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William M. Clow

Losing or Finding

Jesus teaches that the way to find life is to be willing to lose it, and that this is a universal law of life.
William M. Clow delves into the paradoxical statement of Jesus in Matthew 16:25, where saving one's life leads to losing it, and losing one's life for Christ's sake leads to finding it. He explains that Jesus is not referring to sacrificing a lower life for a higher one, but rather emphasizing a universal law of life where being eager to save life results in losing it, while being willing to lose it leads to finding it. This profound truth challenges the conventional wisdom of seeking self-preservation above all else.

Text

"For whosoever will save his life shall lose it: and whosoever will lose his life for my sake shall find it"

(Matt. 16:25).

On the face of it nothing can be more contradictory than to say that to save one's life is to lose it, and to lose one's life is to find it. Sometimes this paradox is explained by declaring that Jesus had two different kinds of life in view. We are told that Jesus meant us to sacrifice a lower life for a higher, an earthly and a temporal life for a spiritual and an eternal, the life of the body for the life of the soul. We are taken, for the noblest instance and proof of this interpretation, to the Roman amphitheatre. We are shown the martyrs awaiting the onrush of the lions. As they are set upon by the hungry and merciless beasts, and as the mangled remains of their bodies are carried away we are told to see in their tragic loss their splendid gain. They have lost their lives for Christ's sake, but they have found the life eternal. But the martyrs' loss and gain touches the fringe, but only the fringe, of Christ's truth.

Jesus has enshrined a deeper meaning in His paradox. He is stating a law of universal life. He does not mean two different kinds of life, a lower and a higher, set in contrast. He is thinking of the same life in each case. He is stating the still unaccepted and, for many men, incredible truth, that to be eager to save life is the way to lose it, and that the way to find it is to be willing to lose it, and, if need be, to pour it out in a splendid waste.

Sermon Outline

  1. The Paradox of Saving and Losing Life
  2. A Deeper Meaning in Jesus' Paradox
  3. A law of universal life
  4. The same life in each case
  5. The way to find life is to be willing to lose it

Key Quotes

“For whosoever will save his life shall lose it: and whosoever will lose his life for my sake shall find it” — William M. Clow
“The way to find life is to be willing to lose it, and, if need be, to pour it out in a splendid waste.” — William M. Clow

Application Points

  • We must be willing to sacrifice our lives for a higher purpose in order to find true life.
  • The way to find life is not to try to save it, but to be willing to lose it for the sake of something greater.
  • True life is found in being willing to pour out our lives in a splendid waste for the sake of others.

Frequently Asked Questions

What does Jesus mean by 'saving' and 'losing' life?
Jesus is referring to the same life in each case, and that the way to find life is to be willing to lose it.
How does this paradox relate to the example of martyrs?
The martyrs' loss and gain touches only the fringe of Christ's truth, and is not the full meaning of Jesus' paradox.
What is the universal law that Jesus is stating?
The law that to be eager to save life is the way to lose it, and that the way to find life is to be willing to lose it.
What is the significance of 'pouring out life in a splendid waste'?
It is a willingness to sacrifice one's life for a higher purpose, and to find life in doing so.

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