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April 20, 2025
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The Passion of the Christian


This article originally appeared on WND.com

Guest by post by David Kupelian

David Kupelian explores what it really means to โ€˜take up your crossโ€™

โ€œAnd when he had called the people unto him with his disciples also, he said unto them, Whosoever 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; but whosoever shall lose his life for my sake and the gospelโ€™s, the same shall save it. For what shall it profit a man, if he shall gain the whole world, and lose his own soul? Or what shall a man give in exchange for his soul?โ€

โ€“ Mark 8:34-37

โ€œAnd he said to them all, If any man will come after me, let him deny himself, and take up his cross daily, and follow me.โ€

โ€“ Luke 9:23

โ€œAnd he that taketh not his cross, and followeth after me, is not worthy of me.โ€

โ€“ Matthew 10:38

Every Easter, many dazzlingly eloquent words are written and spoken about Christโ€™s โ€œPassionโ€ โ€“ a singular historical event, graphically portrayed in films like โ€œThe Passion of the Christ,โ€ โ€œJesus of Nazarethโ€ and โ€œThe Greatest Story Ever Told.โ€ That these screen depictions serve to powerfully rekindle many believersโ€™ gratitude for what Jesus endured for their sake is undeniable. But I wonder, how often does that appreciation for Christโ€™s sacrifice ignite a fire in the belly of believers to โ€œtake up the crossโ€ themselves?

But first things first. What in the world does โ€œtaking up your crossโ€ really mean?

โ€˜I die dailyโ€™
In ages past, Christians dwelt a lot more on the concept of taking up the โ€œcrossโ€ than they do these days. Today, the phrase โ€œitโ€™s my cross to bearโ€ is usually a self-congratulatory reference to the fact that we have to put up with a vexing medical condition, or a child in trouble with the law, or perhaps an overbearing, live-in mother-in-law.

Admonitions from the pulpit may not shed much more light. Oh sure, a well-intentioned minister will reverently read one of the scriptures cited above on โ€œtaking up the cross,โ€ and he might even briefly plug the ideal of self-denial. But too often this amounts to a polite nod to a notion that seems both archaic and almost irrelevant, or at least unattainable, and the pastor just moves on to more pleasant topics โ€“ like how grateful we are for Christโ€™s death and resurrection.

It wasnโ€™t always so. Throughout past centuries, Christian philosophers and mystics dwelt at length on the crucial, life-and-death need for repentance, resignation, โ€œmortification,โ€ the โ€œcrucifixionโ€ of sin in man, and the โ€œdeath of the carnal manโ€ or of โ€œthe creaturely selfโ€ and so on.

The Apostle Paul said it most powerfully and succinctly when he wrote: โ€œI die daily.โ€

Unfortunately, much of what has been written in more contemplative eras about this inner transformation of man is highly poetic and allegorical โ€“ an attempt to use mere words to chart the narrow path that connects manโ€™s lowly estate with Godโ€™s heavenly one. Although such archaic language may be profound, itโ€™s probably insufficient for Christians today, buffeted as we are on the outside by a voracious and atheistic secular culture, and on the inside by what is increasingly a simplistic and far less rigorous Christianity than that embraced by our forefathers.

Please allow me to take a stab at this, from a somewhat different angle โ€“ this command from Jesus Christ that each of His followers โ€œtake up his cross daily.โ€

Killing the creature
What exactly is this โ€œcreaturely selfโ€ that Christian thinkers throughout the centuries have so colorfully warned we must โ€œslayโ€ or โ€œcrucifyโ€ if weโ€™re to inherit the Kingdom of God?

tโ€™s self-evident that weโ€™re all born with a troublesome nature called โ€œpride.โ€ Basically, pride is the part of us that wants to be like God. It loves being praised, quickly puffs up with angry judgment over the real or perceived wrongs of others โ€“ and as a rule is oblivious to its own faults. Moreover, you can think of pride as a โ€œlife formโ€ โ€“ a living, breathing โ€œsomethingโ€ which, like any other life form or โ€œcreature,โ€ can be fed or starved. When itโ€™s fed, it grows and enlarges; when it is starved, it diminishes and dies โ€“ daily.

As our pride โ€“ our โ€œsin selfโ€ โ€“ diminishes and dies through obedience to God, the direct result is that our good side, our true God-centered character and identity, enlarges.

Weโ€™re not talking about matters of dogma here. Nor is this just a matter of outward behaviors and โ€œworks.โ€ So please donโ€™t e-mail me with arguments about โ€œfaith vs. works.โ€ This is about real change โ€“ about transformation โ€“ the mystical heart of the true Christian life, about โ€œdying to the world.โ€ Not an archaic, poetic and hopelessly idealistic notion, but the very heartbeat of our everyday life, as we deal with stresses and problems (โ€œtrials and tribulationsโ€) in our lives.

Of course โ€“ and this is something of a divine paradox โ€“ as Christians, we know we canโ€™t save ourselves, and yet we are most definitely called to obedience. So, letโ€™s not slough off our responsibility to โ€œdie dailyโ€ by comfortably presuming on the unending mercy of God. His mercy is unending, indeed, but also balanced with justice, and these two seemingly contradictory qualities work together mysteriously and wonderfully toward our redemption, but only in the truly sincere human soul that doesnโ€™t tempt God.

A different kind of love
To understand what โ€œtaking up the crossโ€ means, we have to understand why Jesus Himself had to suffer.

More pointedly, if our loving God is omniscient, omnipotent and omnipresent โ€“ which He is โ€“ why then did His own Son have to be tortured and executed? Countless people throughout the ages have asked, โ€œIf God is love, why would he require his own son to endure such torture and death?โ€ Indeed, many have judged God, concluding: โ€œI could never worship a god like that.โ€

Although we say โ€œGod is love,โ€ we donโ€™t really know what either one is, do we? โ€œGodโ€ is beyond our comprehension โ€“ like understanding infinity. And โ€œloveโ€ โ€“ well, we use that word to describe our โ€œstrong feelingsโ€ for anything and everything weโ€™re attracted to.

Letโ€™s talk about real love.

Thereโ€™s one element present in almost every authentic manifestation of real love among us human beings. And that is โ€“ are you ready for this? โ€“ suffering. From the ultimate expression of love โ€“ โ€œGreater love hath no man than this, that he lay down his life for his friendโ€ โ€“ to the simple act of being patient with others, love implies forbearance, longsuffering and kindness in the midst of problems.

Hereโ€™s how Webster defines โ€œpatienceโ€: โ€œthe bearing of provocation, annoyance, misfortune, or pain without complaint, loss of temper, or anger.โ€

Certainly, Jesusโ€™ words as he was dying on the cross โ€“ โ€œFather, forgive them; for they know not what they doโ€ โ€“ are the kindest, most patient words ever spoken.

Thus, patience is nothing less than the basic โ€œcellโ€ or building block of love for each other. The very idea of being patient implies suffering with grace. The recipient of your patience โ€“ say, your spouse or child โ€“ experiences that patience as love, just as they experience your impatience as a lack of love.

Still, why is love inextricably tied to suffering?

Just think: God is the architect of an awesome expanding universe involving heavenly bodies and distances and speeds and temperatures beyond human comprehension, as well as of a never-ending microscopic cosmos of orbiting particles and universes within universes, all too small for human eyes or minds to conceive. And yet, thereโ€™s one thing the Creator of all couldnโ€™t just โ€ฆ create out of thin air. And thatโ€™s love.

Oh sure, He loves us. But Iโ€™m talking about our love for Him and for each other โ€“ fulfilling Jesusโ€™ two greatest commandments. The only way God could โ€œcreateโ€ loving children was for us to have a choice: a choice to love Him, or to be our own god โ€“ literally, a choice to make something more important than our own lives, well-being and comfort โ€“ a choice to love, in other words โ€“ and to be able to demonstratethat love, which involves suffering.

After all, if I compel you to โ€œlove me,โ€ is it real love? Of course not. Love always involves a choice.

Jesusโ€™ teaching that thereโ€™s no greater love than laying down your life for a friend doesnโ€™t only mean that you have to be willing to die for someone else by jumping into a lake to save them, or taking a bullet meant for them. Remember, Paul said, โ€œI die daily.โ€ Itโ€™s a different kind of โ€œdeathโ€ thatโ€™s being called for. You have to be willing to let your pride-self die โ€“ for the sake of your โ€œneighborโ€ โ€“ and particularly, for your familyโ€™s well being.

Small example: If someone puts you down or treats you in a cruel or unjust way and you become angry and upset, youโ€™ve simply failed to find Godโ€™s love in that moment and to extend it to the offending person. All of us have fallen for this temptation over and over โ€“ I know I have many times. But if we are genuinely patient โ€“ that is, if we suffer the cruelty with grace, and resist the temptation to puff up with anger because our pride was offended โ€“ we can then respond to the other person with the energy and spirit of Godโ€™s love.

So do I need to be a martyr?
Do an Internet search on the phrase โ€œTake up your crossโ€ and youโ€™ll discover sermon after sermon on the necessity of being willing to be tortured and executed for Christ.

โ€œAre you living with a martyrโ€™s attitude, that is, willing to suffer and/or die for the cause of Christ?โ€ asks one sermon on the topic. โ€œWe are to be Jesusโ€™ present-day martyrs, as millions in the past literally were proven to be by giving their lives for the cause of Christ.โ€

Others regard the โ€œtake up your crossโ€ reference as a call to the celibate, monastic life.

And of course there are lots of references to the conflict between manโ€™s โ€œnatural willโ€ and Godโ€™s will, and how they are at war with each other.

Indeed, โ€œtaking up the crossโ€ has always been a common sermon topic. Most typically, listeners are admonished to visit the sick, feed the poor, put their spouseโ€™s desires ahead of their own, tithe and volunteer time for church work, and the like. And while these are all fine actions to take, the problem is, one can do all of them and still remain the same faithless, resentful, doubtful, guilt-ridden, but heavily compensated โ€œniceโ€ person. Worse, the approval and adulation we receive from others for our โ€œgood worksโ€ often serves to further blind us from seeing and repenting of our well-concealed sinful nature.

The point is, weโ€™re not so much in need of a behavior change as we are of a naturechange. The โ€œcrossโ€ Christ prescribes for us is an instrument of death. But just as He died to bring life, we are supposed to โ€œdieโ€ to sin that we may share His life.

All of which boils down to this: The real โ€œcrossโ€ we have to bear is that we have a fallen nature, which we need to understand and relate to properly โ€” which allows God to change us.

Letโ€™s start with an obvious example โ€“ sex. Men in particular are born with a sexual nature that needs to be restrained. If not, men would want to express this drive virtually all of the time. Obviously, men need to control this โ€œanimal natureโ€ or โ€œcreaturely self.โ€

Likewise, what if somebody wrongs you so egregiously that you have an impulse to do him bodily harm? You better restrain that impulse too, right?

So much for the obvious. How about something more subtle?

Letโ€™s say we suffer from envious thoughts. To covet is to break one of the 10 Commandments. So how do we deal with these troublesome feelings? How do we โ€œrestrainโ€ them? Certainly not by wallowing in them and indulging them. But also not by repressing them, or attempting to manufacture โ€œgoodโ€ thoughts and feelings in their place. The Christian answer might be to pray, but what form of prayer? Try this out: If you notice envious thoughts, just observe them โ€“ honestly, sincerely, without escaping or trying to change them or making excuses for them or justifying them or getting upset over them. Just see what you see, with poise and dignity โ€“ and quietly, wordlessly, cry inwardly to God for help. He will.

This is true transparency, which is resignation of your will to His. It calls forth the very process of regeneration, imperceptible though it may be to us.

Put another way, โ€œdyingโ€ to the world is like fasting โ€“ but not from food. The real โ€œfastโ€ God desires is that we fast from evil thoughts, from anger, from envy, from lust, from greed and so on. He wants us to abstain from being irritated by provocations, from becoming impatient and angry toward others, from temptation of all sorts.

The truth is, weโ€™re never closer to God than when weโ€™re just plain quiet and still, aware of all of our defects in each precious moment, looking at ourselves first and foremost, without judgment or worry, and having quiet faith that God is there with us and that He will help us.

Shortly before His Passion and death, Jesus gave his disciples what He called โ€œa new commandmentโ€ โ€“ namely, โ€œThat ye love one another; as I have loved you, that ye also love one another.โ€ Of course, since He had previously brought forth the Old Testament commandments to love God โ€œwith all thine heart, and with all thy soul, and with all thy mightโ€ (Deuteronomy 6:5) and to โ€œlove thy neighbor as thyselfโ€ (Leviticus 19:18), how was this Last Supper commandment then โ€œnewโ€?

It was new because He was raising the bar to a higher standard. He was now asking us to love one another as He loved us.

We are supposed to live the way Jesus lived, and to suffer the way He suffered. (I said, the way he suffered โ€“ with love for each other through obedience to the Father โ€“ though obviously not to the extent He suffered.) And, my dear brothers and sisters in Christ, that does not mean only sharing the Gospel of Christโ€™s atoning death and resurrection with as many people as possible. We are called to a still higher standard โ€“ to live as He lived โ€“ or maybe to put it more aptly, to love as He loved.

Love and logic
In the classic story of โ€œBen-Hur,โ€ Judah, long-consumed by hatred and a desire for revenge against Masala for falsely condemning him as a galley slave and imprisoning his mother and sister, now lepers, witnesses the crucifixion of Jesus.

In the final unforgettable scene, Judah tells his betrothed Esther: โ€œAlmost the minute He died, I heard Him say, โ€˜Father, forgive them, for they know not what they do.โ€™

Esther, amazed, responds in a whisper: โ€œEven then โ€ฆโ€

โ€œEven then,โ€ echoes Judah. โ€œAnd I felt His voice take the sword out of my hand.โ€

The real Passion of Christ must connect directly with our own internal programming and strengthen our own spirit, as it did in the story of โ€œBen-Hur.โ€ We too must die the death God has prescribed for us โ€“ the death of pride, the ancient compulsion to be our own god โ€“ that we may share the true life He prepared for us, and which His Son purchased so dearly for us.

One of the main reasons Iโ€™m a Christian is simply because it makes so much sense to me. If God wanted to demonstrate His love for mankind, how else could He do it? Go ahead, tell me! What could He do to demonstrate the depth of His love? Make mountains of pomegranates for everyone? Give everyone a great job and a big house and three luxury cars? Give us everything our proud little hearts desire?

No, if God wanted to demonstrate His love for us, and at the same time provide us with the perfect, ultimate example of real love for our fellow man, what could be a more perfect expression of love than the willing suffering and death of His Son โ€“ Who while dying asked God to forgive His tormentors? The sheer beauty, logic and power of it is transcendent. If youโ€™re looking for love in this loveless world, thatโ€™s it.

I know some will be offended by this message, as though by even mentioning and holding up the standard Jesus clearly demanded of His followers, I am somehow denying the sufficiency of His substitutionary death for all mankind.

But you see, thereโ€™s something really wrong with todayโ€™s Christianity. Over 70 percent of Americans consider themselves Christians, but our countryโ€™s government, laws, culture and institutions, from its education system to its entertainment industry โ€“ are increasingly and overtly hostile to Christianity. Even Christian families all too often are falling apart. Clearly, weโ€™re missing something big.

So, can you handle a little tough love? Here it is: Just continually telling each other about Jesusโ€™ death and resurrection is not enough. Itโ€™s not what He taught. Jesus didnโ€™t say, โ€œJust talk about me and youโ€™ll be saved.โ€ Rather, He said: โ€œRepent: for the kingdom of heaven is at hand.โ€ (Matthew 4:17) And โ€œIf ye keep my commandments, ye shall abide in my love; even as I have kept my Fatherโ€™s commandments, and abide in his love.โ€ (John 15:10) And โ€œโ€ฆ he that shall endure unto the end, the same shall be saved.โ€ (Matthew 24:13 KJV)

So, while as Christians during the Easter season we reflect on the Messiahโ€™s suffering and sacrifice, the question is: What are we willing to suffer and sacrifice? Can we face our own sinfulness? Itโ€™s the one enemy most of us donโ€™t really want to confront.

To take up our cross โ€“ to โ€œlose our lifeโ€ for His sake so that we โ€œshall save itโ€ โ€“ we need to repent. And we cannot repent without looking in the mirror and honestly facing the sin in our minds and hearts. To stand transparent before God so He can heal us through understanding and repentance may be as hard as watching Jesus being scourged and crucified, but watch it we must.

God honors the sincere soul who, with quiet dignity, simply faces the darkness within and repents. This is the heartbeat of our life, without which there is no real life. Each of us has this moment-to-moment choice to make, whether to defend, excuse and enlarge our sinful, hell-bent nature, or whether to pick up our cross, deny our (wrong) self, and follow Jesus โ€“ first to death, and then to life.

Copyright 2025 WND News Center

The post The Passion of the Christian appeared first on The Gateway Pundit.

Source: The Gateway Pundit
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