Summary: Following Christ means, among other things, putting God first and prayer

RG/KB 27-06-2010

This morning, I would like to look at one verse from our Gospel reading – verse 59 where Jesus said: "Follow me."

In Mt 16, Jesus elaborates on what he means by following him when he said: If any one would come after me, he must deny himself and take up his cross and follow me (Mt 16:24)

And in those words you find the heart of the Christian Gospel.

In the Great Commission of Mt 28, Jesus tells his church to go and make disciples – that is people who will follow him

Keith Green, the late husband of Melody Green who wrote our second hymn: “There is a Redeemer” once said this:

“Going to Church no more makes you a Christian than going to McDonald’s makes you a hamburger”

What makes you a Christian is the desire to FOLLOW Jesus.

So what exactly does following Christ entail?

There are a number of things but I would like just to look at two

1. Putting the things of God ahead of our desires and

2. Prayer

Let’s look at the first

1. Putting the things of God ahead of our own personal desires

Sounds good doesn’t it – but what exactly does that mean?

There is certainly something of self-denial there.

If you think St Paul was an ivory tower scholar in his following of Christ, just listen to what he had to go through to follow Christ:

“I have worked much harder, been in prison more frequently, been flogged more severely, and been exposed to death again and again. 24Five times I received from the Jews the forty lashes minus one.

25Three times I was beaten with rods, once I was stoned, three times I was shipwrecked, I spent a night and a day in the open sea,

26I have been constantly on the move. I have been in danger from rivers, in danger from bandits, in danger from my own countrymen, in danger from Gentiles; in danger in the city, in danger in the country, in danger at sea; and in danger from false brothers.

27I have laboured and toiled and have often gone without sleep; I have known hunger and thirst and have often gone without food; I have been cold and naked.

28Besides everything else, I face daily the pressure of my concern for all the churches.” (2 Cor 11:23-28)

Being a Christian is not easy, because we adopt standards that are not this world’s standards.

Story: There was a vicar last year who advocated that if people are poor they should steal from the supermarkets.

But that is not following Christ because it breaks the 8th commandment:

“Thou shallt not steal” (Ex 20:15)

It can cost us to follow Christ and to do what is right.

2. Prayer

The second action I believe following Christ entails is prayer. Because prayer is talking with God.

And the Christian faith is all about RELATIONSHIPS

Jesus prayed a lot. We read in Mark how Jesus prays in a Solitary Place

35Very early in the morning, while it was still dark, Jesus got up, left the house and went off to a solitary place, where he prayed. Mark 1:35

Prayer requires a lot of commitment

There are two types of prayer that I think we can get a handle on.

The first is simple prayer and the second is prayer of the ordinary

1. Simple Prayer

Strange title – what is simple prayer.

Dom Chapman summed it up well when he said: “Pray as you can, not as you can’t”

Many people think you can’t pray until you have the right MOTIVATION and SERIOUS and IMPORTANT THINGS to trouble God about.

But simple prayer is childlike prayer

We all come to God with mixed motives

As Richard Foster puts it

“The Truth of the matter is, we all come to prayer with a tangled mass of motives – altruistic and selfish, merciful and hateful, loving and bitter. Frankly this side of eternity we will never unravel the good from the bad…”

For me that was a real eye opener – because God loves us because we are his children. He knows our motives – we can’t kid him – and all he wants us to do is to come to him!!

Simple prayer is talking to God as we might our best friend

Foster gives good advice:

Don’t give up praying because you are struggling with evil, anger hurt etc. Rather pray while you are struggling with evil.

Simple prayer can also be self-centred prayer – a conversation of the heart.

Foster writes this:

In the beginning we are indeed the subject and centre of our prayers. But in God’s time and in God’s way a “Copernican revolution takes place. Slowly, almost imperceptibly there is a shift in our centre of gravity. We pass from thinking of God as part of our life to the realisation that we are part of his life.”

2. Praying the Ordinary

The other type of prayer that I can really appreciate is what Richard Foster calls the prayer of the Ordinary

Question: Let me start by asking how much time in the week we think we pray:

1%, 5%, 10%, 30%, 50%.......

I saw a statistic a few years ago, in which it was claimed that the average pastor in Canada and the USA spent 15 mins a week praying!!

We are so busy

Richard Foster writes this:

Many of us live in a kind of inner apartheid.

We segregate out a small corner of pious activities and then make no spiritual sense out of the rest of our lives.

We become so accustomed to this way of living that we fail to see the contradiction in it.

The scandal of Christianity in our day is the heresy of a 5% spirituality.

We overcome this modern heresy by Praying the Ordinary.

Story: I would like to tell you a similar story of an old beautiful Christian lady, Mary who Maddy and I went to visit when we were living in Leven (1998/1999).

The Vicar, Martyn Dunning had asked us to visit Mary because she was housebound and unable to come to church.

She had one son who did not visit her. However, her ex- daughter in law (for her son had got divorced) did come over regularly and some friends from Church too.

We started having a Bible Study together and she picked the book of Isaiah!

We also learnt her story – how she was suffering from arthritis and a weak heart.

Her husband Larry had died a good number of years earlier

But she did not moan – rather she was such an encouragement to us.

She would tell us she was in pain if you asked how she was - but she didn’t dwell on it

And slowly she went downhill – and died just after we had left the village. Martyn rang us up to tell us that Mary had gone to be with her Lord.

She lived an ordinary life and died an ordinary death.

She accepted her deterioration with grace and gentleness – and still had a concern for those in the old people’s home - Abbeyfield House who did not know the Lord.

The point is that God dwells in the daily things and the ordinary and not just in the spectacular and heroic.

God is with us while we are cooking, hoovering (excuse the misuse of the trademark), washing up – emptying the dustbin

Foster says this:

“If we cannot find God in the routines of home and shop, then we will not find him at all. Ours is a symphonic piety in which all activities of work and play and sex and sleep are holy habitats”

Most of Jesus’ life was tied up with the ordinary – growing from childhood to manhood in the Carpenter’s shop – and the Gospel really only record the last 3 years of his life – his ministry years.

I remember thinking – when I was a patent lawyer - that if I became a vicar I would have all the time in the world to pray and spend time with God!

Who was I kidding – I am busier in my vocation than ever I was as a lay person.

In praying the Ordinary – my vocation is part of my Prayer of the Ordinary

The secret is learning to pray in our work.

We cook to the glory of God, we wash up to the glory of God – and in the example Foster uses you dig ditches to the glory of God

Metropolitan Anthony Bloom once said: A prayer makes sense only if it is lived”

We also pray the ordinary when we engage in the “Prayer of Action” as Jean-Nicholas Grou – a French Jesuit Priest and Author who lived from 1731-1803 - calls it.

Grou said:” Every action performed in the sight of God because it is the Will of God and in the manner God wills is a prayer and indeed a better prayer than could be made in words at such times.”

May I ask you the question again – how much time do you devote to prayer – 5%, 10% 30%, 50% or even more?

Conclusion

It is easy to be involved in Church but not committed to being a disciple of Christ.

It is easy to believe in Christ intellectually and give him an hour of your time on Sunday but that is not enough.

Jesus calls each one of us to follow him 24/7.

He doesn’t want us just to be “involved in Church” – he wants disciples “committed to follow him”

What is the difference you might ask.

Let me give you an analogy (which I am sure you have all heard before).

In a good cooked English breakfast, bacon and egg

the hen is involved but

the pig is committed .

Following Christ – being a disciple of Christ should impinge on the way you live

We live in a post Christian culture. Choosing to lead a Christian life is not easy. It runs contrary to our culture.

Jesus recognised this when he said in Mt. 7:13

13"Enter through the narrow gate. For wide is the gate and broad is the road that leads to destruction, and many enter through it. 14But small is the gate and narrow the road that leads to life, and only a few find it.

Most, if not all, of us here today are Christians and so, in some way or another we have chosen to follow the Christian way of life.

So I would like to ask the question:

If you decide this morning to heed Jesus words and follow him, what level will your commitment be?

We have three choices in our level of commitment - so far as the will of God in our lives is concerned.

1. We can decide to put His will foremost in our lives some of the time

2. We can decide to put his will foremost in our lives most of the time

3. We can decide to put his will foremost in our lives all of the time.

Conclusion:

I’d like to leave you with a poem that is a real challenge to the way we can live our Christian lives

The Road Not Taken by Robert Frost

Let me read it to you in closing:

Two roads diverged in a yellow wood,

And - sorry I could not travel both

And be one traveller, long I stood

And looked down one as far as I could.

To where it bent in the undergrowth,

Then I took the other, as just as fair,

And having perhaps the better claim,

Because it was grassy and wanted wear,

Though as for that, the passing there

Had worn them really about the same,

And both that morning equally lay

In leaves no step had trodden black.

Oh, I kept the first for another day!

Yet knowing how way - leads on to way

I doubted if I should ever come back.

I shall be telling this with a sigh

Somewhere ages and ages hence:

Two roads diverged in a wood, and I --

I took the one less travelled by,

And that has made all the difference.

I wonder which road you would take

- the well travelled road of self will or

the road of following Jesus, come what may.

Because it is that second road that Jesus calls us to travel this morning.

So let us bow our heads and pray

Lord Jesus, you call everyone of us to follow you – and yet we know that the interests of self will get in the way.

Send your Holy Spirit among each one of us to stir us up in our complacency and make us truly your disciples.

We ask this through Jesus Christ our Lord Amen