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Lost Doctrines Cross in Life of a Believer
E.A. Johnston
0:00
0:00 4:56
E.A. Johnston

Lost Doctrines Cross in Life of a Believer

E.A. Johnston · 4:56

E.A. Johnston emphasizes that true Christian discipleship involves embracing the cross and understanding the cost of following Christ, countering modern evangelism's oversimplified and prosperity-focused messages.
In this sermon, E.A. Johnston challenges the modern, overly optimistic portrayals of Christianity and calls believers to embrace the true cost of discipleship through the cross. Drawing from Scripture and the insights of William MacDonald, Johnston exposes the flaws in easy believism and prosperity gospel teachings. He urges the church to recover the lost doctrine of the cross and live authentically as followers of Christ.

Full Transcript

Today's modern evangelism paints a rosy picture of becoming a Christian, that if you become a Christian, then your life will be all sunshine and honey blossoms, and we hide the reality that to be a Christian is to live a life of discipleship that has hills and valleys, victories and defeats. Some evangelists take the positives to an extreme and preach only a prosperity gospel, that if you take Jesus, you will automatically have health, wealth, and happiness, but it isn't so. Those kind of preachers are more interested in fleecing the flock than helping them because they just want to help themselves to your money.

You have to realize, friends, that there is a cross smack dab in the middle of the Christian life Jesus told his disciples, if any man will come after me, let him deny himself and take up his cross and follow me, for whosoever will save his life shall lose it, and whosoever will lose his life for my sake shall find it. The bottom line, friend, is a crucified Christ must have crucified followers. One must count the cost to being a Christian.

Anything worth having in life has a sacrifice attending it. What cost counts and what counts costs. There will be a constant battle with the world, the flesh, and the devil.

I like what my friend William MacDonald had to say about discipleship. Bill MacDonald wrote the widely popular Believer's Bible commentary, and he wrote the following words on faulty evangelism in our day. It's important that we listen carefully to his words as he describes easy believism.

At first blush, the method and message might seem above criticism, but on closer study, we are forced to have second thoughts and to conclude that the gospel had been oversimplified. The first flaw is the missing emphasis on repentance. There can be no true conversion without conviction of sin.

A second serious omission is a missing emphasis on the Lordship of Christ, Jesus' first Lord, then Savior. A third defect in the message is the tendency to keep the terms of discipleship hidden until a decision has been made for Jesus. Our Lord never did this.

The message he preached included the cross as well as the crown. The result of all this is that we have people believing without knowing what they believe. In many cases, they have no doctrinal basis for their decision.

What I like his comments, friends, because they are so true. We have watered down the gospel so much in our day to make it more palatable to sinful man that in the process what we preach today bears little resemblance to the real gospel of the Son of God. Jesus told his followers about the cost of following him.

We see this clearly from Matthew 8, 19 and 20. And a certain scribe came and said to him, Master, I will follow thee whithersoever thou goest, and Jesus saith unto him, the foxes have holes, and the birds of the air have nests, but the Son of Man hath not where to lay his head. In our pulpits in the land, we need to be honest with folks, and we need to recover the lost doctrine of the cross in the life of a believer.

Remember this, friends. The Christian life is lived via the cross.

Sermon Outline

  1. I
    • Modern evangelism's rosy picture vs. reality of discipleship
    • Critique of prosperity gospel and its dangers
    • The necessity of embracing the cross in Christian life
  2. II
    • Jesus' call to deny self and take up the cross (Luke 9:23)
    • The cost of discipleship and counting the cost
    • The battle with world, flesh, and devil
  3. III
    • William MacDonald's critique of easy believism
    • Missing emphasis on repentance and Lordship of Christ
    • The danger of hidden discipleship terms and watered-down gospel
  4. IV
    • Jesus' teaching on the cost of following Him (Matthew 8:19-20)
    • Need to recover the lost doctrine of the cross
    • Living the Christian life through the cross

Key Quotes

“A crucified Christ must have crucified followers.” — E.A. Johnston
“There will be a constant battle with the world, the flesh, and the devil.” — E.A. Johnston
“We have watered down the gospel so much in our day to make it more palatable to sinful man that in the process what we preach today bears little resemblance to the real gospel of the Son of God.” — E.A. Johnston

Application Points

  • Recognize that following Jesus involves sacrifice and is not a promise of earthly prosperity.
  • Evaluate personal faith to ensure it includes repentance and submission to Christ's lordship.
  • Commit to living a life that embraces the cross daily, understanding the spiritual battles involved.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the main problem with modern evangelism according to the sermon?
Modern evangelism often oversimplifies the gospel, neglecting repentance and the cost of discipleship, and sometimes promotes a prosperity gospel that misleads believers.
Why does the speaker emphasize the cross in the Christian life?
Because Jesus taught that following Him requires self-denial and taking up the cross, meaning believers must accept sacrifice and suffering as part of discipleship.
What does William MacDonald say about easy believism?
He critiques it for missing repentance, ignoring Christ's Lordship, and hiding the true cost of discipleship until after a decision is made.
How should Christians view the cost of following Jesus?
They should count the cost realistically, understanding that discipleship involves battles and sacrifices, not guaranteed health and wealth.
What is the 'lost doctrine' the sermon calls to recover?
The lost doctrine is the centrality of the cross in the believer's life, emphasizing sacrifice and the true nature of Christian discipleship.

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