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Follow Jesus: Sacrificial Servanthood Series
Contributed by Dana Chau on Aug 28, 2025 (message contributor)
Summary: What comes to your mind when you hear the word “sacrificial”? Do you serve God faithfully while maintaining a healthy lifestyle and healthy relationship with Him? Get ready to learn how to fulfill our call to serve sacrificially without sacrificing what God never intended us to sacrifice!
Follow JESUS: Sacrificial Servanthood
Mark 10:32-45
We continue our mini-series on servanthood. This is really a sequel, since there are only two messages. Last week, sustainable servanthood, and today, sacrificial servanthood. Both messages are a part of the bigger church annual theme: Follow Jesus.
During the summer of 1999, I flew out to Washington DC to spend two weeks with one of my mentors. I watched him interact with people in counseling situations, board meetings and Bible studies at his home and at the World Bank. We would talk about life and ministry as we walked or drove from one venue to another.
We spent every awake hour together, and I slept in his home office. I felt like one of the 12 disciples following Jesus around. I observed him serving people from morning to night, and from midnight to early morning he would prepare his sermon and meetings.
For the next eight years in my pastoral ministry, I followed his tireless example of serving people from morning to night and preparing for sermons and meetings from midnight to early morning, sleeping 4 to 6 hours per night. I sacrificed my health, my hobbies and my family for ministry.
Some people would call this sacrificial servanthood. Others would call this workaholism. A few have even described this scenario as "ministry has become the pastor's mistress."
What is biblical sacrificial servanthood? How do we distinguish it from workaholism or blind passion? Our text is Mark 10:32-45 (READ)
This passage records Jesus predicting his death and resurrection. But the disciples instead of hearing what Jesus would soon go through, they were thinking of what Jesus could do for them. What a contrast between sacrificial service and being self-serving.
This morning we'll be looking at the true marks of sacrificial service. These marks will help us root out wrong motives, wrong expectations and wrong reactions. They will help us choose and commit wisely what to sacrifice for.
Here's the first mark: The sacrificial servant know what is the sacrifice. We see this in Mark 10:32-34.
Sacrifice is defined as "the act of giving up something that you want to keep especially in order to get or do something else or to help someone." The Bible tells us that Jesus gave up his life to pay the penalty for our sins. And that he rose from the dead to give us eternal life.
Jesus not only knew what he sacrificed for, but he knew what the sacrifice involved, verses 33 and 34 (READ). He served sacrificially knowing the sacrifice. He chose his cross, he counted the cost, and he contained the loss.
We need to choose our cross. By the cross, I mean the sacrifice. There are many needs calling us to sacrifice, but we have limited time, energy and money. So we need to choose wisely.
Many choose their sacrifice based on gut, guide or God. By gut, I mean feeling. We choose to sacrifice for a need that moves us emotionally. By guide, I mean example. We choose to sacrifice for a need because someone we admire sacrificed for the same need. By God, I mean obedience to God's direction. We choose to sacrifice for a need in obedience to God's Word or His Spirit's leading.
Here's what else we need to do in order to know the sacrifice. We need to count the cost. Know that we have what the sacrifice requires of us. Jesus said in Luke 14:26-33 that we need to count the cost before committing or beginning. This is true for building something, fighting a cause or following Christ. This does not exclude faith but includes knowledge.
Finally, to know the sacrifice, we need to contain the loss. To serve sacrificially does not sacrifice others unknowingly. This is where we make sure the cost of the sacrifice is not costing someone other than me. Does my sacrifice in serving the school, church or my employer cause me to neglect my family? Jesus' sacrifice benefited others, at his own expense, not at the expense of others.
Pause. Reflect. Pray. Where are you currently serving sacrificially? Why did you choose to make this sacrifice? Gut, guide or God? What is it costing you to make this sacrifice? Who are you sacrificing unwittingly? What can you do to contain the loss for others?
Here's the second mark: The sacrificial servant know what is the alternative. We see this in Mark 10:35-42.
Jesus knew the alternatives to sacrificial service are 1) self-serving or 2) letting the need go unmet. Whatever the need, we can respond in one of these three ways. Jesus chose to serve sacrificially on the cross.
Here's why. Jesus was never self-serving. He did allow others to serve him as we saw last week, but not for selfish reasons. Rather He gave others a chance to mature and to gave Himself the needed rest and refreshment to better serve others in the future.