Considering My Cross
"Then
Jesus said to his disciples, “Whoever wants to be my disciple must deny
themselves and take up their cross and follow me. For whoever wants to
save their life will lose it, but whoever loses their life for me will
find it. What good will it be for someone to gain the whole world, yet
forfeit their soul? Or what can anyone give in exchange for their soul?"
Matthew 16:24-26
It
is the time of year for all good Christians to reflect on the cross.
We consider what Jesus of Nazareth did for us by dying on a Roman
cross. But I've been thinking about the cross Jesus says is my cross.
Jesus says, "Whoever wants to be my disciple must deny themselves, and take up their cross and follow me."
Why is it we contemplate the cross of Jesus, but pay so little
attention to the cross Jesus says we must carry? So I'm considering my
cross this year.
There
is a vast difference between my cross and the Roman cross Jesus was
nailed to. It appears that Jesus is saying, "Come and die with me," but
that isn't what he is saying. Why does Jesus talk about a disciple's
cross, what happened for Jesus to speak of, not his cross, but a
disciple's cross, or specifically, "My cross"?? Let's take a look at
what happens before Jesus speaks of denying or taking up.
"From
that time on Jesus began to explain to his disciples that he must go to
Jerusalem and suffer many things at the hands of the elders, the chief
priests and the teachers of the law, and that he must be killed and on
the third day be raised to life. Peter
took him aside and began to rebuke him. “Never, Lord!” he said. “This
shall never happen to you!” Jesus turned and said to Peter, “Get behind
me, Satan! You are a stumbling block to me; you do not have in mind the
concerns of God, but merely human concerns.”
Matthew 16:21-23
What
occasions Jesus speaking of denying self and taking up crosses?
Peter's response to Jesus saying he must suffer and die. It appears
Jesus is saying, "Come follow me to the place of your crucifixion," but
Jesus merely says, take up your cross and follow. Now if Jesus is
saying "Follow me to the place of your death," then doesn't that
contradict what Jesus says in Matthew 11:28? “Come to me, all you who are weary and burdened, and I will give you rest." If
Jesus is telling us to follow him to our death on our own cross then he
does contradict himself. What is missing from the text of Matthew 16
is cultural and religious context. When Peter rebukes Jesus saying, "Never, Lord! This (horrific death) shall never happen to you!", he is only going by what the Jews had been taught for centuries, beginning with Moses.
Moses
was actually the mold the Jews used to measure Messiahs.
Moses was sent by God to deliver God's people from brutal slavery to
Pharaoh, king of Egypt. In the mind of the Jews the Messiah would
free the Jews from their oppressors; cleans the people and nation of sin
and from worshiping false Gods; and finally, (r)establish a kingdom for the benefit
of the Jews. Peter, naturally believed Jesus was going to be the
Messiah he had been taught to expect. When Peter rebukes Jesus he isn't
doing it out of love for Jesus, but rather for his own selfish gain.
If you'll remember several times Jesus has to break up arguments among
his disciples. They were constantly arguing over who would sit next to
Jesus on his right and on his left. Think about the phrase, "So and So
is the boss's right hand man." The right hand man is the closest, most
trusted side kick or henchman for a powerful leader. To be King Jesus'
right hand man would make a person the second most powerful person in
the land (world). If Jesus died then Peter wouldn't get to be Jesus right hand
man. And how do we know Peter is only thinking of himself and his
gain?? Jesus tells us so, "Jesus turned and said to Peter, “Get behind me, Satan! You are a stumbling block to me; you do not have in mind the concerns of God, but merely human concerns.”
Peter was only concerned with gaining power wealth and position.
Peter's motives weren't serving God's purposes, and actually oppose
God's purposes.
So
Jesus isn't talking about his cross. Taken in context Jesus is
confronting Peter's (and his other disciples) "merely human" way
of thinking and being. So when Jesus tells his disciples, "Deny self
and take up your cross," he's addressing their double minded service of
both God and themselves. In context what Jesus teaches is very clear,
"Deny your merely human desires and concerns." If Jesus were speaking
to us Americans he might say it this way:
"Deny your self-serving
demands/desire for your rights, and stop pursuing the selfish ideal of
the American Dream."
It isn't too difficult to see why Jesus tells us
"Deny ourselves," in light of Peter's completely selfish thinking. Its
the whole, "take up your cross," thing which gets things muddled up.
Because
of Jesus death on a Roman cross when Jesus uses "your cross" to
confront his disciples we automatically assume Jesus is speaking about
dying with him on his cross. I believe a careful look at the matter
will reveal that Jesus is saying something very different from what
we've traditionally thought about Matthew 16:21-28.
For
the first time Jesus begins to explain to his disciples that he must
suffer and be put death, but that he will rise from the dead after three
days (Matthew 16:21). What Jesus never says is how he will die. Again
we tend to read into the account that Jesus told his disciples he must
be crucified. But the text never explicitly says Jesus spoke of
crucifixion, or any other methodology. Matthew's account merely says, "...Jesus
began to explain to his disciples that he must go to Jerusalem and
suffer many things at the hands of the elders, the chief priests and the
teachers of the law, and that he must be killed and on the third day be
raised to life." There is an internal problem Jesus creates,
which makes it unlikely anyone could believe he is speaking of his death
on a cross. In verse 21 Jesus says he must suffer many things and
then be killed, but that he would be raised after three days. Who does
Jesus say would make him suffer? Jesus tells his disciples he must suffer at the hands of the Elders, Chief Priests, and teachers of the law.
I defy anyone to find a place anywhere in the Old or New Testament
where the Jewish leaders crucified anyone. There are places in the
Bible where people were hanged on trees, but that doesn't mean
crucifixion. Crucifixion was a Roman practice they introduced to
Palestine. Twice in John we are told Jewish leaders picked up stones to
stone Jesus. In Acts 7 Stephan is stoned to death, by the Jewish
leaders. Stoning was the method of execution the Jews preferred. Under Roman
occupation the
Jews weren't even allowed to execute criminals. Had the Jews crucified Jesus they could hardly have done it
in secret. Stoning on the other hand could be done by dragging the
intended victim to an out of the way place. The Romans would have been
quite upset with the Jews for using crucifixion. It is very likely the
Jewish leaders would have found themselves hung on crosses right next
to Jesus. Crucifixion is a horrible, degrading, shameful way to die,
and the Romans used it to keep subject peoples intimidated and under
control. The Romans, like all governments, didn't like competition, and
tended to remove all competition by killing it. Only the Romans could
have crucified Jesus and got away with it.
The
Jewish leaders of Jesus' day were as duplicitous as any politicians
today. The Jewish leaders fostered hatred and mistrust of the Romans,
while at the same time seeking to keep Roman favor. During Jesus
earthly sojourn the Jewish High Priest was appointed by the Roman
governor, not by God. In order to keep the favor of the Jewish people
their leaders could not act like Romans. The Romans were seen as
hateful defilers and oppressors of the Jewish religion and people. When
Jews worked with the Romans, to oppress their fellow Jews, the Jewish
leaders excommunicated them. (See Luke 5:30; and 18:9-11) Even Jesus
makes a negative comment about tax collectors. In Matthew 18 Jesus
teaches his disciples that if a sinning brother won't give up his sin
the Church should, "...let him be to you as a Gentile and a tax collector."
(Matthew 18:17). No Jewish leader wants to do anything which makes
Jews connect Jewish government (serving God) with Roman government
(serving false gods, and oppressing the Jews).
There
are lots of other problems with Jews and Crucifixion, but this post is
already getting long. I hope I've given you enough to see that there
are real problems with the idea Jesus' cross and "your cross" are
connected in anyway, at least not in this part of the Scriptures. We
are told in Scripture that we are crucified with Christ, but that's not
the context of Matthew 16 So if Jesus isn't making a connection between
his cross and "your/my cross" then what does Jesus mean by, "Take up
your cross and follow me."?? If Jesus isn't saying "Follow me to the
place of your crucifixion," then what is he saying? As I said before,
if Jesus is saying "follow me to your crucifixion," he would be
contradicting what he's already taught... "Come to me all who are weary and heavily burdened. and I will give you rest."
(Matthew 11:28). But if we begin with Matthew 11:28 then we can
understand better what Jesus is saying in Matthew 16 about, "taking up
your/my cross..."
What is Jesus talking about when he says, "come to me, you who are weary and heavily burdened and I will give you rest?"
What is the heavy burden? What is it which makes us weary? Sin and
the brokenness it produces in our lives, right? So how can Jesus first
say, "Here let me take your sin and brokenness," but then say, "Take up
your cross (a terrible, shameful, slow, excruciatingly torturous death)
and follow me to your place of death???" Who could believe or trust
Jesus??? To be crucified with Christ on his cross; it is Christ
dying on his cross which frees the sinner. Crucify me on my cross and
my sin will be paid for, but I will still be cut off eternally from the
presence of God. I've died, and have no way to come back to life, so I
am eternally dead. And if I am to die on my cross then why would Jesus
need to be crucified? Yes, Jesus is speaking figuratively when he
speaks of your or my cross, but don't confuse your or my cross with the
cross of Jesus. Jesus came to take my sins on his cross, and give me
freedom from death. Jesus comes to take our burden, our cross and give
us rest, so what is this cross of ours, and why does Jesus say deny self
and take up your cross, if he comes to take it away??
When
Jesus speaks of your cross and my cross he is talking of the way we
live our lives without God. Our cross is the result of our sin. Jesus
is comparing our sinful, godless, brokenness to being crucified. He is
saying, the way you and I live our lives; everything we do to cover up
our failures; how we attempt to fix ourselves by getting more and more
stuff; climbing the corporate ladder; sex, drugs and rock'n'roll; all
that we do to feel happy is in reality a horrible, painful, shameful,
slow torturous death: CRUCIFIXION. "There is a way that seems right to people, but in the end it is the way of death."
So when Jesus says, "...deny yourself and take up your cross," he is
saying, "Stop thinking and living like a mere human with your focus only
on human concerns and desires." Jesus is saying, "Just stop creating
that cross of yours; pick up the mess of your life, just as it is, pick
it up, and follow me." Jesus isn't leading us to death, but rather to
life, freedom, and peace. Jesus isn't calling us to die on "your/my
cross" he's calling us to stop killing ourselves with our sinful broken
ways.
In Christ there is no condemnation: "For God did not send his Son into the world to condemn the world, but to save the world through him."
In Christ there is reconciliation with God, truth, and everlasting life: "Jesus answered, “I am the way and the truth and the life."
Deny
yourself, take up your cross and follow Jesus. Stop thinking and
living the old "merely human" way, because it is the way of terrible,
torturous, hateful, and shameful death. Just pick up that mess you've
created and chase after Jesus with all you've got. Before too long you
will see that Jesus does exactly what he promises, "Come to me, all you who are weary and heavily burdened, and I will give you rest."
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