[forthright] What Does It Mean to Bear Our Cross?

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From: "Forthright Magazine" <forthrightmag@...>
Date: Tue, 04 Jan 2005 14:47:19 -0200
Forthright Magazine
http://www.forthright.net
Straight to the Cross


COLUMN: Square One

What Does It Mean to Bear Our Cross?
by Richard Mansel

In Mark 8:34, Jesus said, "Whomever desires to
come after Me, let him deny himself, and take up
his cross, and follow Me" (NKJV). What does it
mean to take up or bear our cross? This is the
very heart of Christian discipleship.

Many use the phrase in ways Scripture never
intended. They will say, "I have a bad back and
that is my cross to bear." Or, "I have arthritis
and that is my cross to bear." They will use it to
represent the hardships in their lives or of
others. We must be careful not to cheapen this
most sacred of tasks for the following reasons.

First, hard times are not bearing our cross
because they exist for everyone. Jesus said,
"Therefore do not worry about tomorrow, for
tomorrow will worry about its own things.
Sufficient for the day is its own trouble"
(Matthew 6:34, NKJV). Job said, "Man who is born
of woman is of few days and full of trouble" (Job
14:1). Troubles come with living, not
discipleship.

Second, bearing our cross is optional. We read in
Matthew 10:38, "And he who does not take up his
cross and follow after Me is not worthy of Me."
Luke wrote, "whoever does not bear his cross and
come after Me cannot be My disciple" (Luke 14:27).

Bearing our cross is our decision to make, as
these Scriptures clearly show. Therefore, hard
times cannot be bearing our cross because no one
asks for storms to savage their life. No one
willingly endures the pain of suffering and loss.
Christ says, "take up your cross," not "receive
your cross."

Third, bearing our cross is contingent on our
continuing to bear it. Jesus said in Luke 14:26-35
that we must sit down and count the costs before
we decide to become a disciple. He says, "For
which of you, intending to build a tower, does not
sit down first and count the cost, whether he has
enough to finish it" (Luke 14:28). When we take up
our cross, we must keep on bearing the cross until
we die. No one seeks to maintain the troubles in
our life.

Fourth, bearing our cross is directed toward the
glory of God. When we take up our cross and follow
him, it is to bring glory to God, not ourselves.
We must lose our pride and self-interest in order
to bear our cross. Jesus gave up everything to go
to the cross and he asks the same sacrifice of us
today.

When we discuss our pain, we are directing
attention to ourselves, not our Savior. It is not
wrong to talk about our pain. Yet it is not what
Jesus meant when he asked us to bear our cross.

"Why did Jesus use this particular illustration?
He used a radical symbol to get people's
attention. He was not simply speaking of an
individual's personal problem or obstacle. In that
day and age, a person who was bearing a cross was
walking to his death. Bearing your cross means
dying to self, laying aside your personal goals,
desires, ambitions and goals for your life."

A. W. Tozer wrote, "In every Christian's heart
there is a throne and a cross; if he refuses the
cross, he remains on the throne. We want to be
saved, but we insist that Christ do all the dying.
No cross for us, no dethronement, no dying. We
remain king within the little kingdom of man's
soul and wear our tinsel crown with all the pride
of Caesar; but we doom ourselves to shadows and
weakness and spiritual sterility."

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