1 Three Life Options God Offers
Meaning
God presents three distinct paths for our lives. The first option is the God-given life—the best life possible. While troubles exist in this world (John 16:33), God fully intends for us to experience life to the fullest (John 10:10). The second option is the most dissatisfying life, characterized by pursuing the "five Ps": pleasures, possessions, prestige, power, and popularity. People believe that the right combination of these will bring fulfillment, but it never satisfies because we are wonderfully made in God's image, created by Christ and for Christ. The third option is the worst life possible: just winging it, making it up as you go, doing whatever you feel like without direction or purpose—an approach that always ends badly.
Important Applications
- Every person walking out of church has already chosen one of these three options, whether consciously or unconsciously.
- The pursuit of worldly success (the five Ps) will never satisfy because we are designed for something greater than temporary pleasures.
- Living without direction or purpose is not freedom—it's a guaranteed path to consequences and regret.
2 The Core Requirement: Become a Follower
Meaning
Luke 9:23-24 presents the path to the best life: "If anyone wants to become my follower, he must deny himself, take up his cross daily, and follow me." This isn't just making a decision; it's a relational commitment where you are attracted to Jesus, have admiration for Him, like the way He does things and thinks, embrace His teaching, have affection for Him, and have come to trust in Him. Becoming a follower (Greek: mathetes; Hebrew: talmid) applies to everyone, not just a special elite class. This isn't merely about getting saved—it's about becoming a real follower of Jesus.
Important Applications
- Following Jesus is relational, not just intellectual agreement or a one-time decision.
- The call to discipleship is not for a select few but for every Christian—follower and disciple are synonymous terms.
- True salvation and following Jesus are inseparable; you cannot have one without the other.
3 Deny Yourself: Give Up Your Own Way
Meaning
The first step in following Jesus is to "deny yourself"—which means giving up your own way. This involves setting aside your habits, desires, and patterns; surrendering your dreams and agendas; and putting away doing things "your way." It's not merely suppressing selfish desires temporarily, but a fundamental reorientation of life where we stop making ourselves the center of every decision and instead submit to Jesus's lordship in every area of life.
Important Applications
- Self-denial is not self-hatred but the recognition that our way leads to death while Jesus's way leads to life.
- We must be willing to surrender not just our bad habits but also our "good" plans and dreams to Jesus's better purposes.
- Denying yourself means releasing control and trusting that Jesus knows better than we do what will lead to our flourishing.
4 Take Up Your Cross Daily
Meaning
Taking up your cross daily is a commitment to sacrificial love and unselfish devotion. In Jesus's time, a cross was an instrument of death—the most brutal form of execution. When Jesus says to take up your cross daily, He's calling for a daily death to self and a daily commitment to live for Him and others instead of ourselves. This isn't a one-time decision but a daily, ongoing choice to follow Jesus's example of selflessness and sacrificial love.
Important Applications
- The Christian life requires daily renewal of commitment, not just an initial decision followed by coasting.
- Sacrificial love means actively choosing to serve others and God's purposes even when it costs us personally.
- Taking up the cross is not merely enduring hardship but actively choosing to lay down our lives for Jesus and others.
5 Put Jesus First: Supreme Devotion
Meaning
Luke 14:26-27 presents Jesus's radical demand: "If anyone comes to me and does not hate father, mother, wife, children, brothers, sisters, and yes, even their own life, such a person cannot be my disciple." Jesus uses spiritual hyperbole here—He doesn't mean literal hatred of family. Rather, He means we must have supreme affection and supreme devotion for Him above even our children, spouses, parents, and siblings. This doesn't contradict the command to love God and neighbor; it clarifies that Jesus must have first place in our hearts. No one and nothing can compete with our devotion to Christ.
Important Applications
- Jesus demands first place not because He is insecure but because only in Him can we find the life we truly seek.
- Loving Jesus supremely doesn't mean we love family less—it means we love them rightly and in proper order.
- When Jesus has supreme devotion, our other relationships actually improve because we're no longer demanding from people what only God can provide.
6 Why Jesus Can Make These Demands
Meaning
Jesus is worthy of supreme devotion because of who He is. Colossians 1:15-20 reveals that Christ is the visible likeness of the invisible God, the firstborn over all creation, and all things were created through Him and for Him. In Christ, all the fullness of God lives in bodily form (Colossians 2:9). Jesus is the most intelligent being in the universe—He spoke it into existence and created the atoms themselves. He is the most powerful being in the universe. But most importantly, He is the best person in the universe: the most sacrificially loving, most kind, most forgiving, most understanding, most gentle, and most patient. He knows every tear we've cried, every fear we've had, every dream we've aspired to. He has always been with us, and He loves us with an intensity beyond our ability to fathom.
Important Applications
- Jesus's demands are not arbitrary or tyrannical—they flow from His perfect character and complete knowledge of what's best for us.
- We can trust Jesus's lordship over our lives because His power is always governed by sacrificial love, never by selfishness or abuse.
- Jesus doesn't just love us—He actually likes us, is interested in us, watches us, thinks about us constantly, and waits for our attention.
- In Him all things hold together (Colossians 1:17)—we are made by Him, for Him, and He sustains our very existence moment by moment.
7 True Biblical Conditions of Salvation
Meaning
Many well-intentioned churches teach non-biblical conditions of salvation: "pray the sinner's prayer," "ask Jesus into your heart," "accept Jesus as your personal Savior," or "believe that Christ died for your sins and rose again." While people can come to genuine faith through these, the terminology itself is "poor dribble"—we can be much clearer and more biblically accurate. The true biblical condition is trust (Greek: pistis)—a relational term meaning faith, confidence, reliance, and belief in connection with Christ (John 3:16). John 10:27-28 shows that trusting equals becoming a follower: "My sheep listen to my voice and I know them, and they follow me." If you trust Jesus, it will evidence itself—you will become His follower. John 8:31 states, "If you continue to obey my teaching, you are truly my disciples." The terms Christian, follower, and disciple are synonymous and inseparable.
Important Applications
- Salvation is not merely a moment of intellectual agreement or a prayer—it's entering into a trust relationship with Jesus that transforms how we live.
- If someone claims to trust Jesus but shows no evidence of following Him, they may be a phony follower or fake Christian.
- The Great Commission in Matthew 28:19-20 commands us to "make followers, teaching them to obey everything I have commanded you"—not just get people to pray prayers.
- Acts 11:26 confirms this: "The followers were first called Christians"—being a Christian means being a follower of Jesus.
8 God's Transformation Process
Meaning
God's formula for transformation is simple but profound: Trust + Training (Obedience to God's Word) = Transformation. Trusting in Jesus is the foundation, but transformation requires training through obedience to Scripture. This is how we progressively learn to live like Christ and love like He loves, resulting in the quality of our lives changing from within. Key training references include 1 Corinthians 10:24 ("Do not look out for yourselves, but look out for the good of others"), Philippians 2:3-4 ("Value others above yourselves"), and 2 Corinthians 5:15 ("He died for all that those who live should no longer live for themselves but for Him who died for them and was raised again").
Important Applications
- Transformation doesn't happen automatically—it requires intentional training through studying and obeying God's Word.
- The cross principle (living for others rather than ourselves) must be applied daily through specific obedience to Scripture.
- God's transformation process is gradual and progressive, requiring patience and persistence as we train ourselves in godliness.
9 The Cross as Temporal Life Principle
Meaning
Jesus isn't setting extreme demands arbitrarily—He's saying it won't work any other way. Unless Jesus has your supreme attention, supreme devotion, complete trust, entire trust, and complete submission, it simply won't work. You can try other paths and spend as many years as you want, but you'll end up dissatisfied or with consequences worse than you ever wanted. The Olympian analogy illustrates this: if a child wants to become an Olympic gymnast, they must find an elite Olympic coach, pay a lot of money, submit completely to that coach, follow every instruction about when to get up, when to sleep, what to eat, and train 6-7 hours a day, 6-7 days a week. There's only one way to become an Olympian: complete submission to the proven coach. Jesus is saying, "If you really want life, quit kidding yourself thinking there's another road or path. There's not."
Important Applications
- The demands Jesus makes are not restrictions but requirements for the best life—like a coach's training regimen for an athlete.
- Half-hearted commitment to Jesus will always result in dissatisfaction—there's no "middle way" that works.
- God's commands are not arbitrary rules but the proven path to human flourishing, designed by the One who created us and knows us best.
- Starting today, regardless of past mistakes or burned bridges, you can have the best life possible through full surrender to Jesus.
10 The Cross as Eternal Life Principle
Meaning
Revelation 13 reveals that "the Lamb's death was planned before the foundation of the world." God knew that if He created free moral agents (angels and humans), we would misuse our freedom. It would take the sacrificial revelation of God in Christ to win back the trust of those who can be won and to finally abolish evil completely and forever. Revelation 5:11-12 shows heaven's worship: the Lamb is worthy not merely because He is almighty and all-knowing, but because He was slain. What makes Him worthy is His sacrificial love and what He does with His power for the highest good. Revelation 21:3-4 promises a future with no more death, sorrow, crying, or pain. Why won't evil return? Because God has manifested His sacrificial love in Jesus on the cross, we have seen what evil is up close, we are "immunized" against it for eternity. Between God's sacrificial love and our experience of evil, it will be forever gone. Everyone everywhere will be full of Christ's love, tenderness, kindness, honesty, gentleness, and goodness—the life every human has always wanted will finally be possible.
Important Applications
- The cross is not just about personal salvation—it's God's eternal plan to destroy evil and restore all creation.
- God is not indifferent to suffering; He suffers with us and in Christ suffered for us, like a father who suffers more than his sick child.
- The cross is the blood-sealed guarantee that God will put a definitive end to evil and usher in an eternal kingdom without pain, sin, or death.
- Evil started in heaven before humans existed, but it won't return because the cross has forever revealed God's character and exposed evil's true nature.