3 Essential Elements of Being a Christian according to Jesus

I can be a very impatient person.

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My mom has an in-law apartment attached to our house. She’s over at our house a lot and I’m at her apartment a lot because she needs a lot of help these days. And if she wants to drive me a little crazy with impatience, all she has to say is, “I want to show you something.” 

“I want to show you something” means, “Shuffle slowly behind me while I push my walker and shuffle behind it until I reach my destination 10 minutes from now.”

I always say, “Just tell me what you want to show me so I can go look at it.” She usually wants to show me that something is missing or that something fell under the bed and she needs me to fetch it. Something along those lines. 

I don’t NEED to shuffle behind her. 

I BEG her to tell me what it is.

I can be a very impatient person.

Jesus is not averse to trying my patience either by making me wait. He might say to me, I think, “When I try your patience, I’m developing your patience.”  

But when Jesus invited people to be his disciples, he was pretty clear about what it meant from the outset.  

Peter and Andrew were fishermen, and he said to them, “Follow me, and I will make you fishers of men.” (Matthew 4:19; ESV)

That was pretty clear to them because they had been listening to Jesus for quite some time. This was not their first meeting. They knew the basics of what Jesus was about. 

And they knew fishing. 

They still had a lot to learn about what "fishers of men" meant, but contained in those words are three essential elements of being a Christian. 

The three elements lead to the kind of dynamic, purposeful, and joyful life Jesus calls us to live. 

The three elements aren’t just descriptive, they can serve as a diagnostic when we’re ailing spiritually or as a basic strategy for growth.

Unfortunately, many who call themselves Christians lack all three all the time. 

We’ll unpack the three elements this weekend as we focus on Matthew 4:17-22. 

I hope to see you there. 

It would be a great weekend to invite someone who is wrestling with following Jesus or feeling stalled in their spiritual growth.

Photo by Erwan Hesry on Unsplash

What can you expect from God when  you’re dearly loved by God?

“This is my Son, whom I love; with him I am well pleased.”

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God’s words to his Son at his baptism in Matthews gospel.

God’s words to his Son are his words to his redeemed—to those adopted into his family. 

And here are the very next words recorded by Matthew: “Then Jesus was led by the Spirit into the wilderness to be tempted by the devil.” 

The Spirit led him into the wilderness.

To be tempted by the devil.

“I love you, my Son. Let’s celebrate your baptism by taking you to a rugged desert to meet face-to-face with the devil.”

What can you expect from God when you are dearly loved by God? 

Here’s one. You can expect to be led into a wilderness for an appointment with the devil.

Thankfully, there’s more.

And knowing the more that there is (some amazing stuff), we can make the best of those wilderness times.

We’ll be exploring all that in this weekend’s sermon. 

Maybe you know someone who needs some encouragement in the wilderness that you can invite.

Photo of the Judean wilderness by Ian Scott on Flickr