Matthew 18:1-14
A Place for the Little People
James Sledge February
5, 2017
It’s
not clear that anyone actually ever said it at the Academy Awards, but the
phrase is closely associated with the Oscars. “I’d like to thank all the little
people who helped me win this award.” I searched the internet and found times
when it was parodied. Paul Williams, on sharing a win for best song with Barbra
Streisand said, "I was going to thank all the little people, but then I
remembered I am the little people."
Paul
Williams’ self-deprecating humor aside, most of us do not want to be one of the
little people. Somebody has to be the
third string guard on the football team, the janitor on the movie set, or the
mail room clerk at the company headquarters, but most people don’t aspire to
such positions. We want to be the starter, the star, the big wig.
In
the world Jesus lived in, children would have been numbered among the little people, and not just in stature.
Unlike in our world, first-century children did not enjoy much in the way of
status or rights. Childhood was short and hard. Until they could begin to take
on adult roles, usually early in puberty, children were not regarded as full
persons. No one tried to get in touch with their inner child, nor did they
point to children as examples to be followed. All of which makes Jesus’ words
more radical than we may realize.
Like
many of us, the disciples don’t aspire to be one of the little people, and they ask Jesus what makes someone a star in
God’s coming new day. “Who is the greatest in the kingdom of
heaven?” Perhaps they expect it will be the one who can do miracles or
who has the strongest faith or who understand the scriptures inside and out.
But Jesus places a child, one of the unimportant, little people, in their midst and says, “Unless you change and
become like this, you can’t be part of the kingdom at all.”
Ever
since he first called the disciples, Jesus has been teaching them about how
different the kingdom is from the world, how the first will be last, how those
who mourn and are persecuted are considered blessed. Still, I suspect they were
stunned by Jesus’ words.