Carry and Follow!

“Carry and Follow!”

Mark 8:31-38 (8:34) – February 25, 2024

            First responders do a tremendous job for their communities! Firefighters, paramedics and police officers put their lives on the line every day, risking their lives to save others. And, they do all this in the line of duty. They all serve in difficult but much-valued jobs, and these positions are to be lauded by grateful communities, certainly!

            As first responders go about their challenging jobs, I can see how some might look at them and say, “I could never do that!” Being a firefighter, paramedic or police officer can be a challenging, and especially dangerous position. Yet, what does Jesus say in our Gospel reading today? Isn’t Jesus talking about doing something just as challenging, even dangerous?

            The background of these words of Jesus is critically important for us to understand exactly what Jesus was getting at. What was the history, the backstory? Here we are at the center of the Gospel of Mark. Jesus had healed, taught, cast out demons, and performed other signs of power, but often in secret. People had questioned who this upstart Rabbi was, but with little answer.  Up until this time, Mark had only mentioned the term “the Christ” once, in the opening verse at the very beginning of the book, until here in today’s reading, in Chapter 8.

Just before this scripture reading today, the Rabbi Jesus asks His disciples, “Who do other people say I am?” Great question! We are familiar with the responses. Some say John the Baptist, others say Elijah or another prophet, but you and I know better. We know different. We know the end of the story. The thing is, these disciples do not.

            Our Lord Jesus regularly said things that were difficult to understand, and sometimes even more difficult to obey. Some theologians and bible teachers call these the “hard sayings” of Jesus. This week we are looking at one of these hard sayings. Listen again: “Then Jesus called the crowd and his disciples to him. “If any of you want to come with me,” he told them, “you must forget yourself, carry your cross, and follow me.

            We can think of the first responders and the challenging jobs they do, certainly! But, if we look at their jobs in the light of what Jesus said here, the Rabbi Jesus is calling all of us – each of us – to do something very much like what a first responder does. “For if you want to save your own life, you will lose it; but if you lose your life for me and for the gospel, you will save it.

            How on earth can we think about, much less talk about, losing our lives? Well, in a spirit of self-sacrifice, certainly many regular folks make amazing and tremendous sacrifices for their loved ones on a regular basis. “we can understand Jesus’ comments about losing our lives in a healthy manner. Sacrifice is an essential part of life. Jesus sacrifices and so do loving companions, parents, grandparents, and friends. Jesus’s ethic of self-denial is grounded in the unconditional love of God.[1]

            Ahh. Now, there I can begin to understand this hard saying of Jesus. When it was compared to the difficult jobs of a first responder, I did not really connect with the description, the comparison. But, by saying that the Rabbi Jesus grounds this taking up the cross, this self-denial, in the unconditional love of God? That I can begin to connect with!

            Yes, we can see how firefighters courageously fight fires! But, it’s no less courageous for parents to scrimp and save to provide their children with good educations or better living conditions. It’s no less courageous for a brother or sister to go way out of their way for a sibling or a parent in need. It’s no less courageous for a good friend to stand up to a bully on the playground to protect their best buddy. How many other examples can we think of, in everyday life, of everyday folks going above and beyond, showing unconditional love? That is what Jesus is talking about. That is a big part of taking up our cross and following Jesus.

            Just in case anyone is still unsure about what Jesus is telling us to do, I will say it another way. The very “act of following Jesus is totally re-ordering our priorities and principles to the way of the Kingdom. It’s no longer about saving our lives.” [2] It’s about living our lives for others, the way that Jesus did. Instead of, “ME, first!” And, “me, me, ME!” And, “where’s mine?” We need to think, “Who would Jesus love?” “Who would Jesus put first?”

            That is one thing that Lent puts front and center: the cross. Jesus told each of us to take up the cross and follow Him. As we walk with Jesus towards Jerusalem, towards Passion Week, we need to think about what we might change to follow Jesus more closely.

One positive change for each of us might be from this suggestion. “What might it mean for us to ‘take up our cross’ to follow Jesus? Are there people in our community who are persecuted for who they are, what they believe, the color of their skin, how they express themselves, or where they come from? How might we and our church share the unconditional love of God with these community members?” [3]

We are encouraged to put ourselves at the service of our Lord Jesus. To think of others, and especially to think of God’s love.  Jesus calls to each one of us to pick up our cross and to follow Him. And following Jesus is not just in Lent, as a Lenten devotion, but we are to follow Jesus all year long. How can you – how can I – show the love of God to others, today?   

@chaplaineliza

(Suggestion: visit me at my other blogs: matterofprayer: A Year of Everyday Prayers. and  A Year of Being Kind . Thanks!


[1] https://www.patheos.com/blogs/livingaholyadventure/2018/02/adventurous-lectionary-second-sunday-lent-february-25-2018/

[2] http://www.rickmorley.com/archives/1453?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=take-up-your-what-a-reflection-on-mark-831-38

[3] https://www.umcdiscipleship.org/worship-planning/depths-of-love/second-sunday-in-lent-year-b-for-the-sake-of-the-gospel/second-sunday-in-lent-year-b-small-groups