Mark 8 v31/38
Jesus is with
his Apostles making his way to Jerusalem
and the Cross. He shocks them by saying he must suffer, be killed and rise
again. He meant this was necessary to
fulfil the purpose for which God sent him into the world; it was necessary for
him to make atonement for man’s sin, for without his blood being shed there
could not be any remission. Without the
Cross God’s holy law could not be satisfied.
Jesus must die that we might live
This is at
the heart of Christian faith and we must always be aware of the truth. This was
the message Jesus taught his Apostles and they took it to the world as the
foundation of our faith.
Peter had
shortly before made the famous confession of Jesus as Lord, for which Jesus
blessed him, but now he faces the wrath of Jesus. Peter did not mean to offend Jesus, he was
just shocked that Jesus had to suffer so much and die, but Jesus suggested
Peter had been influenced by the devil in one of the greatest recorded rebukes.
Jesus then
spelled out what being one of his followers would mean. He always made clear
that there would be a cost involved, and never offered cheap grace. Salvation is all of grace, offered to sinners
who repent freely; by grace we are saved through faith, but all who want
salvation must demonstrate the sincerity of their faith by carrying a cross.
There will
inevitably be suffering when you decide to follow Jesus. You will lose friends, be mocked, frozen from
groups, treated as going through some strange illness. You could indulge the
world’s pleasures and be thought a grand person, get involved in any form of
morality, but if you are seen as religious or read the bible, you become a
person no one wants to be with. Yet
bizarrely such perverse attitude does not apply to followers of the ethnic
faiths.
All
Christians need to realise the challenge we face. We must see we are engaged on a battlefield
not a playground as we meet an evil world which wants to force us into a
private sect.
Jesus called
the crowd to him and told them whoever loved his life would lose it, but
whoever loses his life for Jesus’ and the gospel’s sake would save it. He meant that the one who lives a self
centred life focused on this world will not find eternal life with God, but if
you give up worldly pleasures and a life of self rebellion against God for the
sake of Jesus and the gospel, will find everlasting communion with God.
Our bodies
have a soul or spirit within, and the soul is the image of God, which in turn
means eternal life, for when we the body
becomes detached from the soul, which lives on in either heaven or hell. So many people go to great length to protect
their body, take all sorts of measures to make sure it is cared for, but ignore
the soul. They never look at the bible
for guidance, and ignore God, who has no place in their hearts or minds.
We all have
souls for which we will have to give account to God; it is an awful thought
when we consider how little attention is given to anything except this world.
We can all
lose it in many ways, by loving sin and cleaving to the world; poison it by choosing a religion of lies; believing man made superstitions; neglecting all
means of grace and refusing to believe the gospel. Whichever way is chosen, the responsibility
falls to each person. Of all foolish and unprofitable bargains one can make,the biggest is
to give up the soul for the present world.
People are
claiming to be Christians, attending Church, even preaching within them, but
living unworthy lives in complete defiance of what God has laid down in His
Word.
Jesus taught
there were two roads in life and each of us must travel on one; one is broad
and most people are inclined to follow that road with all worldly goods and
thrills, whilst the other road is narrow and fewer take that one, for it means
living a godly way of life with restrictions on how you journey.
There is now
much reluctance to accepting belief in a hell, although most everyone accepts
there is a heaven, to which all believe they are heading irrespective of how
they lived their lives. There is going to be such disappointment one day. Jesus in his parables made clear two roads,
two destinies, sheep and goats, tares and wheat. All Christians should make sure those nearest
and dearest to them are aware of this.
Whenever Jesus spoke of heaven, he also referred to the alternative as
hell.
I have stated
so many times I think it shameful as well as cruel, for the Churches to let
people live under such a delusion and create liturgy which virtually assures
people that a person can separate themselves from God, have no association with
him, and yet still receive salvation. To say such is to flagrantly teach false
doctrine, for the bible is quite unequivocal and patently clear, it means
accepting Jesus death on the Cross was the price he paid for their sins. The Bible states, salvation is found under no
other name under heaven than Jesus.
Jesus
pictured a field with the good seed representing his gospel, and the tares were
the seeds of the devil, and a lot of people are prepared to sell their souls to
follow a hedonistic lifestyle. But God
is long suffering and wants all people to be saved, which is why He calls on
all to repent and turn to Jesus.
Everyone has to make a decisive decision, remembering hell is total separation
from God. The alternative is to spend
eternity with Jesus, who makes the final judgement on death when we will be called
to account for our life before him.
Let these
words of our Lord sink deep into our hearts, yet words are inadequate to express
their importance; remember them when
temptation present itself and the matter of the soul seems of no importance.
The final
call of Paul in our passage is for people never to be ashamed of the gospel. How many
Church members are embarrassed when asked if they believe? Indeed how many are ready to acknowledge they
attend Church? How reluctant to answer
if asked to give our opinion on moral questions? If you are not ashamed, you are ready to
speak out about your faith.
Remember the
words of Jesus, ‘for whoever is ashamed of me and my words in this sinful and
adulterous generation, of him also shall the Son of man be ashamed when He
comes in the glory of the Father’.
We may offer what is hard for sceptics to
believe, but that should not stop us telling it. When we tell how God took a young Jewish girl
and caused her to conceive by the power of the Holy Spirit; that when this
child became man He performed miraculous deeds and eventually gave His life by
a cruel death on a Cross, in order that God would forgive people of their sins:
that three days late would rise from the dead as a sign that one day all who
believe in Him and accept Him as Saviour, would live eventually with Him in
heaven.
The gospel is
the story of Jesus Christ, who gave Himself to be crucified for our sins in
order to reconcile us to God. Why should
anyone be ashamed to tell that story? We
all no doubt are ashamed of things we have done in our lives, and the things we
have said but wished we hadn’t, and that is understandable. But we allow ourselves to become ashamed of
something for which there is no need to be ashamed of.
The reason he
is not ashamed is,-- because the gospel is the
power of God leading to salvation for all who believe.
Always bear
in mind that only Christianity has a Cross at the
centre of its faith. Only Jesus suffered an horrific death on the Cross as a
Saviour.
Let us all
pray for faith and courage to confess Christ before the world and never be ashamed
of him who died for us on the Cross.
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