Challenges of Jesus
Introduction
(John 12:21):
“Sir, we would see Jesus.” When we see Him clearly, He lovingly lays
holy challenges before us—summons that shape us into the people God
designed us to be.
Challenge 1:
Follow Him as He Followed the Father
Jesus’ earthly life was a steady “Yes” to the Father’s will. He came
not for self-direction but for divine obedience: “I seek not mine
own will, but the will of the Father” (John 5:30; cf. John 6:38).
Scripture foresaw the Servant who would enter history to accomplish
God’s purpose (Hebrews 10:4–7). Discipleship means tracing His
footsteps, not merely learning His words (1 Peter 2:21). He calls us
to deny self, take up our cross daily, and follow (Matthew 16:24;
Luke 9:23). That path includes hardship—He had nowhere to lay His
head (Luke 9:58) and foretold the world’s hatred toward His own
(John 15:18–21). Yet He served rather than demanded service (Matthew
20:28), prayed for our unity on the eve of His sufferings (John
17:21–22), and even interceded for His executioners (Luke 23:34).
Look to Him and endure (Hebrews 12:1–4). This first challenge
reshapes our instincts from self-focus to Godward, others-serving
faithfulness.
Challenge
2: Think as He Thought
Conduct follows contemplation. Our Lord acted rightly because He
thought rightly. Scripture urges us to “arm” ourselves with His
mindset (1 Peter 4:1) and to dwell on what is true, honorable, just,
pure, lovely, and praiseworthy (Philippians 4:8). “As he thinketh in
his heart, so is he” (Proverbs 23:7). We cannot think as Jesus
thought unless we know how Jesus thought; therefore we must learn
His word and let it renew our minds (Romans 12:1–2). He redeemed a
people “zealous of good works” (Titus 2:14) because they “first gave
their own selves to the Lord” (2 Corinthians 8:5). Christ challenges
us to wholehearted commitment—no partial loyalties, no rationalizing
around hard teachings, only a willing mind shaped by Scripture.
Challenge
3: Obey as He Obeyed
Though He is the Son, “yet learned he obedience by the things which
he suffered” (Hebrews 5:8–9). He humbled Himself to the lowest
place, “obedient unto death, even the death of the cross”
(Philippians 2:5–8). Reviled, He did not revile back; suffering, He
did not threaten; He entrusted Himself to the Father (1 Peter 2:23).
He asks no less than real obedience from those who call Him Lord
(Luke 6:46). Our warfare is spiritual; we pull down proud arguments
by bringing “every thought into captivity to the obedience of
Christ” (2 Corinthians 10:4–5). His command-path leads to life
(Revelation 22:14). The obedient way is not harsh; it is holy, wise,
and good.
Challenge
4: Love as He Loved
Love is the atmosphere of all Christ’s challenges. He loved the
Father perfectly and our souls sacrificially. He calls us to love
God with all the heart, soul, mind, and strength, and to love our
neighbor as ourselves (Mark 12:30–31). Even our Savior “pleased not
himself” (Romans 15:3). He loved your soul and mine enough to die
for us; will we love our souls enough to live for Him? This love
motivates following, thinking, and obeying; it turns duty into
devotion and challenge into joy.
“Challenges of Jesus” Sermon
Outline:
-
Introduction: John 12:21—To see
Jesus is to receive His holy challenges.
-
I.
Follow as He Followed the Father
-
His
mission of obedience (John 5:30; 6:38; Hebrews 10:4–7).
-
Deny
self; take up the cross (Matthew 16:24; Luke 9:23; Luke
9:58; John 15:18–21).
-
Serving
heart; intercession and unity (Matthew 20:28; John 17:21–22;
Luke 23:34; Hebrews 12:1–4).
-
II.
Think as He Thought
-
III.
Obey as He Obeyed
-
Learned
obedience; cross-shaped submission (Hebrews 5:8–9;
Philippians 2:5–8).
-
Meek
endurance (1 Peter 2:23); true lordship requires doing (Luke
6:46).
-
Captive
thoughts, faithful walk (2 Corinthians 10:4–5; Revelation
22:14).
-
IV.
Love as He Loved
-
Conclusion: These challenges form
us into what God created us to be—Christlike in aim, mind, will,
and love.
Call to
Action:
Let Christ’s challenges become your way of life. Hear the word
(Romans 10:17). Believe the gospel (John 3:16). Repent (Luke 13:3).
Confess Jesus as Lord (Romans 10:9–10). Be baptized into Christ and
raised to new life (Romans 6:3–4). If you have drifted, return
through confession; He is faithful and just to forgive (1 John 1:9).
Walk in the light, thinking His thoughts, obeying His will, loving
as He loved.
Key
Takeaways:
-
Jesus models
joyful obedience to the Father and calls us to follow (John
5:30; 6:38; Hebrews 10:4–7; Matthew 16:24).
-
Christlike
thinking grows from Scripture and renews the whole life
(Philippians 4:8; Romans 12:1–2; 1 Peter 4:1).
-
True
lordship means practical obedience, not lip-service (Hebrews
5:8–9; Luke 6:46; 2 Corinthians 10:4–5).
-
Love for God
and neighbor is the sum and spirit of every challenge (Mark
12:30–31; Romans 15:3).
-
Endurance
flows from fixing our eyes on Jesus (Hebrews 12:1–4).
Scripture
Reference List:
-
John
12:21—“Sir, we would see Jesus.”
-
Hebrews
10:4–7—The Servant comes to do
God’s will.
-
John
5:30; 6:38—Not My will, but the
Father’s.
-
1 Peter
2:21—Following in His steps.
-
Matthew
16:24; Luke 9:23—Deny self; take
up the cross daily.
-
Luke
9:58—No place to lay His head.
-
John
15:18–21—The world’s hatred
toward disciples.
-
Matthew
20:28—The Son of Man came to
serve.
-
John
17:21–22—Christ’s prayer for our
unity.
-
Luke
23:34—“Father, forgive them.”
-
Hebrews
12:1–4—Look to Jesus; endure.
-
1 Peter
4:1—Arm yourselves with His mind.
-
Philippians 4:8—Think on these
things.
-
Proverbs 23:7—As a man thinks, so
is he.
-
Romans
12:1–2—Living sacrifice; renewed
mind.
-
Titus
2:14—A people zealous of good
works.
-
2
Corinthians 8:5—First gave
themselves to the Lord.
-
Hebrews
5:8–9—Learned obedience; author
of salvation.
-
Philippians 2:5–8—Obedient unto
death.
-
1 Peter
2:23—Reviled not again.
-
Luke
6:46—Why call Me Lord and not do
what I say?
-
2
Corinthians 10:4–5—Every thought
captive to Christ.
-
Revelation 22:14—Blessed are
those who do His commandments.
-
Mark
12:30–31—Love God wholly; love
your neighbor.
-
Romans
15:3—Christ pleased not Himself.
Prepared by Robert Moss
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