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If you want to turn somewhere
in your Bibles, we're going to end up reading in Matthew 21. But I want you to think about
what we're doing this morning. Jesus never stopped discipling
his disciples. I want you to think about, when
we think about discipleship, it's not a book or a program
or a mission organization. It's what Jesus did. Jesus never
stopped discipling his disciples. And that's especially true on
Palm Sunday, that we're celebrating the launch of the Palm Sunday
events today. So right in the midst of all
that, we have been looking at these, as you see on the screen,
these exercises for biblical health. So we're in an ongoing
study of the biblical exercises for spiritual health and fitness,
which are the disciplines that a disciple follows and is trained
and taught and understands are commanded. And Paul told Timothy
that for all the generations of believers to come, in order
to stay close to Christ, command and teach them what Jesus commanded
and taught. It's so interesting how the Gospel
writers looked on the Gospels. You don't have to turn there,
but the first verse in the book of Acts, you know, the book of
Acts, do you know what the first verse says? all that this book
contains, all that Jesus both began to do and to teach. You see, the early church thought
of themselves as a continuation of what Jesus did, His example,
and what He taught, His direct verbal Word of God commands.
So Jesus is discipling by what he did and what he said. And
Paul said that's the method. Command, repeat what he commanded,
and teach, you know, train them in how to model what Christ did.
And so, before us in the New Testament, we have Jesus himself
teaching us by his words. And we're gonna look this morning.
In fact, when we finally get there, from Matthew 21, we're
gonna get all the way to John 12, and we're gonna see how Jesus
taught the message of Palm Sunday. And I hope that it will deeply
impact you as it has me. But what Jesus was doing is,
he was telling the disciples they need to learn to follow. these lessons. And so that's
what we're going to learn this morning. We're going to learn
to follow our Master's Palm Sunday lessons for his disciples. And
the first one we're going to see is in John, but we're going
to actually dip in a little sooner than that. From Christ's actions
and words, from the week that launched Palm Sunday, we can
see some of the most vital elements of a true follower of Christ.
Now remember, a disciple is a follower of Christ who is a believer,
who is following the way, who is called a saint, and finally,
almost last but not least, a Christian. And in the process, it's explained
that the new birth takes place. But all of those things are the
same, in the New Testament at least, not in churches and not
in a lot of literature. But in the New Testament, they're
all the same. It's the same group of people with a growing understanding
Through the Lord Jesus Christ himself that they truly were
his sheep. They were following him They were his learning disciples
who wanted to go through life Following him. I mean what a
way to go through life following Christ and that's the ultimate
life and so disciples are taught to observe what Christ taught.
Disciples are keenly desiring to know what Jesus Christ expects
from them, since a disciple is following him, since a disciple
hears his voice, and his voice speaks through his word. It is
so powerful to know that you can actually check in and know
each day what you're supposed to do by listening to the Lord
through his word. And so, we are going to be looking
in the time in Christ's life that we remember and celebrate
as Palm Sunday. Now, Palm Sunday actually might have been Palm
Monday. I mean, we only call it Palm Sunday because it's in
the church calendar. In the sequence of events, it's very possible
this happened on Monday, but I'm not into the chronology this
morning. Palm Sunday's events are among the few events that
jump off the pages of Scripture. Remember, there are 89 chapters
in the four Gospels. Three of the Gospels, Matthew,
Mark, and Luke, are called synoptic. Syn is a preposition in Greek,
with, and optic is to see. So they see together, is what
synoptic means. They're seeing with each other.
And so if you go through Matthew, Mark, and Luke, it's almost like
You don't know which book you're in. I mean, other than some stylistic
things, but they're pretty much all hovering like a little trio
following Christ. John, you wonder where he was.
I mean, he doesn't even cover the same stuff. It's almost like,
wow. I mean, he was like in a jet
or something. I don't know, he saw other stuff.
But those together make the portrait that God wants us to see. And
it's a fascinating study to harmonize the gospel accounts and look
at what events are in all four. And there aren't very many. And
this is one of them. There are very few events in
the life of Christ that all four gospel writers record. And when
you bump into one, it's kind of like if everywhere you go,
every television set and every restaurant you're in, if every
channel is having the same broadcast, it's like you better stop. It's
like a tsunami or something is happening if everybody is looking
at it. When all four of the Gospels
align and look at the same event, it is a major learning time. And that's what we're at this
morning. So what we're gonna do is, and this is just for those
of you that like a challenge or maybe jump to an opportunity
to really maximize the time, these four references are the
launching of the greatest week, as Phil said, of the history
of the universe. This is when Jesus comes as the promised Lamb
of God, who presents himself as the King, which he is, not
only of the universe, but of Israel, and comes into town on
the time period when the Passover Lamb was selected to be slain. exactly when Christ was crucified. So he actually, and in other
years I've taught about this, he actually came into town with
the lambs in order to present himself as the Lamb of God. And
so, starting in chapter 21, we have the countdown to the greatest
week, and it goes all the way to 28. Starting in Mark 11, we
have the countdown to the cross, and it goes all the way to 16,
chapter 16. Starting in Luke 19, it goes all the way through
24. You understand, this is the central focus of all the gospels,
and they devote the largest portion of their coverage to this week. And then in John 12, all the
way to 21. It's just this continuous, Countdown so what I'm saying
is this to read 21 on in Matthew 11 on in Mark 19 on in Luke and
12 on and John takes less than a hundred and ten minutes or
a hundred and twenty seven minutes. Do you know how long that is?
That's the run time of most movies You know what I'm amazed? Every
time a new comic book movie comes out, I hear the buzz. When are
you going? I'm going to go. Are you going
to go stand in line? Do you want to be in the premier opening? I mean, we won. Do you
want to go? And they're instantly able to find two hours or more
of time. and change their whole schedule
to not miss that event. Guess what? The greatest event
in history launches today in the chronology of the scriptures. And if you could just give God
the same level that a new movie coming out has, that you carve
out of your life two hours, You could actually read this week,
from Matthew 21 on, Mark 11 on, Luke 19 on, and John 12 on, and
have, next Sunday if the Lord gives it to us, the most astounding
celebration of Christ's death, burial, and resurrection, because
you've carved out of your life, above and beyond everything else
that life fills with, a carefully, prayerfully read-through of these
events. But let's just start. Look at
Matthew 21 with me. I want you to see what's happening. In verse
one, they drew near Jerusalem, it says, and we're not gonna
read together until we get to John, so don't worry. They drew
near Jerusalem, Bethphage, Mount of Olives. These are all geographic
marker points on the map. Jesus sent two disciples, verse
2. He said, go to the village opposite you immediately. You'll
find a donkey tied and a colt with her. Now just think what
that means. It's kind of like a parked car,
a donkey tied. Jesus said, go look for it, a
vehicle of conveyance. Okay, so just put it into 21st
century, okay, and loose them and bring them to me. steal the
car. I mean, that's actually kind
of what's going on. And look at verse three. And
if anyone says anything to you, like, what are you doing taking
my, you know, my vehicle? Say, the Lord has needed them,
and immediately he'll send them. And so Matthew devotes the next
22 verses from one through 22 to this event. Now, turn over
to Mark 11 with me. And this is just to get your
feet wet in how exciting it is to read this. But in Mark 11,
they drew near to Jerusalem in verse one. In verse two, he says,
go into the village, kind of the same thing, and there'll
be this colt there. And then look at verse three of chapter
11. If anyone says to you, what are
you doing? Say, the Lord has need of it, and immediately he'll
send it here. And Mark here devotes 26 verses to the Palm Sunday
events. Now go to Luke 19. You notice
they're very similar, don't you? I mean, see why they're called
synoptics. Now look at Luke 19 and starting
in verse 28. And when he had said this, he went on ahead going
up to Jerusalem, verse 29, and it came to pass as he drew near
to Bethphage and Bethany, there's, and the mountain called Olivet,
you know, same geographic pins on the map. He sent two of his
disciples, same little detail, verse 30, go into the village
opposite you, as you enter, you'll find a cold tide, no one's ever
sat, loose it and bring it here. And look at verse 31, if anyone
says, what are you doing? You say to them, the Lord has
need of it. And Luke devotes 21 verses to the Palm Sunday
event. Now turn to John 12. How completely different. John,
now remember he's the last one. Probably Matthew was the first
of the Gospels, maybe Mark. Luke, we know, wrote Luke and
Acts as a group because he was writing that as part of Paul's
trial going before Caesar and they had to have a complete,
kind of like the pre-trial paperwork that went in for the case, the
case stuff. So that's why Luke is written
like it's written, Luke and Acts merged together. But after about
30 years, John comes back and he sees completely, amazingly
different, but the same. And starting in chapter 12, Look
at verse 12, it says the next day a great multitude had come
to the feast. And when they heard Jesus was coming to Jerusalem,
look at verse 13. This is a completely different,
completely different. They take branches of palm trees
and they went out to meet him and they cry out, Hosanna, like
we were talking about this morning. Blessed is he who comes in the
name of the Lord, the King of Israel. No donkey, no borrowing,
no if they're worried, it's okay. Completely different. Now, why
am I saying all this? Because this is written for us
to see the discipleship lessons. In this event, Palm Sunday, Jesus
teaches perhaps some of the most profound, maybe the only more
profound lessons are what we'll see, Lord willing, on Good Friday
and Easter Sunday resurrection morning. Jesus actually preached
a sermon from the cross that was probably the most important
words he ever, you know, ever spoke. And there's not very many
of them. But second to that would be these. And these are profound
lessons. And often we look at the chanting
multitudes waving their palm branches, and the Passover season
and events, you know, a million plus people, and the amazing
details of the donkey, and then what follows, the temple cleansing?
You know, that's a part of this. And we don't even sometimes think
of that. What is that for? And cursing a fig tree, that
was part of this too. I mean, Jesus didn't come to
judge in his first coming. He came to bless and to save. He's coming the second time to
incinerate with fire. What's he cursing a fig tree?
And is there a moral obligation that Jesus was condemning in
a tree that it didn't bear fruit? I mean, why did he curse it?
See, all of these are discipleship lessons. And they're some of
the most powerful ones in the Gospels. And they're just amazing.
We'll only get to see a couple of them this morning. But Palm
Sunday's week was like every other week and every other event
in Christ's life on earth. It was used by God to teach us. Now remember what Paul said,
all Scripture from Genesis all the way through all those genealogies
and sacrifices and everything, all the way through the parts
we like to the end. All Scripture is inspired by God. and is profitable
in our lives. And Paul says, all scripture
was given for the purpose to show us what is right, what is
wrong, how we are to get right, and how we stay right. And that's
2 Timothy 3, verses 16 and 17. So each of the gospel accounts
explain the elements, not only of what Jesus did. You know,
and sometimes that's all we see. Oh, he borrows a donkey, rides
in, does all this. But the gospel accounts also
are there to show us why he did all those things. And I think
sometimes that's what we need to slow down, back up, and look
and say, why? Did he do what he did? And why
did God decide that out of everything, now have you ever thought about
this? Tonight I'm gonna be talking about heaven because you know
the little boy that went to heaven from the operating room, movie's
coming out and everybody's all alarmed about whether that's
true or not. And I thought about something. The Bible tells us at the end
of the gospel by John, that if everything Jesus said and did
was written down, the whole world couldn't hold the books of everything
that Jesus said and did. But what God wants us to think
about, concentrate on, learn, study, discuss, and live by,
he wrote down. Do you understand? It's so human. If I said, nobody peek behind
that black curtain behind me, do you know what would happen?
People would be, they would not think for the rest, as soon as
possible, they'd wanna go see what's behind the curtain. That's what got Eve in trouble
in the Garden of Eden. Okay, that's not a positive thing
when it comes to spiritual things. Did you know, most people that
are racing off to see the latest movie don't often know what the
Bible says. They're more curious about what
Hollywood says Noah's like, or what some very gifted, imaginative
father and son think heaven is like, rather than what the God
of the universe who said if everything Jesus said and did was written
down, the world couldn't contain the books. But I'm telling you
what is most important and what I want you to fix your heart
and mind and know on. But most people are more curious
about what God didn't write down. And see, that's why discipleship
is waning. Because it's based on adhering
to what God says. As we'll see this morning. Well,
what can we learn from the Palm Sunday event? We'll only get
through the first two of these. There are actually seven huge lessons,
but two this morning. Jesus came to die. And that's
what we're going to see in John 12. I mean, bang. Before he got
into town in Mark 10.33, before he gets there in 11.1, he says,
the Son of Man is coming to die and he's going to be crucified
and horribly treated and die. And the disciples said, what?
What are you talking about? See, they were off script. They
were not aware of what was going on. Jesus came to die, but all
the way through his ministry, he kept saying, if you're gonna
follow me, you gotta take up your cross. If you're gonna follow
me, you've got to die daily to what you want. You see, Jesus
came on Palm Sunday for the singular purpose, to die on that cross
as a lamb. And you know what he says singular
in our life should be? We need to live dying daily. And secondly, Jesus followed
the scriptures as absolute and he expects us to do so also.
So, with this thought, number one, lesson one. Jesus came to
die and expects us to die also. This is our text we're gonna
read together. John 12, verses 23 to 26. And I've highlighted
for you, this is what Jesus says right here on Palm Sunday. You
know, what he did and what he said are the two things we're
looking at. This is what he said. And notice the repeated death, unless
a grain of wheat falls to the ground and dies. But if it dies,
and then look at the next. Hates his life in this world,
which is parallel with dying. Serves me, follow me, parallel
with dying. Serves me. See what the Lord
says, you gotta die to all of your plans, and all of your aspirations,
and all of your goals and desires, and let me reprogram you with
mine. That's the only way the Christian
life works. He said, I am your shepherd, I am your master, I
am out front and you're following me. Do you know what most Christian
lives look like in the 21st century? If you look at Christendom as
a whole, Jesus is walking and it's like someone walking their
dog that has their leash behind him and that dog is like this
and they're and the collars pulling their head. That's what Christianity
has gotten to. People are not in sync with the
Savior. And he says, you know how you
get in sync with me? Don't have your own agenda, have
mine. And it starts right here in John
12. So let's stand together for the reading of God's word and
remain standing for prayer and let's read it together and ask
and invite the Lord to teach us his first lesson, the paradox
A following Christ. is we get to live, but we're
dying every day that we live. It's a paradox. Here we go, together. But Jesus answered them, saying,
The hour has come that the Son of Man should be glorified. Most
assuredly, I say to you, unless a grain of wheat falls into the
ground and dies, it remains alone. But if it dies, it produces much
grain. He who loves his life will lose
it, and he who hates his life in this world will keep it for
eternal life. If anyone serves me, Let him
follow me and where I am there my servant will be also. If anyone serves me him my father
will honor." Let's bow for a word of prayer. Father I pray that
the truth of your word will speak to our hearts that we will open
our hearts and say, Lord, I want to hear you. I want to follow
you. I want my life to be fruitful
and pleasing to you. And if you say that the only
way for that to happen is for me to deny myself and take up
this cross and become a living sacrifice, crucified with you,
yoked to you, not going my own way, then that's what I want. And Lord, that's what your disciples
are, your followers are, that's what believing Christians that
are born again, that are saints headed to heaven. You said that's
what we are. And so we're just asking you
to reset us to the original settings when you saved us. That we would
follow you every day that way. And that you would be glorified
as we do. In the precious name of Jesus we pray. Amen. And you
may be seated. Well, let's talk about, real
quickly, the paradox of following Christ. Remember, Jesus said,
if you're gonna follow me, you gotta deny yourself, and the
disciples were processing that. He said, if you're gonna follow
me, you have gotta take up your cross, and someone asked me a
couple weeks ago, they said, but would they have known what
a cross was? You bet they did. Did you know the Jewish people
have always been a little bit independent? And the Romans didn't
like independence. They like people to bow and obey
under the iron heel of Rome. And so the different Roman governors
had different methods. And during the time of Christ
and leading up to it, when they had rebellions in Galilee, they
crucified 10,000 at a time and lined the roads, every main road
of Galilee, with crucified aunts, uncles, nephews, brothers, fathers. The people saw it. And they didn't
crucify them on high hills, they crucified them by the road at
eye level. So when Jesus said that, it was
very offensive to say, take up your cross. Their uncle or aunt
or people they knew had been crucified. It's horrible. And the Romans, by the way, left
them there till they rotted and fell off in the rebellion. They did
that. That was just, you would get
it if you took them down and buried them. It was offensive. And so, it was a paradox. I mean,
Jesus was very controversial. And this Christ-centered life
of the cross is a collection of paradoxes. If you just look
at what Jesus said in his earthly ministry, he said, to really
live, you've got to die. If you really want to rule, you
have to serve. Do you remember when it's talking about the most
senior leaders of the church in 1 Peter 5? Peter heard Jesus
say this, by the way. And when Peter recounted how
Jesus said the elders were to lead the church, he said they
are to strap on the apron. of a slave. See, Peter heard
that. To really rule, we must serve.
To really win, if you really want to be a winner in life,
you have to lose. Jesus said the one who gains the whole world
will end up losing his own soul. But whoever loses for my sake
gains forever. That is an antinomy. It's a paradox
to us. We say, It doesn't sound right. To really win, we have to lose.
To really be rich, we're supposed to give our possessions away.
Jesus said, whatever you die clutching in the end and held
to the end, you lose. And whatever you freely gave
away before that time lasts forever and is multiplied 10,000%. Now that is not what we normally
hear. That's why Jesus, I mean, the longer people listened to
him, the more they said, this guy's crazy. Remember John 6,
66? Most of them stopped following
him. And finally, to really get ahead, Jesus said, go to the
back of the line. I mean, that is, when's the last time that's
been taught in school, you know? We teach, knock everybody out
of the line and pull yourself in the front, by all means. Kick
and drag and climb to the top of the ladder, no matter who
you have to climb over. Jesus said, no, no, actually,
if you really wanna get ahead, stand at the bottom of the ladder.
I mean, think about it. That is what he said, and people
didn't like it. So basically, what Jesus said,
to really live, Jesus said, we have to die. Look right where
you are in John chapter 12. Understand, this is Jesus applying
the Palm Sunday event. And in 12.24, He says, 23, the
hours come, the Son of Man should be glorified. He's talking about
Palm Sunday as he's coming to die. The glorification is Jesus
being the atoning sacrifice for the sin of the world. And he
said, most assuredly, verse 24, I say unto you, unless the grain
of wheat falls in the ground and dies, it remains alone, but
if it dies, it produces much grain. Jesus is telling them to really
live. Jesus said, I'm showing you.
To really live, you've got to die. Because for me, to unleash
all that God has for us, Palm Sunday offers us lessons from
the Master to his disciples. The first discipleship lesson
for us today is the life that Christ called all of his disciples
to follow throughout all the centuries is a paradox of living
while dying. Jesus repeatedly said to follow
him, we must take up our cross and follow him. But that abstract
thought was distressingly vivid to the disciples. Jesus added
over and over again, I am going to die. I'm going to be killed. They're going to despitefully
treat me. To really live, Jesus said, you have to die to self.
Without death, we're unable to unleash all the vast workings
of God in our life. We're like the dragged puppy.
Do you think that the master dragging the puppy behind it
is really unleashing all the potential? Why don't we just
say, hey, I want your way? See, that's what he's talking
about. This dying daily is a daily surrender, a daily renewal of
not my will. That's the only way. Death to
self is the key that unlocks the doorway to all that God has
planned for us. The earlier we learn this, the more fruitful
our lives become. How well each of us remember the words of Romans
12, 1 and 2 when they first penetrated our hearts. Think about what
Paul said. He says we are to offer our bodies
as a living sacrifice. What's a sacrifice? It's something
that that is not today, but then a sacrifice was something that
was offered completely and it was it was given up in the temple
either to be burned on the altar or or to be offered and it became
part of the subsistence of the priesthood, but you lost it.
It was a sacrifice that you lost complete control of. It was dead
to you as far as you were concerned for any benefit from then on. And Jesus said, I want you to
be a living sacrifice. You're still alive, but you have
totally given up your control. It's like you're dead. And how
well we remember when we understood Paul's saying, this transforms
us so we'll be no longer conformed to the world's powers. And that's
the pathway of blessing. But you know, when we really
understand these words, if you really understand daily sacrifice,
we begin a daily renewal of offering ourselves to God. Paul says that
dying, I mean, if you look at Romans 12, it's right at the
beginning of the most applicable, practical part of the book of
Romans, and he said this dying is the daily prerequisite. You
want to be spiritually vital like Romans 12 talks about and
ministering to one another in the church and praying and rejoicing
and all that? The prerequisite of all of disciple life for the
Lord, being a disciple and living for the Lord, is dying on a daily
basis. And that produces our spiritual
vitality. And every time we feel stagnant spiritually, like we're
being dragged through life, you know, and don't know what's going
on, it's just a warning we need to release again, the directing
of our lives back to the Lord. When the Lord leads our life,
our life is not stagnant. It's not empty. It's not hopeless
and purposeless and wearying and just troubled. When the Lord's leading, it's
not that way. Now, we have troubles, but we see why we have them and
His purpose. And so, when we feel stagnant,
it's a time to release, to surrender, to die, to take up our cross
and give our life back to the Lord. And actually, this becomes
a way of life. And something to think about,
do you start every day bowing before the Lord and surrendering
and taking up his cross and just saying, Lord, I wanna deny myself
today, I don't wanna control my plans, my goals, and my desires,
I really, put them on the altar, burn them off if you want, give
me whatever's left, or give me yours, or I just don't want my
own way. You know, one of my heroes growing
up was George Mueller. I read every version of his,
George Mueller of Bristol, of his life. He lived from 1805
to 1898. He was an amazing discipler. I admire him. Most people think
of him as an orphan rescuer. Yeah, but you haven't read the
journals. I mean, that was a front. He was getting all those orphans
off the streets of London so that he could feed and clothe
and educate and disciple them. And he did. He said, as for me
and my house, if you're gonna live in my house, you're gonna
serve the Lord. If you're gonna be fed at my orphan tables, all
5,000 of you, you're gonna learn these disciplines, learn this
work ethic, and you're gonna meet my God. And I'm gonna talk
to you about him every day. And they learned verses, and
they memorized, and they learned the gospel, and he launched wave
after wave of those 5,000 orphans that were living in his homes
into British society. Why do you think England surrounded
the world with the gospel? I mean, those orphans rescued
by a godly man who poured his life into them, what a view of
their heavenly father, how they wanted to love and serve. But
someone, I mean, he had such a thing going, he became worldwide
famous. And someone asked him, what was
the secret of your life? Usually when you're old and it looks
like you're turning out well, people ask you that. And George
Mueller hung his head and said, well, there was a day when I
died. And then he bent his head lower and said, I died to George
Mueller. I died to his opinions, his preferences,
his tastes, his will. I died to the world, its approval
or censure. I died even to the approval or
blame, even my brethren and friends. He said, what I did is I just
died. And I said, Lord, for me to live is Christ. I would like
your agenda, your plans, your goals for my life. How clearly
we see that's what Jesus modeled. It's what Jesus taught. Right
here in verse 24 of chapter 12, it's what Jesus believed as the
way to win, was to die. And that's why he left us these
words. Jesus came to die and he expects
the same from us. We're to die daily as living
sacrifices. We're to resist the pattern of
the world that we're to live for ourself. And we're to accept
the yoke of Christ. Remember what Jesus said? Come
unto me all you that labor and are heavy laden, I will give
you rest. Take my what upon you? Yoke. What's a yoke? It's an ox yoke. It's an inflexible
wooden beam. But Jesus said, take my yoke
upon you. That means Jesus is in one side
of the yoke. And he wants us to stick our
head through and to walk beside him through life. Did you know
that's how we follow him? We're following his lead as he
is yoked to us and we to him. And can you imagine how hard
it is for him when we're pushing or saying, I don't want to go
that way? You know, pulling the yoke around
our neck that's yoked to him and he's walking the right way
and we're going, I want to go this way. See that's, George
Mueller said, I'd die to wanting to go that way. And I want to
every day say, Lord, I want to go your way. I'm yoked to you,
so you lead. I don't know where we're headed.
Well, how do we apply Christ's command? In fact, better yet,
how did those who were closest to the situation apply it? See,
that's what the gospel writers had the record of Christ's life,
and we can read it, but the epistles are those that most knew Christ
and what he said. And Jesus told them how to apply
everything he commanded and taught and did, and that's what they
wrote down in the epistles. So, how do we see this applied
in the epistles? Well, I have for you to look
at. In fact, I want you to read it
with me. The two most well-known applications, it's Paul's Romans
12, 1 and 2, and it's Paul's 1 Corinthians 6, 19 and 20. Most
of us, you know, Romans 12 and 1 Corinthians 6 are about, you
know, quite a few chapters apart. And so, actually 10 chapters
apart. And so, they don't usually get read together. And so, what
I did is I brought them together and then I merge them like this.
Because they're actually a sequence that totally harmonize with Christ's
call that we deny ourself, take up his cross, and follow him. So you don't have to stand up,
you can just sit. This is a fun read. And let's read these, and
I want you to notice what it's talking about. Present your bodies,
I put it in bold. Your body is my temple. You're
not your own. You're bought at a price. So
I want your body and your spirit harmonized with what I'm doing.
You see how it all ties together? This is the daily. dying to my
plans and living to Christ. So let's just read it, okay?
Together, I beseech you therefore, brethren, by the mercies of God,
that you present your bodies, a living sacrifice, holy, acceptable
to God, which is your reasonable service, Do you not know that
your body is the temple of the Holy Spirit, who is in you, whom
you have from God, and you are not your own? And do not be conformed
to this world, but be transformed by the renewing of your mind,
that you may prove what is that good and acceptable and perfect
will of God. for you were bought at a price. Therefore glorify God in your
body and in your spirit which are God's." Now, you know, that's
an amazing thought. And most of us have heard this.
In fact, when you think about it, most of us at some time or
another have, maybe at youth camp, maybe at a retreat somewhere,
we have Romans 12, one and two. We have surrendered to the Lord. And you know what Jesus is asking
before we lose this thought of dying to self that he brought
up on Palm Sunday? And before losing the thought
of how those closest to him applied it, they said, it's a daily living. I live every day sacrificed to
Christ. Now, before we lose those concepts,
I want to ask you something on Palm Sunday. I want you, in a
moment, not right now, don't want anybody to get out of touch
with what we're doing, but in a moment, we're gonna bow our
heads and close our eyes, and I want you to think about who
uttered those words that are right in front of you. Paul wrote
them down. Who said them? Those are the
very words of God. The Almighty Lord and Master
of the universe. That's who thought this up. Paul
didn't think this up. This was inspired. And I'd like
to ask each of you to think about if at some time in your life,
up through today, you have made that personal surrender and dedication
to Christ. I mean, I remember, I remember
standing at Camp Barakel, you know, in the old side, holding
on to the pew, hearing that speaker speak. And he said, Romans 12,
1 and 2, and you got, in fact, I think it was Carl Howarda,
come to think of it, Steve Harrington's uncle or something. I mean, it
was in a small world. But I remember, you know, the fire's going, you
know, and going down front. I bet all of you have some time
you remember whether it was watching Billy Graham or at a youth retreat
or throwing a stick on a fire or at some couple's deal where
you finally, or maybe you're all alone reading the Bible,
you finally said, I just wanna, you know, you looked around to
make sure nobody was listening, Lord, I just wanna surrender and dedicate
my life. I don't even know what that means.
I know what you're gonna do, but I wanna do that. So if you have ever
done that in your life, do you know what the Lord says? That
is supposed to become a daily renewed occurrence. That's what
a living sacrifice, it's not a dead memory. It's alive, it's
renewed. Take up your cross, Jesus said,
daily and follow me. Okay? Now, now you can listen
with your eyes closed. Let's all bow our heads. I want
each of you, with heads bowed and eyes closed, I want you to
think about when you made that personal surrender and dedication
to Christ and presented yourself to Him. And if at some time in
your life you have done that, I would like to invite you on
this Palm Sunday 2014 to make a renewal of that surrender today. And the way you do it is, with
heads bowed and eyes closed, quietly stand right where you
are. And if you are offering yourself
to the Lord for the first time, you can also stand and surrender
to Him. So as you stand right now, I want you to do something
in your heart. I want you to repeat to the Lord,
That you are renewing your surrender and dedication to Him as you
stand. And say, I want to right here
today, as I stand before you quietly, I want to renew that
You bought me at a price. I'm supposed to glorify you.
I'm presenting my body again. It's what I did back when I was
a kid or last month at a retreat. And your body is my temple. And
I want you to transform me. So as you stand in your heart,
tell the Lord you're renewing your surrender and dedication.
And when you're all done telling him that, quietly, you can just
be seated. Amen. Now, I want you to think
about something. Why not do that every day? Have
you ever thought about that? That is what we're supposed to
be doing. I want to tell you a little secret. Bonnie will
probably be embarrassed if I tell you this, but when we were starting
out, we were newlyweds. We went out to Grace Community
Church. I was a brand new pastor. We had nothing. Only Bonnie had
a car. All I had was my books, you know.
What a pair we were. And we didn't even have enough
money to rent an apartment out there. You didn't get paid for six weeks.
So we lived in a church member's basement on the floor with a
Goodwill mattress. With no, we couldn't even afford
the metal stuff underneath. It was just a mattress. And so
the people at Grace felt so sorry for us starting out that our
class bought us this plantation bed. It's almost like bungee
jumping to get off of it. It's so tall. It's one of those
big poster beds, you know. Hardly, you have to have a taller
ceiling to get it in there. And so, you know, over the years,
the older I get, the more I get to the edge and then I, you know,
take the plunge down. But you know what? A little secret. Most of you wouldn't have seen
that. It's in the dark early in the morning. As soon as I... and I'm aware, I'm still alive,
breathing, thinking, I'm still on earth and awake. That's what
I do. I say, give me another day to
live. You bought me. I'm not my own. This is your
body. I'm your temple for the day,
as long as you give me. I want to renew that surrender,
that consecration. I don't want my plans, my goals,
my ambitions, I put them on your altar as a living sacrifice.
I'd like you to tighten up the yoke, and I'd like to walk through
life with you. You know, I could, you could
remember many things from Palm Sunday. Do you know what one
thing would be? It doesn't matter if you have one of those, you know,
they're not popular, one of those squishy water beds, or if you've
got one of those little pallet things, you're on a futon, or
if you've got the, you know, the one you can control with
the air in it and everything, or you just have a normal one,
you don't even know what it is. If you wake up tomorrow, As you're
sliding those feet, most of us put our feet on the floor of
some form or another. As soon as you're conscious that
you're still alive, You know what would be nice to do? You
want to have the greatest day in your life, pause before you
tweet and poke and twit and whatever else, you know, all those things.
You know, people sleep with their phones nowadays, which I'm a
terrible proponent that is not wholesome for the Christian life.
But before you even touch that thing and just, you know, just
say, Lord, You're living inside. I am your servant. I want to live this life for
you. And renew every day. Why not
renew? Jesus came to die and expects
us to also. And we don't have time today.
The second lesson is that he came to follow Scripture. We'll
do this another poem Sunday. And followers of Jesus follow
Scripture. But what I want to close with is right here in Matthew
11, 28. The life of dying daily and surrendering to the Lord,
the life of surrendering and renewing that Dedication to Him. Jesus described this way, and
I put it on the screen for you. Come to me, all you who labor
and are heavy laden. This is one of the most beautiful,
this is Jesus' arms open wide. This is one of the most beautiful
gospel offerings Christ made in the scriptures. He says, you're
laboring through life, don't know what you're here for, and
you're heavy laden in your sins. Come to me and I'll give you
rest. I'll give you rest from guilt, I'll give you rest from everything,
from all the fears and all the horrors that life has. If you
come to me for salvation, I'll give you rest. But here's what
salvation is. It's not adding Jesus to your
life. It's taking my yoke on you. You see people that want
a savior but not a Lord want forgiveness without the yoke. See, that's salvation. Salvation
is hearing and following Christ. And he says, the way you follow
me is you take my yoke upon you and go through life learning
from me. I am gentle and lowly in heart. And when you learn from me, you
find rest for your souls. And he says, guess what? My yoke
is easy. My burden's light. He said it
takes all the stress out of life to know you're connected to Christ. An ox yoke, remember, two circles.
You had the veteran ox that knew where they were going, that would
walk straight, and you had the learner who got put in and kind
of acted like the puppy for a while, and all of a sudden learned it
went easier if he walked in step, in time, the same direction as
the wise leading ox. We'll go from agriculture to
Christianity. Jesus said, I'm on this side,
you're on that side. When I saved you, I want you
to put this yoke on, and I want you to walk through life with
me. And by the way, when we walk through life with Christ, you
know what we look like? That's what Wednesday night,
remember I said I'm speaking 12 times this week? One of them is Wednesday
night. We're talking about, in biblical counseling discipleship,
what the fruit of the Spirit is. It's when Christ's personality
is transplanted in me, when I become like Him in the way I respond
in life. How do I do that? I'm connected
to Him. I'm going, he is facing the same things in life that
I am, and I learn as I'm yoked to him how to respond. And it's
the easiest way to live. Because Jesus said, what I came
to do in life is the will of him that sent me. And that's
what you should want too. So this Palm Sunday, I challenge
you to try and remember today until tomorrow morning. Whenever
that is for you. And when you get to the edge
of whatever you go unconscious on every night, and you become
conscious again, sit up and get to the edge, however far it is,
and when you're standing, say, checking in, I'm yours. I renew my surrender to you. If you start doing that every
day of your life, I can promise you, your life will radically
change because you'll start walking in that yoke through more and
more of life. Let's all stand together, and
as we stand, I'm gonna close in prayer, and as at every service
here at Calvary, at the end of the service, there'll be godly
elders and Titus II women with their Bibles, and if you, maybe
today, maybe when you stood for the quiet, head-bowed standing,
it was the first time you ever stood in your life, and you might
wanna come and talk to someone, or maybe you don't even know
what we're talking about. You think this is crazy. but
you know in your heart that you don't have rest for your soul.
And the idea of Jesus' arms out sounds appealing. Well, they're
still out. While you're alive and hear his voice, the invitation
is open. He's saying don't harden your
heart. And they'd love to talk to you about how to meet Christ.
He actually is here today. Let's bow for a word of prayer.
Father in heaven, I thank you for the lessons for your disciples
from Palm Sunday. They are transformational. learning to die daily, submitting
to your word, doing your will, being yoked to you, and they
even get better. When you start preaching from
the cross and can't say more than two or three words at once,
it's very powerful. I pray that we would learn to
follow you and to do your will as we're yoked to you through
life. And I pray that you would work in all of our hearts that
we would not soon forget that you want us to take up that cross
every day. And may we start a habit, whether,
when we jump out of bed or whenever, to be yoked to you. In the name of Jesus we pray,
and may you be glorified in our lives as our desire. And all
of God's people said, amen, and God bless you as you go.
ESH-13 - The Discipline Of Disciple-Making - Learning To Follow Our Master's Palm Sun
Series Biblical Exercises for Spiritu
Jesus constantly discipled His disciples; and Palm Sunday was no exception. Paul told Timothy, and all the generations of believers to come, stay close to Christ: command and teach the church to be all Christ taught us to be. That is what we have before us in the New Testament. We are to command in the sense that “God says this”, and we are to follow up with teaching them “how to” observe what Christ wants from us who please Him by our lives.
| Sermon ID | 413141547305 |
| Duration | 50:26 |
| Date | |
| Category | Sunday - AM |
| Bible Text | John 12:12-26 |
| Language | English |
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