What It Really Means to Follow Jesus - [Matthew 16:24-27]
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Jesus doesn’t recruit fans. He calls disciples. That difference changes everything, especially when we let Matthew 16:24–27 speak for itself: deny yourself, take up your cross, and follow Him.
We walk slowly through what Christian discipleship actually means, not as a church slogan but as a daily commitment to become more like Christ in the way we think, live, love, serve, and surrender. We talk about why “must” matters, how self-denial goes beyond giving up a few comforts, and why taking up your cross is about willing identification with Jesus even when it brings shame, criticism, or misunderstanding. Along the way, we draw from stories and examples that sharpen the point, including Dietrich Bonhoeffer’s costly faithfulness and C.T. Studd’s picture of full-life surrender.
Jesus also turns our instincts upside down: trying to save your life can be the fastest way to lose it, while losing your life for Christ is where real life is found. We sit with the promise that Jesus will return in glory, evaluate how we used what God entrusted to us, and reward what was done in faith. That eternal perspective reframes success, ambition, and what we chase day to day.
If you’re ready to take an honest look at the cost of discipleship and the hope on the other side of surrender, press play, then subscribe, share, and leave a review. What is one area of your life Jesus is asking you to trust Him with fully?
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Catch On Fire Podcasts aims to lead us all into a closer walk with God as we strive to become more like Jesus.