Jesus doesn’t say, “Make converts to your way of thinking.” He 
says, “Look after my sheep. Make sure they are nourished with knowledge 
of me.” We think that the work we do in Christian ministry counts as 
service; Jesus Christ says that service is what we are to him, 
not only what we do for him. Christianity is not devotion to a work or a
 cause or a doctrine; it is devotion to a person.
“If anyone comes to me and does not hate father and mother, wife 
and children, brothers and sisters—yes, even their own life—such a 
person cannot be my disciple” (Luke 14:26). Jesus doesn’t argue or 
compel. He simply says that if we wish to be his disciples, we must be 
devoted to him. When we are touched by the Spirit of God, we see 
suddenly who Jesus is, and this becomes the source of our devotion.
Today, we’ve substituted ideological belief for personal belief. This
 is why so many are devoted to causes and so few to him. People don’t 
want to be devoted to Jesus; they want to be devoted to the cause he 
started. Jesus Christ the person is deeply offensive to the 
educated mind of today, to those who don’t want to see him as anything 
other than a champion of their cause.
Our Lord’s obedience was to the will of the Father, not to the needs 
of humanity. The saving of humanity was the natural outcome of that 
obedience. If we are devoted only to humanity, our love will falter, and
 we will soon be exhausted. But if we love Jesus, personally and 
passionately, we will be able to serve humanity, even if people treat us
 like doormats.
The secret of the disciple’s life is devotion to Jesus Christ; its 
hallmark is unobtrusiveness. It is like a kernel of wheat that falls to 
the ground and dies, then springs up, transforming the entire landscape 
(John 12:24).
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These words from Oswald Chamber's classic My Utmost for His Highest slapped me hard, so to speak. A very good reminder of the games we play.
		 
				 
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