We are called to obey all that Christ commanded us to do, we read that in the great commission. Jesus never commands us to live by His example, but instead to live by His commands. He certainly is a great example of what obedience to his own commands looks like, nonetheless it is His words we obey not his example. Why is this important? or is it important? It is incredibly important.
If you say you are trying to be like Jesus then you are trying to weep for my sin, trying to be a man of sorrows, trying to be despised, trying to be misunderstood, trying to end up on a roman cross, trying to sweat as it were drops of blood, trying to be a sacrifice for other's sins, trying to do a number of things which He has done, but never commanded you to do! Am I splitting hairs? It may seem that way at first, but this is more critical than we think. When we look at Jesus' life as exemplary then we quickly lose sight of the work that He has done FOR US that could never be accomplished by us. We gloss over His divinity while focusing entirely on His humanity. When you encounter someone who is in sin if you ask yourself "What would Jesus Do?" the response should be weep and fear because you are going to die for that sin. Yet if you ask "What has Jesus commanded?" you will be equipped to properly deal with sin.
The focus of being like Christ is a noble focus when properly framed. However it quickly becomes a paradigm for life that doesn't take into account the things He has done for you and this world neither you nor anybody else could ever do.
So where do you focus when it comes to moral standards, ethics, and so on. Jesus summed up the law for us, Jesus gave us a number of commands, He did not leave us without instruction. Focus on His instruction, and then with regard to those instructions, see him as the example of how to carry them out, and never allow your sight of Him as an example to overshadow the sight of him as your righteousness, propitiation, and redemption.
1 comment:
Interesting perspective. "For those God foreknew he also predestined to be conformed to the image of his Son, that he might be the firstborn among many brothers and sisters" (Rom. 8:29). This passage does seem to indicate that we are conformed to the image of Christ, but what specifically does this mean? I think your post does a good job addressing this and giving a realistic perspective on it. Good stuff, thanks.
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