- He taught them (Matthew 4:23)
- He ate with them (Matthew 26:26)
- He traveled with them (Mark 6:1)
- He went camping with them (Matthew 8:20)
- He went to church with them (Mark 1:21)
- He worshipped with them (Matthew 26:30)
- He prayed with them (Matthew 26:36)
- He prayed for them (John 17:9)
- He spent time with them doing regular things (see below)
- He fished with them (Luke 5:4)
- He hiked with them (Mark 3:13)
- He barbequed with them (John 21:9)
- He hung out at their place (Mark 1:29, Matthew 9:10)
- He invited them over to His place (Mark 2:1, Mark 3:20)
- He stayed up late to help them (Mark 1:32)
- He met their families (Mark 1:30)
- He gave them nicknames (Mark 3:17 & Luke 9:54, Matthew 16:18)
- He allowed them to be them (as evidenced by Peter’s entire existence)
- He called them out when they were sucking (Luke 9:55)
- He encouraged them when they were on track (John 1:47, Matthew 16:17)
- He joked around with them (Luke 24:13-36; great 15-minute sermon about it here)
- He cared deeply about them (John 17:12)
- He talked theology with them (Matthew 13:24)
- He talked politics with them (Matthew 22:21, ; Matthew 20:25)
- He talked business with them (Matthew 20:15)
- He made them uncomfortable (John 6:60-61)
- He explained things to them (Matthew 13:11)
- He used words they could understand (Matthew 13:47, Matthew 4:19)
- And when they still didn’t understand, He slowed down (Matthew 15:16)
- He gave them advice (Luke 10:25-37)
- He helped their businesses (Luke 5:6-7)
- He defended them (Mark 9:18-19)
- He fought for them (Mark 2:25-7, Luke 22:31-32, 1 John 3:8)
- He served them (John 13:5)
- He served with them (Matthew 14:19)
- He sacrificed for them (Matthew 17:12)
- He corrected them (Luke 9:50)
- He challenged them (Luke 10:8-9)
- He expected more from them than they expected from themselves (Luke 9:13)
- He trusted them (Matthew 21:1-3, John 19:26-27)
- He gently rebuked them when necessary (Mark 10:38)
- He harshly rebuked them when necessary (Matthew 16:23)
- He forgave them and gave them second and third and twentieth chances (John 21:15-17)
- He was patient with them (Luke 9:46-48)
- He never left them, but He allowed them to leave Him (John 6:66)
- He invested in them, even when there seemed to be little to no results (Luke 9:43-56)
- He was human with them (John 11:35)
- He lived with them (John 1:14)
- He showed them how to live (John 10:10)
- Essentially, He did life with them. Every. Single. Day.
Tag Archives: Jesus
Don’t Go, and Make Disciples
We all know the great commission: “Go, therefore, and make disciples of all the nations…” (Matthew 28:19)
Now here’s my question: What is the first thing Jesus commanded in this verse?
You probably said “go,” right? And… you’d be wrong.
You see, the word “go” in this verse (the Greek πορεύω) is in the passive tense, meaning He’s not actually commanding us to go. A more accurate translation would be, “As you go, make disciples of all the nations.” [1]
Most of us think our commission is to go somewhere (preferably some country far, far away) and get people saved. But that’s not what Jesus is saying. He isn’t telling us to go somewhere; He’s simply acknowledging that we all will inevitably go somewhere. And whenever we go somewhere, what are we supposed to do? Make disciples.
When you go to school, make disciples.
When you go to work, make disciples.
When you go to the grocery store, or soccer practice, or the neighborhood barbeque, make disciples.
No matter where you go, your commission is to make disciples.
So what are you waiting for? People are waiting. Get going!
[1] A few versions translate this passage accordingly:
- Having gone, then, disciple all the nations (Young’s Literal Translation)
- Therefore having gone, disciple all the nations (Berean Literal Bible)
- Therefore, as you go, disciple people of all nations (International Standard Version)
- So wherever you go, make disciples of all nations (God’s Word Translation)
13 Biblical Lessons Superman Can Teach You
1. You may be in this world, but you certainly aren’t of it. (John 17:16, Philippians 3:20)
2. Without a knowledge of your true heritage, you will inevitably live a bleak life of confusion. (Colossians 1:9-14)
3. However, upon discovering who you really are, you can become the hero you were born to become. (Mark 16:15-20)
4. Your heavenly Dad saved you from the eminent destruction of your former world. (Ephesians 2:1-4) 5. As a child of God, you have a seemingly unending arsenal of superhuman powers and abilities. (Mark 16:16, Philippians 4:13)
6. Your true destiny lies in using those God-given abilities to rescue others from evil. (Matthew 10:8, Mark 16:15)
7. While enemies may rise up against you, they will never be able to stop you. Punch you, stab you, shoot you, run you over, blow you up… you are indestructible. (Isaiah 54:17, Luke 10:19)
8. To be quite honest, though, living a righteous life for God can sometimes get lonely. You might feel the pressure to change who you are to blend in. (Romans 12:1-2)
9. But don’t let your merely human alter ego get in the way of your true heritage. Your identity as the son of El (albeit, El Shaddai, not Jor El) is what makes you great. (1 Corinthians 3:3, Galatians 4:7)
10. That’s not to say you can’t hold a steady nine-to-five and still have time to save the world. (Acts 20:35, Proverbs 12:11, Colossians 3:17)
11. Just don’t let your emotions get in the way. Being led by your emotions is truly your greatest weakness. (1 Peter 5:8, Titus 2:6)
12. All in all, continue spending time in solitude with your Father, and you will do unimaginable things. (Mark 1:35, Matthew 14:23, Luke 6:12)
13. And remember, it may not always seem like it, but the world is in desperate need of salvation. And you’re the one to bring it to them. (Romans 10:14-15)
So go, Man of God. Go and change the world.
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Jesus Stalker
I think a lot of people are Jesus Stalkers. They listen to the music they think He likes, they hang out at the places they think He likes, they read the books they think He likes. They even daydream about spending eternity with Him. But they don’t actually talk to Him.
Listen, going to church is very important. So are listening to worship music and reading Christian books. But none of those are a substitute for spending time with God.
So put down the Joseph Prince book, turn off the Jesus Culture CD, and go pray. Not “I’m praying because I need more stuff” or “I’m praying because I’m also driving.” Genuine prayer with your heavenly Dad. Time set apart for Him. Simply because you love Him.
It’ll be good for you. I promise.
The One Thing Jesus Couldn’t Do
Jesus walked on water. He calmed the raging seas. He healed the sick, opened blind eyes and deaf ears, and caused the lame to walk. He fed ten thousand people with a kindergartener’s sack lunch… on two separate occasions. He went head to head with the religious elite, defended the widows and orphans, and transformed the world as we know it. He did everything and could do anything.
Well, not quite anything.
“Now Jesus could do no mighty work [in His own country], except that He laid His hands in a few sick people and healed them.” (Mark 6:5)
Hold the phone. Jesus, the King of kings and Lord of lords, the Great High Priest, the Lion of Judah and Lamb of God, the Son of Man, the Jesus, couldn’t do mighty works?
That doesn’t make any sense. What could have prevented the Word Made Flesh Himself from healing the masses, when He had already proven Himself more than capable? What force possibly could have stopped Jesus Christ of Nazareth from performing mighty works?
“And He marveled because of their unbelief.” (Mark 6:6)
It was the people’s lack of faith that stopped the miraculous power of God from working in their lives. They chose to believe that Jesus’ power wasn’t available for them. And as a result, it wasn’t.
Over and over and over again in the scriptures, we read that it is our faith that triggers God’s power to move in our lives. Every single day, we make thousands of choices to trust in the world and the circumstances and whatever else there is, or to trust in God’s Word.
The Galileans chose to reject God’s Word.
I’m choosing to trust God.
What’re you going to choose?
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Four Important Lessons Jesus Taught Us about Judgment
If there is one word that the church doesn’t understand, it is the word “judgmental.” Christians are terrified of this word, and the mere mention of it causes the average believer to crumble to the floor and play dead (much like an opossum).
Ironically, most of this stems from a terrible misunderstanding of Jesus’ teachings regarding judgment. So let’s consider the story of the woman caught in adultery (from John 8) to glean four biblical lessons regarding judgment.
1. Jesus called her behavior “sin”
Jesus didn’t shy away from questions regarding morality. He clearly identified her adultery as “sin” in verse 11. And He said it right to her face. This wasn’t the only time he voiced His opinion regarding sin, either. In Mark 7:20-23, Jesus gives a laundry list of sins (including lying, stealing, and homosexuality), which He says “defile a man.”
There is nothing wrong with calling sinful behavior “sinful.” Jesus did it all the time. You don’t get people saved by telling them they aren’t really sinning. All that does is justify their belief that they aren’t desperately in need of a Savior.
Sin is sin. And the reality of sin in our lives is what prompts us to find the One who can deliver us from our sin.
2. Jesus told her to stop sinning
Most people stop reading the story at verse 10. “And all of the mean, judgmental Pharisees left, and Jesus gave the woman a big hug and said, ‘It’s all going to be okay.’”
But what does Jesus say to her in verse 11?
“Neither do I condemn thee. Go and continue living in sin.”
Nope.
“Go and try really hard not to sin.”
That’s not it, either.
“Go and read My latest book, Ten Ways to Overcome Sin.”
No, He told her to stop sinning.
“Go and sin no more.”
We often hear people say that Jesus spent much of His spare time with sinners. That’s only a half truth. He spent His time converting sinners into saints. It was time deliberately spent, and while the people He congregated with usually started off as sinners, they soon left their life of sin to follow Jesus.
We hinder someone’s relationship with God when we allow them to continue living a life of habitual sin. Let’s not forget it was sin that separated us from God in the first place. Grace doesn’t free us from the consequences of our sin; it frees us from sin itself.
3. Jesus didn’t condemn her for her sin
These are the words that most of us remember from the story, and we’d do well to remember them. “Neither do I condemn you.”
Jesus draws a line in the sand between two words that the church thinks are synonymous. Judgment and condemnation are different things. Jesus clearly judged her sin. He told her right to her face that she was sinning, but He didn’t chuck a rock at that face. He told her the truth (in love, I might add), told her to stop, and then walked away.
I’m not someone’s executioner. I’m just a guy who is filled with God’s life and knows God’s truth. My responsibility is to make that truth known and make that life available. Because the truth is, we all have sinned, and therefore deserve death. But God graciously gave us His life instead. Shouldn’t we do the same?
4. Jesus gave her a way to stop sinning
The big difference between judgment and condemnation is your willingness to lead someone out of sin.
Matthew 7 is where we find the oft-quoted verse, “Judge not, lest you be judged.” Jesus follows this up with a metaphor, saying,
“How can you say to your brother, ‘Let me remove the speck from your eye’ when you have a plank in your own eye?” (Matthew 7:4)
But then He says something we often overlook.
“First remove the plank from your own eye, and then you will see clearly to remove the speck from your brother’s eye.”
The point in this discourse isn’t, “Don’t judge another man’s sin.” His point is, “You both have sin in your life. Deal with your own sin, and then help your brother deal with his.”
And Jesus called this process, “judgment.”
The point of judgment isn’t to throw rocks at someone else. The point of judgment is to get all of the planks, specks, and sins out of our lives, so we can effectively serve God. And if the church was more willing to deal with sin rather than avoid it, we’d be a heck of a lot stronger than we are.
Identity Crisis of the Seven Sons

The seven sons of Sceva getting their butts handed to them by a demon-possessed man. To be quite honest, it was a little embarrassing.
In Acts 19, a band of misguided Jewish brothers went on a stroll through downtown Ephesus when they were approached by a demon-possessed man babbling in the streets. In an attempt to make a name for themselves, they recited their obviously rehearsed exorcism routine:
“I command you in the name of Jesus, whom Paul preaches, to come out!”
Normally you’d expect some flailing around and a bit of green pea soup, topped off with an evil spirit vacating the premises… but not this time. No, the man just started at them. Then he simply asked:
“Jesus I know, and Paul I know. But who are you?”
The brothers didn’t have an answer.
The tale ends with the devil chasing them down the street, stripping them of their clothes, and winning the battle. Now, the problem wasn’t that Jesus wasn’t powerful enough. It also wasn’t that Paul’s preaching wasn’t good enough. The problem was that those wannabe-exorcists didn’t know who they were.
This is where I come in. My job is to teach Christians who they are so they can do what God has called them to do. Or, as Paul so beautifully put it,
“His responsibility is to equip God’s people to do His work and build up the church, the body of Christ.” [Ephesians 4:12]
Too many Christians aimlessly wander the earth without knowing who God created them to be. We are a church in the midst of an identity crisis, not sure where we came from, what we are here for, and what we are supposed to do. So that’s what you can expect from me. That’s what you can expect to find in my blog, my books, my videos, and my sermons. To learn who you are, how God feels about you, and what you can do to advance God’s kingdom on the earth.
Enjoy the ride.