Mark 9:30-37
Getting Our Mojo Back
September 23, 2018 James
Sledge
I
spent much of my childhood and youth in Charlotte, NC, back in the days when TV
had a total of six or seven channels. Of these, the CBS affiliate dominated the
local market and also owned the largest radio station. It had a number of high
profile, charity events each year, but the one I recall the most vividly was an
annual on air blood drive.
They
advertised it heavily. Corporate sponsors provided food, refreshments, and
gifts. Radio and TV personalities worked the event. CBS sent in stars from
various shows, and all during the day they would have live broadcasts interviewing
donors, talking about how easy is was, how almost painless it was.
The
event was always a huge success with more than a thousand people donating
blood. The Red Cross blood bank would be as full as it ever got, but this blood
drive never seemed to convert many into regular donors. Year after year, most
of those interviewed were first time donors, and year after year, it wasn’t
long before the Red Cross was making pleas to the public about critically short
blood supplies. The gifts, glitz, celebrities, and chance to be on TV drew in
lots of people, but when it was all over, they went back to old patterns, ones
that didn’t include giving blood.
A
similar pattern showed up in the early Jesus movement. The gospels report huge
crowds coming out to see this miracle working, charismatic,
teacher-prophet-messiah. But by and large, the crowds saw the show, perhaps got
a healing, and then went home to their old lives.
The
early reflected this. It was a small movement, and you see that in the New
Testament. In his letters, the Apostle Paul deals with questions about what parts
of normal, civic participation are out of bounds for followers of Jesus,
questions that arise because the Christians are a tiny minority. So too some of
the gospels address communities struggling to remain faithful when doing so may
get them ostracized from polite society.
We
tend to think of the Bible as a public book, but the individual components of
the New Testament – which didn’t really exist as we know it for a few hundred
years after Jesus – were not understood that way. They were not used to spread
the Christian message but to help existing Christian communities deal with
issues that they faced. The books that would become the New Testament weren’t
for the masses, but for the dedicated few.
It’s
easy to see why the early Jesus movement tended to be small. While Jesus might
have made a big splash and attracted a lot of gawkers, people hoping for a
healing, or a political messiah to take on the Romans, many of Jesus’ teachings
were not real crowd pleasers. The teachings we heard this morning are no exception.