Luke 6:40 “A pupil is not above his teacher; but everyone, after he has been fully trained, will be like his teacher.”
One of the core principles of discipleship is becoming like your teacher. Being like Jesus is a consistent theme sounded forth through the pages of the N.T. Be conformed to His image, the Romans were taught. In Corinthians it is be imitators of me as I am of Christ. In Galatians, it is no longer I who live, but Christ lives in me. In John’s first letter, he who abides in Him ought himself to walk in the same manner as He walked. At the washing of feet, Jesus said, “I gave you an example that you should also do as I did.”
Many of our hymns reflect this concept: O to be like Thee blessed Redeemer, this is my constant longing and prayer; Christ liveth in me; Let the beauty of Jesus be seen in me.
Following Jesus. Staying with Jesus. Becoming like Jesus. Not running ahead of Jesus. Not going your own unique way. Not redefining what faith means to you. Not blazing new trails or boldly going where no man has gone before. No, the theme of the N.T. is become like Jesus. At Antioch, the disciples were first called “Christians,” or “little-Christs” because they molded themselves after the Lord.
But all these generations later, so removed from the times and region, is it possible for you and I to be like Jesus? Is that just a pipedream? Our fast paced, social media filled days, and high tech culture seems to have outgrown the need to be like Jesus.
What does becoming like Jesus involve? It’s more than going to church on Sunday morning. That’s the extent of how many these days define it. Yet, on a Monday, it’s in the trenches of dog eat dog world. On Friday nights, it’s partying with friends. Catch a hour of church on Sunday and most think they’re good, they’ve got it.
The process of being like Jesus begins with an internal choice you make. You have to want to be like Jesus. There is an attraction to Jesus that you want in your life. You see something that appeals to you. Jesus was sure. Jesus was calm. Jesus was passionate. Jesus was spiritual. Jesus was focused. Jesus was compassionate. Jesus made a difference. In a selfish, “I don’t care about you,” times that we live in, what we see in Jesus is not only refreshing and missing, it’s something that we long for. Peace in an chaotic world. Confidence in a world that is doubtful and confused. Doing what is right, regardless.
The process begins internally. You want what you see in Jesus. More than that, the N.T. shows you that you can be like that. I may want to hit a baseball like the Dodger great Ohtani, but I can’t. Just wanting doesn’t mean that you can. The Bible says you can be like Jesus. But, it’s the daily choices that will make that a reality or just a dream. Diligence is hard. It’s hard in saving money. It’s hard in eating right and exercising. It is hard in putting off the simple, superficial, feel good choices over what is spiritually best.
Second, the process is not something that you turn on and turn off. You are like Jesus or you are not. You are like Jesus on Sunday, as well as Monday. You are like Jesus by yourself as you are in a crowd. You are like Jesus. This is who you are. This becomes your Spiritual DNA.
How do I make these right choices? How do I become like Jesus? How do I think like Jesus?
First, it begins with having an open heart that examines and accepts the Jesus that the Gospels present to us. Don’t recreate Jesus. Don’t restructure Jesus to fit what you think He should be. Let the Gospels introduce you to Jesus. See Him through the eyes of Matthew, Mark, Luke and John. Let the Holy Spirit define Jesus. That’ the starting point. That’s where you begin. Jesus in Samaria. Jesus with the hurting. Jesus leading His disciples. Jesus dealing with opposition. Jesus focused upon His Father.
Second, develop the faith that will lead you to changing your heart. That faith will catch you from saying things that you probably shouldn’t say. It will keep you from talking so much about yourself and listening to others. It will invite the Lord into daily conversations. Your eyes will see things that you have never noticed before. Kindness and tenderness become welcome within your heart.
Third, step by step, gradually, you’ll realize how much clutter has filled your heart. You will recognize more and more that the world is moving the wrong direction from the Lord. Like cleaning out a closet, you’ll start tossing attitudes, ideas, and habits that you’ve held on to for a long, long time and now finding out that they are not healthy, spiritual or welcome in the heart of a disciple.
And, just like that, you’ll begin to become more and more like Jesus.
Is it possible? Absolutely! You’ll be so glad that you started this journey.
Roger
