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  • Roger D. Willmore
    September 2005
    Matthew 25:1-13 No matter the custom or culture, weddings are important and revered events. As a pastor I have always been extra sensitive...
  • Scott Gibson
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    Luke 2:22-40 Listeners to this sermon know that waiting for anything isn't easy. We live in a fast culture today. Everything is...
  • Scott Gibson
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    Romans 16:25-27 Have you ever tried to put into one sentence what a magazine or newspaper article, a book you’re reading or a movie...
  • Paula Fontana Qualls
    September 2005
    Isaiah 61:1-4, 8-11 Santa Claus, sleigh bells, reindeer. Snow falling, icicles forming, Christmas music playing. Christmas lights,...
  • Paula Fontana Qualls
    September 2005
    Isaiah 40:1-11 So often the Old Testament is perceived as portraying a wrathful God of vengeance. But in this Old Testament passage,...
  • Paula Fontana Qualls
    September 2005
    Isaiah 64:1-9 Have you ever had a conversation with someone only to realize how distant that person was from God. It is a humbling...
  • L. Joseph Rosas III
    July 2005
    Romans 13:8-14 The old adage says, “If your output exceeds your income, your upkeep will be your downfall.” Stress is the leading...
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The Consequence Of Following Jesus
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The Consequence Of Following Jesus
By Chuck Sackett

Matthew 9:9-13, 18-26

“When God bids a man, He bids him ‘come and die’.”  And Bonhoeffer did.  He came; and he died.  He recognized the hold of God over him as a disciple.  There really is no other legitimate way to respond to God.  We must recognize His hold over us. God’s call comes with consequences.

It’s not clear in our text (Matthew 9:9-13, 18-26) if Matthew fully understood what he was getting into.  But it became clearer the longer he stayed with Jesus.  In the ensuing conversations and events the consequences became crystal clear.

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The consequence of following Jesus…

is to be pressed out of our comfort zone, relationally.  Soon we find ourselves with all those “undesirable” folks.  It’s hard for the Pharisee in us to think God cares about those “tax collectors and sinners,” but eventually we learn He does.

A few years back, when AIDS was more fearsome than today, I watched a man share his testimony in a room full of aspiring ministers.  As the story unfolded of bi-sexual behavior, infection, and repentance, you could see the visible attempts to move as far back in their seats as possible.  But not all—at the break, several came and embraced our guest and welcomed him to our class.  These men and women knew the calling of Jesus.

Someone wisely said, the church is not a sanctuary for saints but a hospital for sinners.  My friend and fellow-preacher wants to know, “why do we have to waste so much time ‘hand-holding’ the saints?”  It’s because we haven’t been close enough to Jesus to hear His call.  His call presses us out of our comfort zone.  He changes the nature of our relationships.  He changes the addresses in our guest book.

Jesus models for us a life of ministry.  Interrupted at the banquet and interrupted on the journey, He models that life is lived for others, not for self.  We are here to offer what God has given us, no matter how inconvenient that happens to be.

The consequence of following Jesus …

is to be pressed out of our comfortable plans, professionally.  The next thing we know, Jesus is calling us to consider the real focus of our lives.  Are we doing what He wants or what we want?

James Earl Massey calls it the Burdensome Joy of Preaching.  He describes the actual call in his book of the same name.  He heard the voice of God as a teenager sitting in worship studying a waltz by Chopin.  He heard God call, “I want you to preach.”  Massey was headed to Julliard’s to study music.  But, instead, he responded to God’s call and became one of America’s greatest preachers and teachers of preaching.

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