38th Street Church of Christ
3904 38th Street NW  Canton, Ohio  44718
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Choosing Discipleship
(John 6:66-69 )

I.          Introduction.

            A.        Why did you come to this assembly?  No matter how each
                        of us would answer that question, no matter what
                        motivation there was for us as individuals, most of us had
                        to choose to come here.  Had to choose to be here rather
                        than somewhere else, doing something else.

            B.         All of life is a series of choices.  Constantly confronted
                        with having to make decisions.
           
                        1.         Sometimes, our choices are between two things
                                    that don’t really appeal to us, so we say we take
                                    the “lesser of two evils.”  We choose the least
                                    offensive, or least unacceptable, alternative.

                        2.         Other times, our choices are more clear cut.  We
                                    like one alternative, and dislike the other, enough
                                    that we already know what we will choose.

                        3.         But, whatever we choose, it automatically means
                                    we give up something else.

            C.        Then, there are some things about which we have no
                        choice.  (Birth; family; time of death.)

            D.        The Bible contains several reminders of the different
                        alternatives God puts before us, always with the advice
                        that we choose that which is good.

                        1.         For example, Deuteronomy 30:15-19 (READ). 
                                    Through Moses, God gave Israel a message on
                                    choices, choices of “life and death.”  With each
                                    alternative there was a clear consequence, either
                                    blessings, or of condemnation.

-2-

                        2.         Probably, one of most expressive passages
                                    on matter of choice found in Joshua 24:  In his
                                    “farewell address” to Israel, Joshua says:  “Now
                                    therefore fear the Lord, and serve Him in sincerity
                                    and in truthand put away the gods which your
                                    fathers served on the other side of the flood, and in
                                    Egypt; serve the Lord.  / And if it seem evil to you
                                    to serve the Lord, choose this day whom you shall
                                    serve:  . . . . but as for me and my house, we will
                                    serve the Lord.”  (verses 14-15).

                        3.         In this New Testament age, we continue to face
                                    important choices.

                                    a.         I Thessalonians 5:21:  “Prove [test] all
                                                things; hold fast that which is good.”
                                                Everything we might read, or hear, should
                                                be tested by comparison with the only true
                                                standard – what God has said.

                                    b.         In John 6 some disciples were leaving Jesus,
                                                no longer choosing to follow Him.  To those
                                                who remained, Jesus gave the same choice
                                                (“Will you also go away?”).  No one forced
                                                to stay.  Everyone free to make own
                                                decision.  But, there was, and is, no neutral
                                                ground.

                        4.         Like those to whom Jesus spoke, we must choose
                                    one course or another.  Psychologist William James
                                    said:  “When you have to make a choice, and don’t
                                    make it, that in itself is a choice.”

-3-

            E.         Christianity is an “either – or” proposition.  We either
                        choose discipleship, or we don’t.  For the remainder of this
                        lesson, let’s consider some choices we must make in order to
                        be a disciple of Jesus.  Will we go with Him, all the way, or will
                        we go away, as so many have, and do, today?  To do this,
                        we’ll focus on one portion of “Sermon On The Mount”, in Matthew 7

II.         “Either – OrReligion.

            A.        Begin at verse 13:  We must choose either the broad way or
                        the narrow way.  (Read verses 13-14).

                        1.         Only a “few” will find, and follow, the “narrow
                                    way”, but it is available to everyone.

                        2.         Jesus’ use of term “way” corresponds to other
                                    places in Bible where word signifies peoples’
                                    serving God.

                                    a.         Isaiah 35:8:  “A highway shall be there,
                                                and a road, and it shall be called the
                                                Highway of Holiness.  The unclean shall not
                                                pass over it, . . .”  The “way” of holiness is
                                                only for those who choose to follow it.  But
                                                it is a sure, and secure, way.

                                    b.         When Saul of Tarsus was zealously
                                                persecuting the church, he was seeking those
                                                who were of “this way” (Acts 9:2), meaning
                                                the way of Christ.

                                    c.         Jesus said of Himself:  “. . . I am the way,
                                                the truth, and the life: . . .” (John 14:6).

                        3.         While there are many wrong ways, there is only one
                                    way of truth, and one way to eternal life.

-4-

                        4.         So often, the reason a person does not find, and
                                    follow, that narrow way of truth is because of self-
                                    will, obstinacy, and pride (or simply a lack of
                                    belief.)

                                    (Illust.)  Man driving in territory unfamiliar to him
                                    came to a sign that said that a bridge was out on the
                                    highway he intended to take.  He was directed to
                                    take a detour over a much rougher road.  But, to
                                    him, the highway ahead looked straight and clear.
                                    That must be an old sign.  Surely, the bridge was
                                    open now.  He drove on for 13 more miles, came to
                                    the closed bridge and had to turn around and go
                                    back.  As he drove along, he saw another sign,
                                    painted in big letters:  “It sure was, wasn’t it?”

                        5.         We can be very stubborn at times.  We can take
                                    that broad, easy crowded road, but one day we’ll
                                    know that God was truthful with us.  It is a way
                                    that leads to destruction.

                        6.         Also, there’s a difference in casually seeking the
                                    narrow way and seriously following it.  For
                                    example, if you hear a child is lost and you’re
                                    asked to help in the search, you’d probably be
                                    more alert for that child as you go about your
                                    daily routine, but it would be a more casual
                                    effort.  But, if your child were missing, you’d
                                    look everywhere and as diligently and tirelessly
                                    as you could.

                        7.         The choice of discipleship is for those who
                                    earnestly and diligently seek God.

-5-

            B.         A second set of alternatives, or choices, is identified in
                        Matthew 7:15-20.  (READ).

                        1.         We must choose either to be a “good tree”,
                                    producing good fruit, or a “bad tree” that
                                    produces evil fruit.

                        2.         Here, service to God is represented by trees, trees
                                    which bear fruit.  Putting these verses in context,
                                    the emphasis is on warning disciples about false
                                    teachers.  All teacher, and what they teach, must be
                                    tested, must be measured by, compared with, the
                                    standard of truth.  That truth resides in Word of
                                    God.  (John 17:17:  “Your word is truth.”)

                        3.         There is also the test of what teaching produces.
                                    One who teaches principles contrary to the Word
                                    of God must be a false teacher, and one who can
                                    only produce evil fruit.

                        4.         As disciples, if we’re going to put teaching to the
                                    test, must have knowledge of the truth.  Then only
                                    may we choose the good fruit over the bad, and
                                    live by correct doctrine as opposed to false doctrine.
                                    As our knowledge leads us to teach truth, we choose
                                    to be a good tree, not a corrupt one.

                        5.         Jesus warned:  “Take heed that no man deceive
                                    you.”  (Matthew 24:4).

                        6.         Paul warned in Ephesians 5:6:  “Let no man deceive
                                    you with empty words, . . .”

                        7.         Choose truth over error, sound doctrine over
                                    possibly faulty tradition, producing good fruit over
                                    evil fruit, and you will be known as a faithful child
                                    of God.

-6-

            C.        Then, beginning at Matthew 7:24, Jesus speaks of two types
                        of builders.  (READ, verses 24-27).

                        1.         The commentator, William Barclay, described some
                                    of special considerations of building in Jesus’ day:

                                                “In Palestine, the builder must think ahead.
                                    There is many a gully which in summer is a
                                    pleasant sandy hollow, but which in winter is a
                                    raging torrent of rushing water.  A man might be
                                    looking for a house; he might find a pleasantly
                                    sheltered sandy hollow; and he might think that this
                                    was a very suitable place.  But, if he was a short-
                                    sighted man, he might well have obtained a house
                                    in the dried-up bed of a river, and, when winter
                                    rains came, his house would disintegrate.  Even on
                                    other sites, it was tempting to begin building on the
                                    smoothed-over sand, and not to bother digging
                                    down to the shelf of rock below; but that way
                                    disaster lay ahead.”

                        2.         In his description of these two builders, Jesus said
                                    they shared one common characteristic:  both heard
                                    the truth He spoke.  What separates them from one
                                    another is that one chose a way of obedience, and
                                    one did not.

                        3.         These two houses could have been identical in all
                                    ways.  Until the storms came, one could have
                                    appeared as secure as other.  But, one could not
                                    stand a difficult test and collapsed, and was washed
                                    away.

-7-

                        4.         Our lives are represented in these houses.  Each of
                                    us is building, either on rock or on sand.  When the
                                    storms of life, tests of faith, beat against us, and our
                                    house is put to test, will it stand firm on a solid
                                    foundation of discipleship, or be destroyed on a
                                    shallow, sandy bottom that looked so deceptively
                                    good at one time?

III.       Conclusion.

            A.        We’ve looked at “two ways”, “two types of trees and fruit”,
                        and two kinds of builders.

            B.         Each person is inevitably characterized by either one or the
                        other of these comparisons.

                        1.         If we live life traveling the “broad way”, if we’re
                                    producing “evil or corrupt fruit,” or if we’re
                                    foolishly building on sand, then we’ve made a
                                    choice – a choice of sin, death, and eternal
                                    separation from God.

                        2.         If we travel the “narrow way”, if we produce “good
                                    fruit”, and wisely build upon the foundation of rock,
                                    we’ve also made a choice – a choice of obedience to
                                    God and eternal life with Him.

            C.        If we know anything about the Bible, we know which is
                        better choice.  By making the right choices now, we’ll
                        never hear Jesus say:  “. . . I never knew youdepart from
                        me, you who practice lawlessness” (Matthew 7:23).

            D.        Let us choose discipleship!

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