Mark
9:30-37
Taken
Over by Love
James
Sledge September
23, 2012
Jesus
would have made a terrible politician and a terrible campaign manager. “Whoever wants to be first must be last of
all and servant of all.” I don’t
think so. Politics is all about being
impressive and convincing people how great you are, not about being servant
like. Jimmy Carter might be the one
president in my lifetime who at times seemed genuinely humble, if not actually
servant like. And this did not serve him well in his one term. He looked weak, not at all the forceful
leader people wanted, and this image problem probably had as much to do with
him losing his reelection bid as anything.
Elected
officials sometimes get referred to as “public servants,” but there is rarely
anything reminiscent of a servant about them.
And the word Jesus uses in our gospel today refers to the servants who waited
tables. These were the bottom tier of
the servants and slaves who were everywhere in the Greco-Roman world in which
Jesus lived. They were the nobodies
among nobodies, and Jesus says to become like them.
Of
course Jesus doesn’t just launch into some arbitrary teaching about
servanthood. Jesus is responding to the
disciple’s discussion of who is the greatest.
It’s a strange scenario. Jesus
has been telling his followers how he is going to be handed over and killed,
but then rise again. This is the second
time Jesus has explained the peculiar sort of Messiah he is. Last time Peter tried to straighten Jesus out. This time the disciples did not understand what he was
saying and were afraid to ask him.
We
don’t usually think of Jesus as someone we’re afraid of, but it says his
disciples were afraid to ask him. I
wonder why. Maybe Jesus just plain
scared them, even more so when he started talking about dying. Jesus obviously scared lots of people. He did get executed after all. And he was radical enough that he sometimes
frightened his own followers.
Then
again, maybe the disciples had some sense of what Jesus was saying but didn’t
like the sound of it. Maybe they were
afraid that if they asked him he would confirm their worst fears. Better not to know for sure. Let’s move on to another topic. We do the same thing. Jesus starts talking about self-denial or
taking up our cross and we change the subject.
But
in a rather bizarre twist, the disciples decide to talk about who is
greatest. Jesus may be refusing to
operate on the world’s terms, but the disciples aren’t ready to join him. Like us, they lived in a world where people
aspired to power and status, although there were very limited opportunities to
move up in the hierarchy of Roman society.
But if Jesus was the Messiah, they had found their ticket to the
big-time.
Reminds
me of a line in a song from the musical, Jesus
Christ, Superstar. “Always hoped that I’d be an apostle. Knew that we would make it if we tried. Then when we retire we can write the gospels
so they’ll still talk about us when we’ve died.”
The
disciples knew better, and so when Jesus asks what they were discussing, they
just stare at the ground and shuffle their feet. Then Jesus sits down. That’s a rabbi’s way of saying, “This is a
teachable moment.” Rabbi’s taught
sitting down, so this means it’s time for the disciples to get some
instruction, instruction that has a very difficult time breaking through the
expectations that they, and we, have acquired from our cultures.