The Cost Of Christianity
The cost of Christianity has been on my mind lately. For one, I think
I’ve been trying to figure out what indeed Christianity has cost me. A
hard verse for me to read is when Jesus says ”if anyone would come
after me, he must deny himself and take up his cross daily and follow
me.” It’s hard for me to read because life as a Christian seems way too
easy. I mean, I have a hard time confronting people because I'm scared
it will cost me "how much they like me."
Let every reader of this paper think seriously, whether his religion costs him anything
at present. Very likely it neither costs you trouble, nor time, nor
thought, nor care, nor pains, nor reading, nor praying, nor
self-denial, nor conflict, nor working, nor labour of any kind. Now
mark what I say. Such a religion as this will never save your soul. It
will never give you peace while you live, nor hope while you die. It
will not support you in the day of affliction, nor cheer you in the
hour of death. A religion which costs nothing is worth nothing.
I
don’t really have much to add to J.C. Ryle’s quote. When Jesus says ”if
anyone would come after me, he must deny himself and take up his cross
daily and follow me.” He assumes that our following Christ means it
will come with a cost. I don’t know about you, but for me, I sometimes
wonder how much Christianity has really cost me. I’ve grown up in the
“Christian” friendly south. I’ve always been surrounded by Christian
friends, and have even been working for a campus ministry for the past
4 years.” But alas, Jesus did not say, Christianity will cost you
something….unless you are from Mississippi.
Nope, I dare say the
reason Christianity costs us so little is because we fear man more than
we fear God. In Mark 6, King Herod stands at a crossroads. He can
either have John the Baptist beheaded, thus pleasing his adulterous
wife, daughter in law, and rich friends, or he can refuse to murder
John the Baptist and forfeit the favor of his colleagues. King Herod
sadly fears the dislike of his friends more than God and therefore
executes John the Baptist.
What’s our answer? We look to the
cross and see what it cost our Savior to bring salvation to His loved
ones. Jesus, the Son of God, who was, is and always will be in perfect
communion with Trinity, took on a body and walked the earth 2000 years
ago. He became his own creation! Was rejected and despised by even his
own people. Then horrifically suffered torture and then a slaves death
on the cross, took the full, unmitigated wrath of God upon himself, and
died. Why? All to pay the debts of his people and secure our complete
redemption. When we look at the cross we see that Christ paid the
ultimate cost, so that we might have life with him eternal.
Ryle
asserts that Christianity will cost us our self-righteousness, our easy
life, and the favor of the world. But when you compare the cost…it’s no
comparison….because we get Jesus. Marrying Liza (my wife for those of
you who don’t know) meant things had to change in my life, but it’s all
worth it because I have Liza. And following Christ means emptying my
wallet, confronting my friends about hard things, not being selfish
with my time, and yes much, much more. But “What shall it profit a man,
if he shall gain the whole world, and lose his own soul (Mark 8:36).”
As Ryle concludes
We shall marvel that we made so much of our cross, and thought so little of our crown. We shall marvel that in “counting the cost” we could ever doubt on which side
the balance of profit lay. Let us take courage. We are not far from
home. IT MAY COST MUCH TO BE A TRUE CHRISTIAN AND A CONSISTENT HOLY
MAN; BUT IT PAYS.