Standing on the Mountain
Monday, July 13, 2026
Luke 14:34–35
Luke 14:34-35
I've never been a big fan of fake meat. If I want to eat meat, I go for the real thing, and if I want to eat vegetables, there are plenty of options there. I don't like food that pretends to be something it isn't.
Here, Jesus is asking people if they'd buy salt that didn't taste like salt. Salt was (and remains) precious, as a flavor enhancer as well as a preservative. But if salt isn't salty... then it's not good for much.
He's telling us about the role of the church. The church has a part to play in the world -- we're called to be witnesses to the Good News of the Gospel. We're called to be servants. To tell the world about our hope in Christ.
If the church isn't doing that, then what is our role in the world? What purpose are we serving? We're called to be active and involved, so that the world may see the light of Christ shining in us and through us.
Friday, July 10, 2026
Luke 14:28–33
Luke 14:28-33
A response to Christ can often be an emotional moment, but to sustain over a life, it needs more than just emotion. It needs to be a whole life commitment, one where you consider everything -- the cost of making Christ the central part of life, as well as everything that must be given up. This is not a small decision -- it sets a course for eternity. Jesus says that we should be prepared to renounce everything, but the interesting piece is that nothing we renounce has eternal value -- what we receive is of infinitely more value and will endure forever.
Jesus wants honest commitment. He wants to ensure that when we make heartfelt commitments, we mean them, and that we're prepared to let God lead us for our entire lives. This is a prayer every day -- to ask the Holy Spirit to lead us, to renew our hearts each morning. God's mercies are new every day, and it takes the leadership of God to follow God like this every day, to train our hearts to love God more than anything else, to notice when other loves are competing for our hearts and distracting us away from God.
Thursday, July 9, 2026
Luke 14:25–27
Luke 14:25-27
When Jesus speaks of hating father and mother, the word he uses is a word of comparison -- he's not telling us to literally hate, but rather that our love for God needs to be degrees of magnitude greater than our love for anyone else. That is what discipleship looks like. How do we love like that?
Such love is even willing to embrace shame. The cross was a matter of public shame and suffering. To embrace this means that one is so completely surrendered to God that even shame does not discourage them from a life of discipleship.
This is a hard teaching -- there's no getting around this. It's Jesus being clear that to follow Christ means faith needs to be our first and highest priority. Jesus is not one more thing in a life like this -- it's the central thing around which everything turns.
I think a life like this follows inspiration by the Holy Spirit. Can we pray for God to move like this, in our own life and in our community?
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