By Adam
Faughn
When taken seriously, one of Jesus's most demanding
commands is found in Luke 9, where He told what it takes to "truly"
be a follower of His:
If
anyone would come after Me, let him deny himself and take up his cross daily
and follow Me.
(Luke 9:23)
Each
portion of that command is challenging, but focus for a few moments on the
command to "take up cross daily." It can be easy to downplay the
depth of that command and how challenging it really is. There are several ways
we can do that, and they all come from a failure to truly remember what a cross
was used for and how horrific it was.
At times, we can downplay the command by
making the cross commonplace. That is, we just do not see it as anything more
than a symbol. Maybe we do this by making it into jewelry or other similar
things, which is not necessarily wrong, but the cross can just become a
"thing" in our minds if we do not really think about it.
At other times, we downplay the command by
talking about regular issues of life and comparing them to the cross. We might
go through a surgery or an illness and speak of it as being our "cross to
bear." Again, I am not saying this is sinful in and of itself, but that
type of language can cause the cross to be something that is more common. It is
something that is painful but normal.
What we must always keep in the forefront
of our minds is that the cross was a method of execution, and it was meant to
be torturous. To state the matter bluntly: people died on crosses.
So, when Jesus said that we must "take
up cross," He was stating that we must die! Obviously, the Lord was not
saying that we must physically die in order to follow Him (although following
Him might lead to death for some people). He was, rather, saying that our
former person must be gone, as good as dead. And take note of the fact that
Jesus said this was to happen "daily."
Each day, we must die to selfishness. We
must die to sin. We must die to the way of the world. So, the cross takes on a
whole new meaning in our life because we see it for what it is, and it is not
pretty or easy.
Paul gives us the mindset we should have
about the cross and what it should mean in our daily walk in one of his most
well-known passages. Knowing that the cross was a method of execution, He made
it clear that this should be what defines us in our Christian life:
I have been crucified with Christ.
It is no longer I who live, but
Christ Who lives in me. And the
life that I now live in the flesh I
live by faith in The Son of God,
Who
loved me and gave Himself for me. (Galatians 2:20)
That
is what the cross should mean. It is dying daily to ourselves so that Christ
can live through us. Let's not downplay the cross; let's make it what it is
meant to be: the place where we die to self and exalt Jesus.
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