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The Way Of The Cross Gary D. Robinson Matthew 16 method died criminal's death dying violently disciples martyrs persecution obedience follow Christ deny ourselves hurt control surrender
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The Way of the Cross
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The Way of the Cross
By Gary D. Robinson
Matthew 16:22-26

"Peter took him aside and began to rebuke him" (Matthew 16:22a).

If Jesus had lived in the deep south in the years following the Civil War, His "cross" probably would have been a rope around his neck and His crucifixion a lynching. If he'd been preaching among Polish Jews around 1940, the cross would have been a gas chamber. Depending on when and where Jesus might have lived and whom He riled (as, sooner or later, he would have), the nails that fixed Him to a piece of wood might have been replaced by leather straps holding in an electric chair. Regardless of the method used, Jesus would have died a criminal's death, not a hero's death.

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We can see now why Peter reacted to Jesus as he did. For Peter, a cross was too terrible a prospect to consider, if not out and out nonsense. Jesus was the One his people had been waiting on; Jesus was the King. Hadn't Peter just told him? Hadn't Jesus agreed with Peter? Kings go out in a blaze of glory — if they go out at all. And so Peter quite naturally balks at the notion of a lynching: "Now hold on, waitaminit!" And Jesus says, "No, you hold on." He then proceeds to turn all conventional wisdom on its ear (Matt. 16:24-26).

What is Jesus telling us? Is he saying that we can't follow Him without dying violently at the hands of unbelievers? Must disciples be martyrs? Some must read the text that way. In Saudi Arabia, it's a capitol crime to confess Christ. If you preach in Laos, you'll end up preaching in jail — if you're still able after they break your jaw. Chinese worshippers watch the door as anxiously as some American worshippers watch the clock. I imagine these people filter Jesus' words through bruises and soreness: "'Carry the cross'? Of course. This is what it means to be His disciple."

Thankfully, violent persecution isn't happening everywhere. It isn't happening in western Europe or Britain or the U.S. — yet. Nevertheless, if we follow Him, sooner or later we'll pay a price. I remember a boy in high school. He was one of the nicest fellows I knew — and I gave him a wide berth. We all did. Because he wore work clothes and blockish work shoes and out of his shirt pocket bulged a well-thumbed red Gideon New Testament. At lunch hour, we left him to preach and sing with his tiny band of disciples. They were harmless enough, we all agreed — so long as we stayed away from them. If somebody got too close, he'd be smudged with their holiness. To wear that mark was to invite ridicule.

Is Jesus then telling us to wear funny clothes and preach during lunch? Not necessarily. But here's a better question: When Jesus does tell us to do something, will we do it? Whatever else Jesus means by "take up his cross and follow me," he surely must mean He's the Leader, not us.

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