord who suffered
here and for whom they too will suffer if they continue true to him, will shortly be
accorded his rights.
So in the confidence of that day, with its blessed compensations, they bear the misjudgments
and the slights of this day.
Everything shall be set right then, for all shall be set in relation to Christ.
In such confidence the true disciple faces the opposition and serenely asserts, but with
me it is a very small thing that I should be judged of you or of man's judgment, yea,
I judge not mine own self.
Therefore judge nothing before the time until the Lord come, who both will bring to light
the hidden things of darkness, and will make manifest the counsels of the hearts.
And then shall every man have praise of God.
First Corinthians chapter 4, verses 3 to 5.
Our Lord took the three disciples up into a mountain, the place of elevation.
The great things of God belong to the heights.
The plain is the place of testimony and service.
The mountain is the place of display.
He who was at home in the mountain, as in the plain, bowed himself in prayer, manifesting
that dependence and humility which paved the way to the glory.
Such beautiful moral features are becoming also in those who would be his disciples.
All that is committed to our trust and testimony now is destined to come out in glory shortly.
In the meantime, if we would be faithful to that trust, let us emulate him.
It may well be that the mountain scene is the answer for the true disciple to the desert
scene of verse 10.
Obscurity for the servant here as following his rejected Lord.
Only there where Christ is transfigured, when all the suffering gives place to the
answering glory, he shall not be alone in that glory.
Even as he was not alone on the glory mount, Moses and Elias were there, but they were
there with him.
These two Old Testament servants were representative of the law and the prophets.
How much of trial and failure marked their days.
But here is the indication that nothing that is of God shall fall to the ground.
All will be gathered up and fulfilled in the manifested power and glory of the kingdom
of God.
We read here in the ninth book of these, they appeared in glory and speak of his decease
which he should accomplish at Jerusalem.
The pillars of the world to come are securely founded in the cross of our Lord Jesus Christ.
We may also view Moses and Elias in another way.
Moses who passed through death is a type of those who sleep through Jesus and who shall
be brought with him when he comes to reign.
Elias is a type of the living saints caught up together with those who are raised.
This raising of the sleeping and changing of the living saints shall take place at the
rapture.
Then as 1 Thessalonians chapter 4 reveals, the Lord himself will come for his own and
translate them from earth to heaven with a view to bringing them with him, to share
with him in his kingdom glory.
Then too the disciples may be viewed as representing Israel nationally as the spectators and beneficiaries
of his glory as the supreme administrator in that coming day.
When they were awake they saw his glory.
Israel shall yet awake from her long sleep among the nations to behold her glorious Lord.
The unwitting remark of Peter was silenced by the enveloping cloud.
Moses and Elias were hidden.
However blessed, none can stand on a level with the Christ of God.
He must in all things have the preeminence.
He shall fill that scene, for God shall gather together in one all things in Christ, both
which are in heaven and which are on earth, Ephesians 1 verse 10.
The kingdom glory as prefigured on the mount of transfiguration shall be the consummation
of all the ways of God.
His will shall be accomplished there.
Hence the cloud of glory which departed from the temple in Ezekiel's day because of Israel's
sin shall return in the day of Christ.
The prophet saw in that vision of the glory in Ezekiel in the midst of the appearance
of the throne the likeness of a man.
Here on the glory mount the man of God's counsel fills the scene and the glory finds its complacent
resting place.
How encouraging to the faith of the disciples to know that in that glory there was a place
for them.
Then too the father called their attention to his well beloved son.
This is my beloved son, hear him.
Beyond all the display of power and glory is the sweet retreat of divine and eternal
affections where the father and the son are ever at home and where way through grace shall
ever dwell.
The father reveals what the son is to him, my beloved, and desires that they give him
their undivided attention, hear him.
What a prospect then for faith!
The blessed light of it is given now during the day of discipleship, and in the apprehension
and enjoyment of it we follow in diligent haste.
Till then, tis the path thou hast trod, our delight and our comfort shall be.
Be a content with thy staff and thy rod, till with thee all thy glory we see.
In our chapter verses 37 to 45 at the bottom of the hill the glorious power of that manifested
kingdom will exercise itself dispensationally in needy Israel delivering them from the power
of the unclean spirit Antichrist and setting them up in the blessing of his own glorious
presence.
All this is here set forth pictorially and ministers an encouragement to loyal hearted
discipleship, but that pathway has to be trodden here and now before the kingdom is actually
brought in.
So for Christ there must be the deliverance of him into the hands of men.
Verses 46 to 48 this expression of the disciples evidenced the innate desire of the flesh for
personal greatness and that let us note and almost beneath the shadow of his cross.
Verses 49 to 50 they boasted their position we forgot him because he followeth not with
us grace rejoices whenever and wherever Christ's name is honored whilst our Lord did not recommend
the twelve to go and join this man yet he rebuked their disposition whilst graciously
emphasizing their association with himself forbid him not for he that is not against
us is for us may we recognize and value all that is done in his name.
Verses 51 to 56 mark the true character of the present moment as to the Samaritans they
did not receive him he was the rejected one consequently insult and reproach belong to
that path into which he called his own do we know what spirit we are of a patient bearing
of the insult and an exhibition of mercy befits those who are of the spirit of the
second man.
Verses 57 to 58 as there is no place here for the master do we as his disciples covet
fellowship with him the servant is not greater than his Lord John 13 verse 16.
Verses 59 and 60 discipleship is in the power of a life which delivers from this death-stricken
scene and gives urgency to the present testimony.
Verses 61 62 Christ must be first he must in all things have the preeminence consecrate
me now to thy service Lord may this be the willing-hearted response of all who hear these
words the rigors of the pathway are real the encouragements are abounding the compensations
are sure and above all Christ is worthy almost as last words to the individual was follow thou me.
John's gospel chapter 21 verse 22 amen. …