Wanna Be Like Jesus?

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Introduction
What would Jesus do? Do you remember that slogan? Before I even knew who Jesus was I knew what WWJD was. It was on bracelets, bumper stickers, coffee mugs – it was everywhere. I imagine even some of you had some WWJD paraphernalia. Did you? It’s okay if you did, everybody did. And I’ve always wondered why. Why did WWJD catch on like it did? Why did it become so huge? I mean, do we really want to live like Jesus lived? Do we really want to do what Jesus would do? I know it’s customary for Christians to say that we want to follow Jesus and we want to be like Jesus. But do we really want to follow Jesus? Do we really want to be like Jesus? Honestly? I don’t think we do. If we really wanted to be like Jesus our lives would look a lot different. Our lives would look less like the lives of our co-workers and more like the life of someone like Stephen. Turn with me to Acts 6:8-7:60 and let’s read some of Stephen’s story together. As we do so we’ll see what it looks like to be like Jesus and decide if that’s something we really want to do. Do we really want to follow Jesus? Do we really want to be like Jesus?

Stephen Wants to Be Like Jesus
Let’s start with verses 8-10. These verses introduce us to the conflict that will follow, “Now Stephen, a man full of God’s grace and power, performed great wonders and signs among the people. Opposition arose, however, from members of the Synagogue of the Freedmen (as it was called)—Jews of Cyrene and Alexandria as well as the provinces of Cilicia and Asia—who began to argue with Stephen. But they could not stand up against the wisdom the Spirit gave him as he spoke.” You’ll remember from last week that Stephen was just your ordinary, everyday, church-going cat. He was no different from you. He was an Average Joe. But, by God’s grace, this Average Joe had earned quite the reputation with the people. They knew him to be a man full of the Spirit, and full of wisdom, a man full of God’s grace and power. Verse 8 tells us he worked signs and wonders among the people. Now, we know from the rest of Scripture that these signs and wonders were always accompanied by an explanation of the gospel. It was because Jesus lived, and died, and rose again that these things were happening. It was because Jesus was and is restoring all things that such miracles were happening. Well, this message about Jesus being Lord and God was terribly offensive to the Jewish leadership. So a number of them, from a certain synagogue, rose up to oppose Stephen. They argued with him, and argued with him, and argued with him. But they could not refute him. No matter how much they tried to trip him up the Holy Spirit continued to give him wisdom as he spoke. They could not out-argue him. Sound familiar? This is the same thing that happened when the Jewish leaders repeatedly challenged Jesus. Again and again they tried to argue with him and again and again he responded with wisdom, putting his challengers to shame. Stephen is learning what it means to be like Jesus.

Well, you remember what happened to Jesus when they could not out-argue him? They made up lies about him and had him arrested for crimes he did not commit. And they did precisely the same thing to Stephen. Read verses 11-14, “Then they secretly persuaded some men to say, ’We have heard Stephen speak words of blasphemy against Moses and against God.’ So they stirred up the people and the elders and the teachers of the law. They seized Stephen and brought him before the Sanhedrin. They produced false witnesses, who testified, ’This fellow never stops speaking against this holy place and against the law. For we have heard him say that this Jesus of Nazareth will destroy this place and change the customs Moses handed down to us.’” They brought Stephen before the Sanhedrin, the governing council of Israel, just as they had brought Jesus before the Sanhedrin in Mark 14. They accused Stephen of denying Moses and the Temple, just as they accused Jesus of the same things in Mark 14. They produced false witnesses to lie and testify that Stephen had committed blasphemy, just as they produced false witnesses to lie about Jesus in Mark 14. The most powerful men in the entire nation are unjustly trying Stephen for crimes he did not commit. Stephen is learning what it means to be like Jesus.

There’s no doubt that Stephen knows where this could be heading. He knows what happened when his Lord stood before these same men. He was beaten. And he was murdered. Given the circumstances you might expect Stephen to get defensive. You might expect him to answer the charges and show that they are false. But he doesn’t. In fact, he says nothing at all to defend himself. Instead, he corrects their theology and promises God’s coming judgment. It’s no coincidence that when Jesus stood before this same council he did the same thing. He was asked to explain himself and answer the charges against him but he said nothing. When they asked him again he still did not defend himself. Instead, he corrected their theology and promised God’s coming judgment. If survival was your ultimate goal you could never say this. But if being like Jesus was your highest goal then you could. Stephen is able to do it. Stephen is learning what it means to be like Jesus.

Stephen’s answer to the charges is a sermon and it’s the longest sermon recorded in Acts. Let’s read it together in verses 6:15-7:53. Stephen does not defend himself. Instead, he defends a true view of who God is. And he does this by reminding the Jews of their own history and their own Scriptures. His sermon has three main points. First, Stephen shows that God is not limited to a certain geographical region. He is not just God of Israel, he is God of all. Second, Stephen shows that God is not limited to a certain man made temple. He does not dwell in religious buildings. He dwells in the heavens and all of the earth is his footstool. Third, Stephen accuses the Jews of being a rebellious and stiff-necked people. They always resist the Holy Spirit…even to the point of rejecting every prophet he has sent…even to the point of rejecting, betraying, and killing the Messiah who was sent to save them. As you can probably imagine, that didn’t go over very well. Verse 54 says that when they heard this they were furious and gnashed their teeth at him. Stephen had to know this wasn’t a good sign. But he saw another sign. He saw something that they did not see. Look at verses 55, 56, “But Stephen, full of the Holy Spirit, looked up to heaven and saw the glory of God, and Jesus standing at the right hand of God. ‘Look,’ he said, ‘I see heaven open and the Son of Man standing at the right hand of God.’” In what the world would call a moment of great shame, Stephen experienced a moment of great glory. The fury of his opponents paled in comparison to the greatness of Jesus whom Stephen saw with clarity. “Look,” he said, “I see heaven open and the Son of Man standing at the right hand of God.” It’s interesting that the Bible usually presents Jesus as seated at the right hand of God. But here he is standing at the right hand of God. This is a picture of Jesus rising up as judge to vindicate Stephen and to condemn those who oppose him. And the Jews know that this is what Stephen is saying. Just as they knew that Jesus was saying the same thing when he described a similar vision. When the high priest asked him if he was the Christ, the Son of the Blessed One, Jesus replied, “I am. And you will see the Son of Man sitting at the right hand of the Mighty One and coming on the clouds of heaven.” The point of both visions is that Jesus is Lord and judge. He is even Lord and judge of the Sanhedrin who have set themselves up as judges over both Jesus and Stephen. By explaining this vision Stephen is guaranteeing his death just as Jesus did when he explained a similar vision. Stephen is learning what it means to be like Jesus.

When Jesus said he would be seated at the right hand of God the high priest tore his clothes, labeled him a blasphemer, and condemned him to death. Hours later they would drag him outside of the city to symbolize he had been cut off from his people and they would put him to death. When Stephen said he saw Jesus at God’s right hand they all covered their ears, yelled at the top of their voices, rushed at him, and drug him out of the city to symbolize that he had been cut off from his people. Then they began to stone him to death. Stephen is learning what it means to be like Jesus.

As he was dying at the hands of his own people Stephen prayed to Jesus, “Lord Jesus, receive my spirit.” Does that sound familiar? As Jesus was being put to death by his own people he prayed, “Father, into your hands I commit my spirit.” Stephen is learning what it means to be like Jesus. As the stones continued to assault his body he dropped to his knees, knowing death was moments away, and he cried out, “Lord, do not hold this sin against them.” Again, we are reminded of Jesus who moments from his death prayed, “Father, forgive them, for they do not know what they are doing.” This goes against every fiber of our being. We struggle to forgive people for hurting our feelings and here’s Stephen forgiving his enemies even as they kill him for a crime they did not commit. It is so far from who we are. But Stephen is learning what it means to be like Jesus. 

We Say We Want to Be Like Jesus
The question for you is this: do you want to be like Jesus? I know that if you go to church you’ve been trained to answer “yes” to that question. But I don’t want you to answer without first thinking very carefully about what I’m asking you. Do you want to be like Jesus? We have just read about a man who wanted to be like Jesus and we have seen what that cost him. So in light of that I ask you again, do you want to be like Jesus? Those of us who are Christians call ourselves Christ-followers, we call ourselves followers of Christ. But have you noticed that we spend most of our time pursuing what Jesus avoided and avoiding what Jesus pursued? We call ourselves followers of Christ but we tend to pursue what he avoided and avoid what he pursued!

Jesus pursued God. Because Jesus chose to live his entire life in pursuit of knowing God and pleasing God he avoided the things that would hinder that pursuit. He avoided the pursuit of comfort for comforts sake, he avoided the pursuit of fitting in for the sake of fitting in, he avoided the pursuit of worldly success, he avoided the pursuit of worldly pleasures. We do the exact opposite. We say we want to pursue God and, yes, we will pursue God but only to the point that pursuing God allows us to continue our pursuit of comfort, continue our pursuit of fitting in, continue our pursuit of worldly success, continue our pursuit of worldly pleasures. We say we want to know and please God and part of us does. But more than that we want to avoid discomfort, we want to avoid being rejected, we want to avoid failure, we want to avoid suffering. And, because of that, we can’t really follow Jesus. We can’t really be like Jesus until we’re willing to be like Jesus in his discomfort, and be like Jesus in his rejection, and be like Jesus in his failure, and be like Jesus in his suffering. If this is part of what it means to be like Jesus do you want to be like Jesus?

Stephen did. And Stephen was. And why? Is it because Stephen was a super-Christian? No. Is it because the first-century Christians had something that we don’t have? No. Stephen was an Average Joe. He was just a guy who volunteered in his local church. He was just a guy who loved Jesus and used whatever gifts he had to serve Jesus’ people. In these ways he really was no different from most of you. And that should encourage you. Because, brothers and sisters, you can do what Stephen did. You can be like Jesus. Because God has given to you the same thing he gave to Stephen. If you are a Christian God has given you the faith to believe in who Jesus is and what Jesus has done, just as he did for Stephen. And if you believe in who Jesus is and what Jesus has done God has also filled you with his Holy Spirit, just as he did for Stephen. This means that if you worship Jesus you have both the motivation and the power to do what Stephen did.

Stephen did what Stephen did because Stephen believed what Stephen believed. Stephen believed the gospel. Stephen believed that the God who he rejected nonetheless chose him. Stephen believed that the God who should have hated him and judged him instead hated and judged his own son, Jesus, in Stephen’s place. Stephen believed that the God who should have been eternally separated from him instead chose to dwell in him by his Holy Spirit. Stephen believed that through the life, death, and resurrection of Jesus Christ he had been made righteous in God’s eyes, he had been made acceptable to the God of the universe, he had been united to the Creator of all things, he had been made alive in Christ though he was previously dead in his sins. Because Stephen believed these things he rightly believed that God is the Ultimate Good, the Ultimate Love, the Ultimate Pleasure. And he gave his life to the pursuit of this pleasure.

You see, contrary to popular belief, Christianity is not a religion that places restrictions on pleasure. To the contrary, Christianity opens the door to the greatest of all pleasures. Christianity invites us to know and pursue pleasure by knowing and pursuing Jesus Christ, the creator of all pleasure. You could even say that Christianity is a hedonistic religion. If you’re not familiar with hedonism it is the philosophy that pleasure is the highest good and highest aim of human life. If you need further clarification about the philosophy of hedonism just turn on BET for an hour. On BET, and on most American television, the pursuit of pleasure is presented as the greatest good we can experience and as the greatest goal we can aim for. And you know what? They’re right. The problem is that they mis-identify the source of that pleasure. They tell us that if we want to pursue pleasure we should pursue sex, and money, and jewelry, and clothes, and possessions, and success, and achievement, and marriage, and singleness, and freedom, and comfort, and so on. They’ve got the pursuit of pleasure right. But they’ve got the source of pleasure wrong. If we chase pleasure by chasing these things we will miss the very thing we’re chasing. We will miss out on true pleasure. Because we’re chasing pleasure in created things instead of finding pleasure in the creator of those things.

Christianity does not place restrictions on pleasure. Christianity opens the door to the greatest pleasures of all. How? By opening the door to knowing and pleasing God through Jesus Christ. The greatest pleasure in all of the universe is found in knowing and pleasing the creator of all pleasure. This is what enabled Stephen to face what he faced. Though they took away his comfort, and they took away his acceptance, and they even took away his life they could not take away his pleasure. Because his pleasure was not found in created things. His pleasure was found in the creator of all things. This is what the gospel assures us. Which means that if we truly believe the gospel we, too, can do what Stephen did. We can be like Jesus. And we can answer, “Yes, I do want to be like Jesus.” And we can say that knowing that being like Jesus means we must and will suffer. Because through our suffering we actually find pleasure. I know it sounds ridiculous but it is true. When we suffer as Christians – as our earthly pleasures, and even our lives, are taken away from us – we are actually receiving greater and more lasting pleasures because we are becoming more intimately united to Jesus, the source of all pleasure. Philippians 3:10 says that when we suffer we suffer with Jesus and we come to know him better as a result. Acts 9:4 says that when we suffer Jesus suffers with us and we come to know him better as a result. When we suffer we suffer with Jesus and Jesus suffers with us and we find the greatest of all pleasures in knowing him and pleasing him in life and in death.

And this is the one pleasure that cannot be taken away. Do you really want your pleasure to be found in comfort, and the approval of other people, and in worldly success, and in worldly possessions? If you find your pleasure in those things you can lose your pleasure in an instant. The moment you encounter discomfort, or disapproval, or failure, or poverty your pleasure is gone. But if you find your pleasure in knowing and pleasing God your pleasure can never be taken away from you. Not because you have done or will do all the right things. But because Jesus has and Jesus does. Jesus Christ has lived the life you could not live, he has died the death you should have died, and he has risen from the dead defeating the enemies you cannot defeat. He has done everything that is necessary to make you acceptable to God and pleasing in God’s sight.

Conclusion
And so I ask you again what I asked you when we started: do you want to be like Jesus? Do you want to be like Jesus knowing what it will cost you? Do you want to be like Jesus knowing it will look like failure to the rest of the world? Do you want to be like Jesus? You should, because that’s where the greatest of all pleasures are found. The pleasures that cannot be taken away even in death. You should want to be like Jesus. And because of what he’s done for you you can be like Jesus. You can be. So what are you waiting for? Stop living for the pleasures of American culture and start living for the pleasures of knowing and pleasing God.  

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