Jesus said 'come' many times in the gospels; but perhaps the most memorable time he said it was to his poor labouring sheep, in Matthew 11.28:
Come unto me, all ye that labour and are heavy laden , and I will give you rest .
Jesus says "follow me" 19 times in the Gospels of Matthew, Mark, Luke, and John. He never says "follow myself."
"Come to Me, all who are weary and heavy-laden, and I will give you rest". This is in Mathew 11: 28
Well at Matthew 16:24 Jesus says "If anyone wants to come after me, let him disown himself and pick up his torture stake and continually follow me." Hope that's what you were looking for.
Yes you can say that as Christians follow his teachings .
after Jesus had seen Peter and his brother at the fish
I can't find 'follow you' in Scripture. but 'follow me' from the mouth of Jesus is recorded 17 times in the Gospels.
Jesus meant let the spiritually dead bury the dead. If you want to live follow Jesus.
Its not that Jesus had to negotiate with Jesus, although things were said about the kingdom to come and the judging. He also said things to bartholemew like the unjust will be punished the just rewarded, the poor shall be rich, the rich shall be poor, but it was mostly the holy spirit and gods wisdom coming into bartholemew that made him follow in gods path
You can say "Ammalu Illu Pinagaat Jesus?" in Greenlandic, which means "Where did Jesus come from?".
Jesus told the two brothers , Follow me. Something like that.
You've got a few details mixed up. He never KICKED Jesus. Jesus said to Peter, speaking about John, "...If I will that he tarry till I come, what is that to thee? follow thou me." He didn't say John WOULD live till Jesus comes, He only asked what business it was of Peter's IF Jesus decided that. The verse is John 21:22.
Let the little children come to me.
Through out the four gospels and the other books of the New Testament we are told to follow the Messiah or the Christ, that is Jesus Christ. If you are a follower of Jesus you are of the Christian religion or faith. Nowhere does it tell us to follow another.
Jesus said "Come, follow me" to his disciples when calling them to join him in spreading his teachings and ministry. This phrase is recorded in the Gospels of Matthew (9:9) and Mark (2:14), where Jesus invites individuals to leave their current lives behind and follow him.