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Most of us, as students, sometimes pulled an “all-nighter” – cramming for an exam, finishing a term paper, or completing a project. I studied all night for a history exam in college and then fell sound asleep during the actual exam. Not my finest moment.
Early in His earthly ministry, Jesus pulled an all-nighter too. In case you think I’m making that up, here’s proof:
Jesus went up on a mountain to pray, and He prayed to God all night. At daybreak He called together all of His disciples and chose twelve of them to be apostles.
(Luke 6:12-13)
Years ago, Howard Hendricks spoke at The Cove about this very event. The importance of choosing Jesus’ twelve closest followers was so important that it merited a full night in prayer. You can imagine Jesus talking with His Father – listing the pros and cons, strengths and weaknesses of each disciple – asking the Father to narrow down the choices. But Hendricks went on to suggest that Judas Iscariot might have been the main reason that Jesus prayed so long and so hard. Again, we can imagine Jesus saying, “Father, are you sure about him?” And we can hear the Father saying, “Yes, Son – it must be Judas.”
The story of Judas is not just a lesson in how not to be a disciple. It’s also a warning. On Focus on the Family, I heard James Dobson say, “Walking into a church doesn’t make you a Christian any more than driving into a garage makes you a car.” You may be smiling, but there’s something not so funny about that statement. And it reflects back on Judas Iscariot.
Judas walked with the other eleven – in the dust of their Rabbi, Jesus – for three years. He saw the miracles and the healings and heard the words of instruction from Jesus and the prayers --- just as did the others. Yet Judas betrayed Jesus. Yes, He was chosen to be a disciple – but he was a chosen one who chose not to follow with his heart.
The warning from Judas is this: we can hang out with Christ-followers, we can hear the sermons the Christ-followers hear, we can know the words and music to all the songs Christ-followers sing, we can say “amen” to the prayers of Christ-followers, we can go to Bible studies with Christ-followers – but until we personally ask Jesus into our hearts, we are not Christ-followers ourselves.
Let’s not just look like Christ-followers –let’s actually BE committed followers of the one true God – trusting Him each day to help us live our lives for Him – lives of integrity -- in humility, gratitude, and praise.
By Judy Shrout
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