The With-God Life (Part 3)
Why Following Jesus Is More Beautiful Than We Ever Imagined
by Raimer Rojas
by Raimer Rojas
Many people assume Christianity is mainly about trying harder to become a better person. They imagine God standing at a distance saying, “Here are the rules. Do your best. Don’t mess up.” If that were the heart of Christianity, it really would be exhausting. It would become another heavy yoke of striving, fear, and performance.
But that is not the invitation Jesus gave. Jesus said: “Come to me, all you who are weary and burdened, and I will give you rest. Take my yoke upon you and learn from me, for I am gentle and humble in heart, and you will find rest for your souls. For my yoke is easy and my burden is light.” — Matthew 11:28–30 NIV. That means discipleship must be understood God’s way. Otherwise, even sincere believers can accidentally place themselves under another yoke. They can turn the Christian life into self-effort, religious pressure, or constant striving.
This is one of the great misunderstandings of discipleship: people often think Jesus is calling them to carry a heavier religious burden, when He is actually inviting them to carry life with Him. But Jesus does not call us into a life we must carry alone. He calls us to Himself. The first call of discipleship is not “try harder,” but “come closer.”
The easy yoke is not the absence of a yoke. It is the presence of Jesus in the yoke. He does not simply point to the path and say, “Try harder.” He says, “Come to Me. Walk with Me. Learn from Me.” The One carrying the other side of the load is Jesus Himself. He lightens our burden. He teaches us step by step. He helps us become the people He calls us to be.
This is discipleship. It is not merely believing certain truths about Jesus. It is learning to live life with Jesus. Discipleship is not life for God at a distance. It is life with God through Jesus. To be with Him. To become like Him. To do as He did.
Jesus is the perfect revelation of God and the perfect picture of humanity as it was always meant to be. If you want to know what God is like, look at Jesus. If you want to know what love looks like, look at Jesus. If you want to know what truth, holiness, and mercy look like in real life, look at Jesus. He is not merely a teacher of these things. He embodies them. Jesus is not only the standard we look toward. He is the Savior who comes near to help us become what He calls us to be.
But Jesus does more than show us the perfect life. He also helps us live the life He calls us into. He gives us His Word to reveal truth and renew our minds. He gives us His Spirit to convict, guide, and empower us. He gives us His people to encourage, correct, and walk with us.
And there is still more. Jesus Himself intercedes for us. The risen Christ, seated at the right hand of the Father, continually prays for His people. He is not praying merely for superficial fixes. He is committed to the deeper work of forming us into His likeness. He cares about our needs, but His vision is larger than our comfort. He is shaping us for the fullness of life with God.
This is why the Christian life is not lonely striving. We are taught by the Word. We are empowered by the Spirit. We are supported by the people of God. We are prayed for by Christ Himself. That is a lot of help. The Christian life only becomes heavy when we ignore the help Jesus has provided.
God has not left us alone to figure out transformation. He surrounds us with divine support from every direction. His Word teaches us how to think rightly and live wisely. His Spirit opens our eyes to what we could not see before. His people show us practical steps toward change through real lives in process.
God’s people are not optional accessories to discipleship. They are one of the ways Jesus helps us learn the life He calls us into. Through brothers and sisters, we learn from victories and failures. We see how people move from brokenness toward healing. We learn what habits helped them grow, what mistakes slowed them down, and what grace carried them through.
Along the way, something beautiful happens. We begin enjoying Jesus. We discover that the One we feared would burden us is actually the One who frees us. The One we thought would only correct us also delights us. The One we thought would demand from us continually gives to us. As we walk with Him, we uncover more of His beauty. We discover His wisdom, mercy, and love in deeper ways than we imagined. Along the way, we also begin embracing new mindsets that help us rebuild our lives on the solid foundation of Christ. Old patterns of fear, self-rule, and striving slowly give way to trust, surrender, and life with God.
Discipleship is not merely becoming a better person. It is discovering the most beautiful Person in the universe and being transformed by life with Him. There are still hardships. There are old habits to unlearn and fears to surrender. There are battles, frustrations, and seasons of suffering. But underneath it all, there is joy. Because the journey is not simply about moral improvement. The journey is about Jesus. We do not merely endure discipleship. We learn to enjoy the One who is forming us.
Jesus is committed to a bigger picture than simply making life easier today. He is leading us into eternal life with God. He is transforming lives that once moved away from God into lives increasingly aligned with Him. One day, every tear will be wiped away. Sin, sorrow, and death will lose their grip forever. We will see Jesus as He truly is and share fully in His joy. Until then, we walk with Him. We learn from Him. We receive His help. We enjoy His presence. And we are gradually transformed by His love. When we see this clearly, discipleship stops looking like a lonely burden and starts looking like the most supported, meaningful, and beautiful life possible.
This is the glorious logic of discipleship: The destination is Christ. The pathway is Christ. The help is Christ. The joy is Christ. Everything begins, continues, and ends in Him. The One who calls us to follow Him is also the One who walks beside us, carries us when we are weak, and faithfully brings us home. This is the with-God life — the life human beings, created in the likeness of God, were designed to live. And it is the most beautiful life a human being can live.