Scripture: Matthew 28:19-20, Luke 14:25-33
Here’s something important: when you invite someone to follow Jesus, you’re not just offering them a ticket to heaven. You’re asking them to hand over control of their entire life. Think about it like this—when a woman gets married, she doesn’t just visit her husband once a week and keep living her own life. Marriage is total commitment. Following Jesus works the same way.
Too many people hear the Gospel and think it’s just about forgiveness. Sin forgiven? Great. Now you’re good to go. But Jesus never presented it that way. He told the rich young ruler to give up everything, and when the man walked away, Jesus didn’t chase after him or soften the terms. He let him go. The conditions weren’t negotiable.
Before baptism happens, people need to understand what they’re actually signing up for. They need to hear: “You’re not just getting eternal life. You’re making Jesus Lord—not someone you squeeze into your schedule, but the center of your entire existence.” This clarity matters. It separates people who genuinely want to follow from those who just want benefits.
In places where following Jesus costs something—persecution, family rejection, loss—people understand the stakes immediately. But in comfortable places, it’s easy to baptize someone who’s just after heaven insurance. Don’t do that. Make the claims of discipleship crystal clear first.
Think about it: If someone asked you today what it means to follow Jesus, would your answer include the word “everything”?
Prayer: Lord, help me understand that following you isn’t a side thing—it’s the whole thing. Give me clarity about what that costs and courage to live it out completely.




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