Walking Like Jesus Did
eBook - ePub

Walking Like Jesus Did

Studies in the Character of Christ

  1. 160 pages
  2. English
  3. ePUB (mobile friendly)
  4. Available on iOS & Android
eBook - ePub

Walking Like Jesus Did

Studies in the Character of Christ

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About This Book

This challenging but easy-to-read handbook helps Christians better understand what it means to walk as Jesus did. McCall explains that mirroring the character of Jesus should be the normal pattern of life for a Christian. The author lays out 14 character traits of Jesus' life, and he explains how those traits can and should be reflected in the daily lives of Jesus' followers. Field-tested discussion questions make the book a "natural" for small-group use.

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Information

Publisher
BMH Books
Year
2005
ISBN
9780884692874
Chapter 1
WHY WALK LIKE JESUS?
WHO IS THE MOST FAMOUS PERSON EVER? TRY DOING A SEARCH ONLINE. I did. Want to guess who was number 1 on every website I found on that issue? You guessed it: Jesus Christ of Nazareth. Jesus has captivated the attention of billions of people over the centuries.
Many of us profess to be his followers. Being a follower of Jesus implies having some understanding of where he is going and being committed to following him there. His commitments become our commitments. His character becomes ours. The Apostle John said it like this: “Whoever says he abides in him ought to walk in the same way in which he walked” (1 John 2:6). How well do we know this Jesus we are professing to follow? How clearly do we understand his character traits that God calls us to reflect? And how does that happen in real life?
In this book we are going on a quest together. Our quest is to see Jesus more clearly. And, by God’s grace, we will find hope and help in our commitment to pursue Christlikeness in our lives—to walk as Jesus did.
Reasons for Our Quest
Going on this quest of pursuing Christ and Christlikeness is a significant lifelong commitment. Why devote ourselves to such a big endeavor? A study of the New Testament reveals five reasons:
1. Christlikeness is our passion. When we are drawn to Christ in salvation, we find that he becomes precious to us. The more we get to know him, the more we want to know him. Then, knowing him more and more leads to becoming more like our Savior every day. After decades of being a Christian, the imprisoned missionary, Paul, could still write with passion, “I want to know Christ” (Philippians 3:10 NIV).
Early twentieth-century gospel songwriter Charles H. Gabriel wrote, “More like the Master I would ever be.” If you love him, doesn’t your heart resonate with those words?
When Christ becomes our Savior, the Holy Spirit gives us a love for Jesus that moves us to want to know him better and reflect him in our lives.
2. Christlikeness is our calling. Jesus stood before a Galilean crowd and said, “Come to me, all who labor and are heavy laden, and I will give you rest. Take my yoke upon you, and learn from me, for I am gentle and lowly in heart, and you will find rest for your souls. For my yoke is easy, and my burden is light” (Matthew 11:28–30). For his followers, Jesus is King. And King Jesus himself has given us his gracious command to come to him to learn—to learn who God is, who we are, how we can be right with God, and how we can live for his glory.
We are not called primarily to an institution or a particular body of doctrine but to a real Person. It is from that real Person, with all his marvelous attributes, that we are to learn about life and eternity. King Jesus commands it, and we must obey his call. As we respond, our initiation into Christ must be followed by our imitation of Christ.
3. Christlikeness is our obligation. Professing that we are connected to Christ in salvation carries with it an obligation to back up that claim with a lifestyle that mirrors the character of Christ. This is at the heart of John’s statement, “By this we may know that we are in him: whoever says he abides in him ought to walk in the same way in which he walked” (1 John 2:5–6). Faith in Jesus as our Savior and conformity to his character are inseparable.
Being like Christ is the standard for Christians. Theologian and pastor Sinclair Ferguson writes, “In a word, maturity equals Christlikeness. No other standard may be allowed to substitute. All other standards will be lesser, man-made alternatives that disguise the all-demanding standard God sets before us in the Scriptures.”1
Repeatedly in the New Testament, we Christians are called upon to follow Christ in our paths to Christian maturity. In addition to 1 John 2:5–6, consider these calls to Christlikeness:
• Jesus said, “I have given you an example, that you also should do just as I have done to you” (John 13:15).
• The apostle Paul wrote, “Your attitude should be the same as that of Christ Jesus” (Philippians 2:5 NIV).
• The apostle Peter wrote, “Christ also suffered for you, leaving you an example, so that you should follow in his steps” (1 Peter 2:21).
If we are not seeking to reflect the character of Christ in our lives, what right do we have to claim to be Christians?
4. Christlikeness is our best witness. Much of what the watching world knows of Jesus Christ comes from observing the lifestyles of those who claim to be united to Christ. The world’s opinions of Christ largely reflect the world’s opinions of Christ’s followers.
It’s helpful to remember that the early Christians were living in a culture that, for the most part, did not yet have the New Testament. What the non-Christians knew of Christ they gleaned not only from what they heard from those early Christians but from what they saw in them. When believers in the first century lived everyday life in a Christ-reflecting way, the non-Christians around them could see the powerful effectiveness of God’s extraordinary gospel in the lives of ordinary people, such as their Christian relatives, coworkers, and neighbors.
Perhaps that’s the implication of the apostle Paul’s choice of words to the early believers on Crete to “make the teaching about God our Savior attractive” (Titus 2:10 NIV).
Our own culture has been marked by a growing biblical illiteracy. As a result, our era increasingly mirrors the first century’s lack of knowledge regarding the New Testament Scriptures. Once again, much of what the watching world knows of Christ is gained from observing the everyday lives of Christians around them.
Today’s Christians have the opportunity not only to speak the gospel message (which we must) but also to demonstrate visually the life-changing effectiveness of the gospel through the ways we reflect Christ. On the other hand, nothing will weaken our witness more than a wide gap between what we say and how we live. The watching world will quickly turn away in disinterest, if not disdain, when they perceive hypocrisy.
5. Christlikeness is our destiny. As much as it might feel like it at times, our lives are not going in circles! As Christians, we are heading for a destiny that God had planned for us even before he said, “Let there be light.” Paul wrote of this destiny in Romans 8. Many Christians find great comfort in quoting Romans 8:28: “We know that for those who love God all things work together for good, for those who are called according to his purpose.”
However, I suspect few believers have explored that passage to discover what Paul was referring to as “the good” that God is working in our lives. The next words from Paul’s pen explain that our preplanned destination is “to be conformed to the image of his Son” (v. 29).
Why would God plan such a glorious destiny for us?
To better appreciate the significance of our God-ordained destiny, go back to the beginning of the human race. God decided to make one of his creations special. He said he would make human beings in his “likeness.” And they would rule over all other created things on behalf of God, the Great King. (See Genesis 1:26.)
God created Adam and Eve in his own image in order to reflect him, represent him, and rule for him as his “prince and princess.” Yet the prince and princess rebelled against the Great King, desiring to be their own bosses rather than to serve as their Sovereign’s representative. Because of their rebellion, sin tarnished God’s likeness in human beings. And we have not fulfilled our designed role ever since.
Significantly, the job description of every person as God’s image bearers is still in force but unfulfilled. The author of Hebrews says that God has crowned him with glory and honor, putting everything in subjection under his feet” (Hebrews 2:6–8).
Then the author adds the sad reality that presently we don’t see everything subject to us.
We might despair were it not for the encouraging words that follow, “But we see him who for a little while was made lower than the angels, namely Jesus, crowned with glory and honor because of the suffering of death, so that by the grace of God he might taste death for everyone” (v. 9).
In other words, the first Adam did not fulfill his obligations as God’s image bearer. However, God never abandoned his goal of having us operate as his special representatives, ruling in the name of the Great King. When the first Adam failed in his mission, God set in motion his plan of redemption and restoration. He sent his own perfect Son in real human flesh as the “last Adam” to restore what was lost by the sin of the first image bearer. (See 1 Corinthians 15:45.)
God’s School of Redemption
Now, as the great goal of our redemption, God is bringing all things into our lives for “the good” of making us like Christ. He is shaping us, conforming us to Jesus’ likeness. We are currently in God’s school of redemption, becoming more and more like Jesus. That’s God’s ultimate goal in our sanctification—to make us more and more like his Son Jesus, who is the Perfect Image-Bearer. (See Hebrews 1:3.)
John Stott wrote, “God’s whole purpose, conceived in a past eternity, being worked out for and in his people in history, to be completed in the glory to come, may be encapsulated in this single concept: God intends to make us like Christ.”2
Right now, in God’s school of redemption, we may feel as if we still have so much to learn, so much that yet needs to change in us. But graduation day awaits! “We know that when he appears we shall be like him, because we shall see him as he is” (1 John 3:2). And then, having been conformed into the image of Jesus, the “last Adam,” we shall “reign forever and ever” in his likeness and under his perfect leadership (Revelation 22:5). This is our preplanned destination. If he is currently bringing all things into our lives to work that “good” in us, then our classwork includes knowing all we can about our Savior. He is the One into whose image we are being restored. It is our destiny to be like Jesus.
Why desire to be like Jesus? That is our passion, our calling, our obligation, our best witness, and ultimately, our destiny. Above all, reflecting Christ’s character is our high privilege.
God calls us to devote ourselves to the study of Christ through his holy Word, praying that his Holy Spirit would conform us more and more to the image of our blessed Savior.
May the mind of Christ my Savior,
Live in me from day to day,
By His love and power controlling
All I do and say.
May the love of Jesus fill me,
As the waters fill the sea;
Him exalting, self abasing,
This is victory.
—Kate B. Wilkinson
 
Discussion Questions
WHY WALK LIKE JESUS?
1. Name several reasons for desiring to be like Christ.
2. Which one of these reasons especially captures your interest? Why?
3. Briefly tell about a person who “preached with his or her life.” What kind of impact did that example make on you?
4. Finish this sentence: “God intends to make us ….”
5. Thus far in your Christian experience, what has Christian maturity looked like? How do you think this picture might change through a study of Christlikeness?
6. Spend time praying, asking God to continue his work of making you more like Jesus—no matter what that might take.
Chapter 2
WALKING IN MEEKNESS
LIKE JESUS
WHAT A SIGHT IT MUST HAVE BEEN! A PARADE OF FOREIGNERS WAS PASSING through the streets of Jerusalem—Gentiles from the east. This entourage of foreign-looking, foreign-sounding men were looking for a king, and they asked the local folks for directions to the king’s palace.
But when they finally arrived there, they found no baby king. Instead, King Herod’s advisors told these magi to look in the nearby village of Bethlehem.
There, in that small, humble town, they found the young King they were seeking, the King who had been born in a stable.
I think we are so familiar with the story of Jesus’ birth and the wise men’s visit that we often miss a significant incongruity. How strange it was that the King of kings would be born, not in a king’s palace but in a stable designed for horses, donkeys, and camels. Why would the King of kings choose to make his entrance in such a humble setting?
In the previous chapter of this book, we learned of Jesus’ gracious call to come “learn from me” (Matthew 11:29). He continued, “for I am gentle and lowly in heart.” That word gentle can also be translated, “humble” or “meek.”
Jesus invites us—actually commands us—to come learn from him, the One who describes himself as “meek and lowly in heart” (KJV).
This is such a loving invitation. How do we learn meekness from Jesus ...

Table of contents

  1. Cover Page
  2. Halftitle Page
  3. Title Page
  4. Copyright Page
  5. Dedication
  6. Contents
  7. Acknowledgments
  8. Foreword
  9. Introduction: Walking in the Footsteps of Jesus
  10. Chapter 1: Why Walk Like Jesus?
  11. Chapter 2: Walking in Meekness Like Jesus
  12. Chapter 3: Walking “On Mission” Like Jesus
  13. Chapter 4: Living Incarnationally Like Jesus
  14. Chapter 5: Walking in Holiness Like Jesus
  15. Chapter 6: Accepting Others Like Jesus
  16. Chapter 7: Showing Compassion Like Jesus
  17. Chapter 8: Suffering Like Jesus
  18. Chapter 9: Persevering Like Jesus
  19. Chapter 10: Practicing Patience Like Jesus
  20. Chapter 11: Forgiving Like Jesus
  21. Chapter 12: Praying Like Jesus
  22. Chapter 13: Serving Like Jesus
  23. Chapter 14: Walking in Joy Like Jesus
  24. Chapter 15: Loving Like Jesus
  25. Chapter 16: The Cost of Walking Like Jesus
  26. Chapter 17: The Privilege of Walking Like Jesus
  27. Appendix: How to Be Right with God
  28. Endnotes