So again, you change the definition of discipleship by focusing on “social justice"...
Nope.
Discipleship is not 'focused' on social justice, but social justice is a part of discipleship. Why is that so hard to grasp? Perhaps because it is something you don't want to acknowledge?
...and claiming Jesus was in favor of a Marxist, secular, political movement.
Nope. Never said any such thing. That would be like me saying that if one opposes abortion, then you must support bombing abortion clinics and shooting doctors who perform abortions.
You have really gone off the rails in your attempt to misrepresent my position.
Jesus said His Kingdom was not of this world...
That's right. It is not powered by the same things this world is powered by. We don't use violence or the sword to expand the Kingdom of God. At the same time, we are IN the world, and THIS world is to be TRANSFORMED by the Kingdom of God. That's part of our discipleship, to do the work of God in the world. Did the Samaritan say to the man beaten and bloody on the side of the road, "God's Kingdom is not of this world. Better luck in heaven!" Nope. He got personally involved. He was the one who loved his neighbor, which is one of the most fundamental commandments of Jesus. Social justice is the love of one's neighbor, and that happens IN THIS WORLD, but it is empowered by the Kingdom of the heavens.
Jesus told us to reject the things of the world.
You are making a fundamental error that could be made clearer in English translations. The world most often translated "world" is κόσμος (transliterated as kosmos or cosmos). There are at least three different meanings.
(1) It literally refers to the planet earth.
(2) It refers to the inhabitants of the earth, both God's people and those who reject God.
(3) The activities, affairs, systems, advantages, and accumulated assets of the worldly persons.
We are not to love the cosmos in the third sense, but we are to love the world in the first and second sense. In the first sense, because it is God's creation that we are supposed to steward, and in the second sense, because God loves the people of the world --
“For God so loved the world, that He gave His only Son, so that everyone who believes in Him will not perish, but have eternal life. For God did not send the Son into the world to judge the world, but so that the world might be saved through Him." (John 3:16-17).
We are to love what God loves, so we love the inhabitants of this world -- we love our neighbor -- and work for justice. This is ridiculously simple, unless you don't want to understand.
Jesus said to seek first the Kingdom of God.
Yes, and the Kingdom of God is inextricably linked to social justice. As NT Wright has put it:
...the whole point of the Gospels is that the coming of God's kingdom on earth as in heaven is precisely not the imposition of an alien and dehumanizing tyranny, but rather the confrontation of alien and dehumanizing tyrannies with the news of a God -- the God recognized in Jesus -- who is radically different from them all, and whose inbreaking justice aims at rescuing and restoring genuine humanness...
Yes, Jesus did, as Paul says, die for our sins, but his whole agenda of dealing with sin and all its effects and consequences was never about rescuing individual souls from the world but about saving humans so that they could become part of his project of saving the world. "My kingdom is not from this world," he said to Pilate; had it been, he would have led an armed resistance movement like other worldly kingdom-prophets. But the kingdom he brought was emphatically for this world, which meant and means that God has arrived on the public stage and is not about to leave it again; he has thus defeated the forces both of tyranny and of chaos -- both of shrill modernism and of fluffy postmodernism, if you like -- and established in their place a rule of restorative, healing justice...
Paul said he determined to know nothing but Jesus Christ and Him crucified.
If you are going to quote Paul, please respect him enough to quote him honestly and fairly, in context, so you don't distort his meaning:
1 Corinthians 2:1-5
And when I came to you, brothers and sisters, I did not come as someone superior in speaking ability or wisdom, as I proclaimed to you the testimony of God. For I determined to know nothing among you except Jesus Christ, and Him crucified. I also was with you in weakness and fear, and in great trembling, and my message and my preaching were not in persuasive words of wisdom, but in demonstration of the Spirit and of power, so that your faith would not rest on the wisdom of mankind, but on the power of God.
Just a glance at that passage shows that it does not mean anything like you claim. Paul was speaking about a particular situation in Corinth, having them recall his manner in which he approached them, quite different than the way Paul preached in other places. Paul had quite a bit to say, even in this same letter to the Corinthians that went well beyond "Jesus Christ and Him crucified."
Apparently Paul isn’t “woke” enough for you.
Actually, Paul is too "woke" for YOU. If you read him carefully -- not just misquote memory verses -- you will see that he had quite a bit to say about the way Jesus opening up the Kingdom of God has changed the way everyone must relate to each other. In his writings, Paul lays a time bomb at the feet of slavery and patriarchy, which will cause both to be challenged by contemporary and future generations of Christians, but I know you can't handle that right now and it goes beyond the most important points here.
You claim His message was changed by Christians to be focused of salvation and heaven. Utter nonsense.
Then how do you explain that the emphasis on the "if you die tonight, will you be in heaven?" theology that permeates evangelicalism? It is nothing like the message Jesus, Paul, and the New Testament writers teach.
The shift began during the First Great Awakening in the United States, with George Whitefield (slave owner) and Jonathan Edwards (slave owner), among others. The preaching and teaching tended to focus on the heaven vs. hell dynamic instead of a fuller gospel message. Feel free to try refute that with facts, not bluster and accusations.
You are changing His message to “don’t focus on salvation and getting to heaven...”
Please show me all the passages in the Gospels where Jesus talks about getting to heaven (not the Kingdom of heaven/God, but getting to heaven). You won't find much. That's when you have to wonder why Jesus talked about so many other things, and then you notice that He focuses on the Kingdom of God. When He sends the 12 out by themselves (and the 72 later), He empowers them to heal and proclaim that the Kingdom of God has come near. The Kingdom of God is not just about the future and "spiritual" things, it is about restoration of health, justice and life.
...but rather focus on social justice lawsuits and secular laws.
You don't understand the message of Jesus.