More than thirty years ago I heard John Maxwell quote Hudson Taylor with a powerful statement that has shaped my thinking ever since:
“If Christ is not Lord of all, then He isn’t Lord at all.”
It is a simple sentence, but it carries profound spiritual weight. The longer I have lived, served in ministry, and walked with Christ, the more I realize how true it really is.
This statement cuts through one of the greatest misunderstandings of Christian discipleship—the idea that we can give Christ part of our lives while holding on to the rest.
The Illusion of Partial Lordship
Many believers sincerely love Jesus, yet still approach faith as though Christ can be Lord of some areas but not others.
We may surrender:
- Sunday worship
- church involvement
- certain moral behaviors
But other areas remain quietly off-limits:
- our ambitions
- our finances
- our relationships
- our priorities
- our time
- our hidden struggles
In effect, we treat Jesus as Saviour without allowing Him to be Lord.
But the New Testament never separates the two.
When the early church confessed that “Jesus is Lord,” they were making a declaration of complete allegiance. It meant that Christ had authority over every aspect of life.
Lordship Means Surrender
The word Lord implies authority, ownership, and rule.
To say Christ is Lord means:
- my life belongs to Him
- my decisions belong to Him
- my plans belong to Him
- my future belongs to Him
This is why Jesus spoke so strongly about discipleship. In Luke 9:23 He said:
“Whoever wants to be my disciple must deny themselves and take up their cross daily and follow me.”
Following Christ has never been about adding Jesus to an already full life. It is about placing Him at the center of everything.
The Danger of Divided Allegiance
One of the spiritual dangers facing many believers—and many churches—is the temptation to live with divided loyalty.
We want the blessings of Christ without the surrender that comes with His lordship.
Yet divided allegiance always leads to spiritual stagnation.
Jesus warned about this in Matthew 6:24 when He said:
“No one can serve two masters.”
A life partially surrendered to Christ will always feel spiritually conflicted. Peace and spiritual power come only when we place every area of life under His authority.
What Lordship Looks Like in Real Life
When Christ becomes Lord of all, it begins to reshape everyday life.
It affects:
Our priorities
We begin to seek God’s kingdom first rather than organizing life around our own agenda.
Our relationships
We treat people with grace, humility, and love because Christ governs our attitudes.
Our decisions
Instead of asking, “What do I want?” we begin asking, “What honors Christ?”
Our calling
We recognize that our lives are not merely careers or personal journeys—they are assignments from God.
Lordship and the Church
This truth applies not only to individuals but also to the church.
Many congregations confess Christ as Lord in their doctrine but struggle to submit to His leadership in practice. Churches sometimes allow traditions, preferences, or personal agendas to dictate decisions rather than asking what Christ desires for His mission.
Revitalization in a church almost always begins when leaders and congregations return to this foundational question:
Is Jesus truly Lord here?
Not just in our statement of faith, but in our decisions, priorities, and mission.
A Daily Decision
The truth behind Maxwell’s quote is that lordship is not a one-time decision. It is a daily act of surrender.
Every day we are invited to say again:
“Jesus, you are Lord of my life today.”
When that becomes the posture of our hearts, something remarkable happens. The Christian life stops feeling like a religious obligation and begins to feel like a life fully aligned with the purposes of God.
The Freedom of Full Surrender
Ironically, surrendering everything to Christ does not lead to loss—it leads to freedom.
When Christ is truly Lord of all:
- our lives gain clarity
- our decisions gain direction
- our faith gains power
The greatest transformation in the Christian life does not occur when we simply believe in Jesus.
It happens when we allow Him to rule our lives completely.
And that is why the statement I heard more than thirty years ago still echoes in my mind today:
If Christ is not Lord of all, then He isn’t Lord at all.

