Believing in Jesus as Savior isn’t hard. Following Him as Lord — that’s the
hard part.
We
want to do things our way, not His, because we do not love Him enough to obey
Him.
The
saddest part of the story of Jonah, one of history’s most reluctant
missionaries, is not that he took off in the opposite direction when God told
him to go to the wicked city of Nineveh. It’s not that he got angry and
depressed when he finally preached to the city and saw all the people there
repent and believe. It’s not that he cared more about his own personal comfort
than the souls of the Ninevites (see Jonah 4).
The
saddest part is that he fled “from the presence of the Lord” (Jonah 1:3 NASB).
How could he love the Ninevites if he didn’t love the Lord?
The
Lord certainly cared about the Ninevites. They had committed all sorts of
abominations, but they didn’t know any better. He asked Jonah, “And should I
not have compassion on Nineveh, the great city in which there are more than
120,000 persons … ?” (Jonah 4:11a NASB). But Jonah was too preoccupied with
himself, his needs, his cold heart, his foolish pride.
That’s
us. That’s me, at least. I want to serve God only. I want to follow Him. I want
to make disciples among the nations — just as soon as I finish all the other
things I need (i.e., want) to do. I’m like the young Augustine, called by God
out of a fourth-century Roman culture saturated in immorality, who famously
prayed, “Lord, grant me purity — but not yet.”
Tomorrow,
Lord, I will give You my whole heart. I promise, just like I promised yesterday
and the day before that.
The
Apostle James had little patience for two-timing believers:
“You adulteresses, do you not know that friendship with the world is hostility
toward God? Therefore
whoever wishes to be a friend of the world makes himself an enemy of God. Or do you think that the Scripture speaks to no purpose: ‘He jealously desires the Spirit which He has made to dwell in us’? But He
gives a greater grace. Therefore it says,
‘God
is opposed to the proud, but gives grace to the humble.’ Submit therefore to
God. Resist the devil and he will flee from you. Draw near to God and He will draw near to you. Cleanse your hands, you sinners; and purify your hearts, you double-minded” (James 4:4-8, NASB).
Double-mindedness
is a plague in the American church, which now finds itself in hostile
surroundings similar to those faced by Augustine and James’ halfhearted
disciples. Our culture no longer accommodates the gospel; it despises it.
That’s a blessing in this sense: The days when you could comfortably fence-sit
with a toe in each camp are coming to a close.
The
time for choosing has arrived.
The
culture will tolerate a one-dimensional Jesus who accepts everything, judges
nothing and requires neither inner transformation nor outer change. The Jesus
of the New Testament is someone else altogether: He refused to condemn the
woman caught in adultery, telling her angry accusers, “He who is without sin among you, let him be the first to throw a stone at her” (John
8:7, NASB). After they left one by one, He asked her, “‘Woman, where are they?
Did no one condemn you?’ She said, ‘No one, Lord.’ And Jesus said,
‘I do not condemn you, either. Go. From now on sin no more’” (John 8:10b,11).
Revisionists love to edit out that last part,
but it’s the whole point of Jesus’ encounter with the woman. Once He dismissed
the hypocrites, He bestowed the amazing grace and mercy of God on a sinner, but
commanded repentance and obedience.
Years
ago a missionary in Zambia visited a village that expressed interest in the
gospel. He asked to see the village chief to seek permission to return. The
missionary sat in the shade of a mango tree, waiting for the chief to come. A
few minutes later, he noticed an old man hobbling toward him through the sand,
leaning heavily on a stick to support his lame leg. The old chief considered
the missionary’s request and gave him permission to return.
The
missionary and a volunteer team came back a few weeks later to share the gospel
through Bible storying. After four days of teaching, a line was drawn in the
sand. The villagers were challenged to walk across the line if they were
willing to turn away from their sin and make Jesus their Lord.
The
first person to move was the old chief. He struggled across the line, dragging
his crippled leg. When he finally made it, he looked up and declared to
everyone, “I want Jesus to be my Lord!” He later was baptized, setting the
stage for transformation of the whole village.
That’s
a decision we need to make anew as followers of Christ. The line has been
drawn.
(What could God do with your
life if you choose to follow Him? Explore the possibilities here and here.)
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