This sermon centers on the radical call to discipleship during Lent, emphasizing that following Jesus demands total surrender, not merely religious observance. Drawing from Isaiah 53, Galatians, and Mark 8, it underscores Jesus' identity as the suffering Servant whose death and resurrection are essential for salvation, and whose followers must embrace a life of self-denial, suffering, and death to self. The preacher confronts the prosperity gospel by affirming that true discipleship involves daily dying to worldly desires, embracing loss, and being willing to suffer or even die for Christ, reflecting the theology of the cross where sacrifice leads to resurrection. The tone is both convicting and pastoral, challenging believers to examine their loyalty and confess Jesus as Lord, while affirming that in surrender, they gain eternal life. Ultimately, the sermon calls the church to a deeper, more costly faith rooted in Christ's sacrificial love and the promise of eternal reward.