The Jesus Who Moves Toward Us, Not Away

DID YOU KNOW

Did you know that Jesus intentionally redefined greatness by welcoming those societies ranked lowest?

When Jesus said, “Allow the children, and do not forbid them to come to me, for to such belongs the kingdom of heaven” (Matthew 19:14), He was not offering a sentimental moment for future children’s sermons. He was overturning a deeply ingrained social hierarchy. In the first-century world, children had no legal status, no economic value, and no social voice. Outside of slaves, they ranked at the very bottom of the social order. Yet Jesus did not merely tolerate them; He elevated them as living illustrations of kingdom citizenship. The Greek phrasing emphasizes belonging, not potential. The kingdom does not merely resemble children someday; it already belongs to such as these. Jesus deliberately moved toward those with nothing to offer Him in return.

This moment reveals something essential about God’s heart. Jesus is not guarding prestige, reputation, or efficiency. The disciples, however, were. They rebuked the parents because they believed proximity to Jesus should be managed and controlled. Jesus corrected them because the kingdom operates by grace, not image. The children came with nothing but need and trust, and Jesus declared that posture central to life with God. In a faith culture that often prizes knowledge, achievement, or visibility, this passage calls believers back to closeness. Not earned closeness, but relational nearness. The Jesus we meet here is not distant or curated; He is accessible, attentive, and deeply compassionate.

Did you know that following Jesus involves feeling toward God, not merely knowing about God?

The encounter with the rich young man in Matthew 19:16–30 exposes a subtle spiritual tension many believers recognize. The man knew the commandments. He had lived morally. He was sincere. Yet when Jesus invited him to relinquish what anchored his security and follow Him fully, the man walked away grieving. The issue was not ignorance, but attachment. Jesus did not question his knowledge; He addressed his heart. True discipleship is not simply about correct answers, but reordered affections. Jesus invites followers into a relationship where nothing—not wealth, not status, not self-protection—outweighs allegiance to Him.

This is where many of us quietly struggle. Like the young man, we may understand what God asks, yet hesitate to surrender what feels stabilizing. Jesus does not shame the man; He loves him enough to speak truth directly. The kingdom He offers is not entered through accumulation, but through release. This echoes Ecclesiastes 6:1–4, which warns that abundance without the ability to enjoy it is a grievous condition. Possession does not equal fulfillment. Jesus invites a deeper joy—one rooted in trust rather than control. Following Him reshapes how we hold everything else, loosening our grip, so our hearts remain free.

Did you know that concern for image can quietly block intimacy with Christ?

The disciples’ reaction to the children reveals an anxiety that still surfaces today. They were concerned with how Jesus appeared to others. They wanted to protect His stature, His schedule, His perceived importance. Yet Jesus was never interested in projecting superiority. He consistently moved toward the overlooked, the uninvited, and the inconvenient. This tension surfaces again in Genesis 26, where Isaac faces pressure, opposition, and misunderstanding. Instead of striving for recognition or retaliation, Isaac quietly re-digs wells his father once dug, trusting God to establish him in due time. Scripture repeatedly contrasts self-promotion with quiet faithfulness.

This challenges believers to examine motivations. How often do we hesitate to act compassionately because of how it might look? How often do we choose distance over devotion because vulnerability feels undignified? Jesus dismantles that mindset. The kingdom advances not through polished appearances, but through humble availability. Children scrambling toward Jesus did not worry about perception; they simply wanted closeness. That instinct reflects a purity of desire adults often unlearn. Christ invites us back to that simplicity—not childishness, but childlike trust. The more we prioritize proximity to Jesus over approval from others, the freer our faith becomes.

Did you know that surrender does not earn the kingdom, but teaches us how to live within it?

One of the most misunderstood aspects of discipleship is surrender. Jesus never presents surrender as a transaction for salvation. Entry into the kingdom is always a gift of grace. Yet surrender shapes how we experience life within that kingdom. The rich young man was not asked to give up everything to qualify for heaven, but to align his life with heaven’s values. In contrast, the children had nothing to surrender except themselves, and Jesus declared them models of kingdom life. This reveals a vital distinction: surrender is not about loss, but about alignment.

Ecclesiastes 6 reminds us that life can be filled with gifts yet empty of joy when God is not at the center. Surrender recenters the soul. It trains the heart to desire God above outcomes. This is why Jesus’ invitation to follow Him is both demanding and liberating. He removes the illusion that self-management leads to peace. Instead, He offers a way of life shaped by trust, obedience, and love. When surrender becomes a daily posture rather than a crisis response, faith matures into quiet confidence. We begin to live not for entry into the kingdom, but as citizens who reflect its values.

As you reflect on these moments, consider where you see yourself in the story. Are you guarding image when Jesus is inviting intimacy? Are you holding tightly to something He is asking you to trust Him with? Or are you being gently called back to the simplicity of drawing near? The invitation of Jesus remains unchanged. He welcomes those who come honestly, follow willingly, and surrender freely—not to diminish life, but to fill it with meaning rooted in the kingdom of heaven.

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Published by Intentional Faith

Devoted to a Faith that Thinks

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