The Cost of Discipleship
A person must pay the ultimate price to follow Jesus Christ
Scriptural Text :
A hen and a pig approached a church and read the advertised sermon topic: “What can we do to help the poor?” Immediately the hen suggested they feed them bacon and eggs. The pig thought for a moment and said, “There is only one thing wrong with feeding bacon and eggs to the poor. For you it requires only a contribution, but for me it requires total commitment!”
Discipleship is best understood as a journey, a direction, an orientation of one’s life toward becoming like Christ. This can only be accomplished by following Christ.
The term “cheap grace” can be traced back to a book written by German theologian, Dietrich Bonhoeffer, called The Cost of Discipleship, published in 1937.
What Is Cheap Grace?
In that book, Bonhoeffer defined “cheap grace” as “the preaching of forgiveness without requiring repentance, baptism without church discipline.
What Is Cheap Grace?
Cheap grace is grace without discipleship, grace without the cross, grace without Jesus Christ.”
What Is Cheap Grace?
Notice what is emphasized in Bonhoeffer’s definition of cheap grace and what is de-emphasized.
What Is Cheap Grace?
The emphasis is on the benefits of Christianity without the costs involved; hence, the adjective cheap to describe it.