Mark 9:30-37. This sermon was preached by Pastor Marty Bonner on Sunday, January 19, 2020.
An age old problem among groups of people is the question, “Which of us is the greatest?” It isn’t generally a spoken question. Rather, it is an unspoken tension that is as clear as an elephant in the room. It often lies beneath the surface of much that is said and done. We must understand that we are not immune to this problem because we are Christians.
Today, we will look at a passage in which Jesus gives us wisdom in regards to this. It is a wisdom that we will be quick to agree with, but very often not actually follow. May God help us to grasp today just who deserves the primary position within God’s Church, even our specific church, because the truth will always be that Jesus is the only one and nothing else matters.
In Mark 8:31, we were told that Jesus “began” to teach them about his coming sufferings. Here, Jesus continues to emphasize this prophetic word that suffering and death lay ahead for him. We are told that Jesus intends to move through the Galilee in a stealthy manner so that he can have some talks with his disciples about this coming rejection. The crowds did not need to be aware of his words before hand, but it was important for the disciples to be able to remember that Jesus had tried to tell them these things. It would actually strengthen their faith once they knew that he was resurrected.
It is interesting to note that Jesus uses the present tense when he says that he is already being betrayed into the hands of men. This is about more than Judas. It involves all the actors that would be in place to do it. The heart of Judas was already wandering away from Jesus towards money and doubt. The hearts of the Pharisees and Caiaphas were already rejecting Jesus and plotting his demise. Even though Jesus was very popular at this point, things were in motion within the hearts of people that would lead to him being betrayed and executed.
Of the things that Jesus teaches them, the fact that he would be killed would be the hardest to accept. Sure, the Messiah could be betrayed, but surely he will rise up and throw out the evil betrayers. For him to be executed clashed with everything they thought they knew about the Messiah.
On top of this, to speak of rising on the third day would seem to make his statements seem even more cryptic. It is not like people were rising from the dead every day. Is this a parable, symbolic, or does it have some spiritual meaning? What does Jesus actually mean? These are the kinds of questions that no doubt clouded their understanding.
Thus, Mark emphasizes that the disciples couldn’t grasp or comprehend exactly what Jesus was trying to tell them. Part of their problem was that they were afraid to ask him further about it. Maybe they were afraid of it being true, or maybe they were afraid to look stupid within the group by publicly admitting that they didn’t understand. Luke adds some colorful phrases in his parallel account of Luke 9. He has Jesus saying, “Let these words sink down into your ears.” The picture demonstrates their inability to hear by comparing it to the inability of words to get into their ears physically, which is clearly not the problem. They are figuratively like a person whose ears are full of something the words can’t sink through.
Luke also says that they couldn’t understand, and “it was hidden from them.” We could assume that God is intended as the one who has hidden it from them. However, it is more likely a combination of their slowness to understand. Finding something that you are fully acquainted with is generally easy, but, if someone has hidden it from you, it becomes a difficult matter. What God was doing here was catching them by surprise and as such it might as well have been hidden from them, even though Jesus is putting it in front of them. Only by the help of the Holy Spirit can we be enabled to see those things that our flesh keeps us blind to.
Lest we be too hard on the disciples, we should remind ourselves of the many times that we have walked on in this life without grasping the things that God is trying to tell us in His Word. We must remain humble as we live because we are continually recognizing areas that we have not understood like we should have.
We are told that Jesus and his disciples have traveled from the northeast region of Caesarea Philippi in a southwestern direction to Capernaum on the western side of the Sea of Galilee. During their travel, the disciples have been discussing among themselves a particular issue. They clearly did not think that Jesus had overheard them, or even suspected what their topic of discussion. So, when Jesus asks them what they were talking about on the road, they are silent and do not answer. The description in the question that Jesus asks portrays a dialogue between the disciples rather than a full-blown, heated argument. Their silence is most likely due to the fact that they know the topic of their discussion will bring rebuke from Jesus.
It is sad when we know that something is wrong and hide it from our superiors, and yet seem to have no qualms doing it among our peers. May God help us to take the hard road of being true to His path of righteousness, even when “everyone else is doing it.” Mark tells us exactly what they were discussing on the road, and it had to do with which one of them was the greatest disciple of Jesus.
“Which of us is the greatest?” In groups, this is a common tension, but it is not always discussed and debated openly. Yet, it fuels much of the actions and remarks of people within the group. There is irony in the fact that they are jockeying for the pole position in what they think is going to happen. They think they will be ruling over Israel with Jesus. However, Jesus is about to be rejected and killed, which means that they are actually jockeying for the position of being 2nd on Israel’s top 13 most wanted list.
Part of their inability to understand what Jesus was telling them is found in this question. Their pride and desires are so strong that they can’t hear or receive what God is trying to tell them. We desire so many things for ourselves and we want so much to be something more than we often are. Such things lead us away from God’s plan and purpose, rather than towards it. Yet, even in this, God corrects us and brings us along.
Jesus knows exactly what they were talking about and proceeds to correct their pride and ignorance without actually stating the topic of their discussion. He teaches them a principle regarding leadership. The principle is this. If anyone wants to be first among his disciples then they should be last of all and servant of all.
The principle is not that we should never want to lead or be the primary leader. Someone will have to be the first leader, and having a primary leader is a good thing. To desire a good thing is not a bad thing necessarily. Paul does the same thing on spiritual gifts. There is nothing wrong with desiring spiritual gifts, but the reasons and motivations behind that desire can be wrong, or even evil. The problem isn’t wanting to be the primary leader. The problem is that we often have no clue about what God expects in His primary leaders.
We are given two qualifications, of which the first is this. They should be the last of all the others in the group. This sets the ways of the world on its head. Instead of seeking the highest position by promoting oneself in pride and arrogance, we should demote ourselves in humility and weakness. God resists the proud and casts them down, but he hears the humble and lifts them up. It is a sad tribute that many, who are self-promoters and full of pride, are given primary positions within the Church that bears Christ’s name. He was not this way. He did not come to promote himself as the King of the world. Instead, he took the lowest place that no one would want, the Scapegoat of the world, the Sin-Bearer of the world, and the Rejected-One of the world. Imagine coming to church one day and they are drawing straws to see who will be the scapegoat for the church. Would you volunteer? Simply put, if you want to be the first then take up the last position, and let God put you in the first place. This is essentially what both David and Jesus did.
The second qualification is that they should be a servant of all in the group. This is really just another way of stating the first qualification. He is not saying that everybody who does this will get to be the primary leader. Not all who desire to be first get to be so, but they should all be a servant to the whole group. What a change this would have in any group. When we try to serve everybody else and trust God for promotion (or not), then pride is given a very serious blow in the group as a whole.
This cannot be about gaming the system in order to get what you want. Otherwise, your flesh will get tired quickly and eventually quit. This is the crucified life of taking the lowest place and serving in the lowest place, not to get the highest place, but in order to identify with our Lord. Ultimately, whether we become the primary leader in this life or not is immaterial. As long as we have Jesus, our place in eternity will far out weigh what we experience here on earth.
Jesus gives them a picture or a parable to help them get it by setting a child in their midst. He adds to the image by putting his arms around the little child. The child is clearly a nobody in comparison to the disciples. Yet, here he is with the arms of Jesus around him. This is an important image. When I deal with other people, I don’t always recognize that God loves them. He is not there physically with His arms around them, but that is His heart towards them. This leads to the second principle that Jesus gives, and is intended to counteract our desire to be first.
If you receive the least one in the name of Jesus then you receive him, even the Father. The disciples were constantly scrambling to be the one who is closest to Jesus or closest to God. Yet, God loves us all and wraps His arms around us all. God does not love the primary leader any more than the person in the lowest place. To receive either one, the highest person or the lowest, is to receive the one who sent them, which is Jesus. In seeking the highest place, we can become dismissive to those we perceive to be in the lowest place. Instead of serving them, we step on them and expect them to serve us.
Jesus inverts this worldly attitude by connecting himself to all of the “Positions” that we could seek or have. To reject and mistreat the lowest is to reject and mistreat Jesus, which is exactly what he has been trying to tell them that the religious leaders would do to him.
They wanted the primary leader spot so badly that they would kill Jesus in order to keep it. Yet, their rejection of Jesus was also a rejection of God the Father whom they professed to serve. Do we actually believe that God is just as intimately connected to the least person within his Church as He is with the greatest? If we actually believe this then we would not be scrambling nearly so hard to have first place. In fact, if we actually understood our God, we would understand that the primary places are to be for those who will serve in the most humble and lowly of ways. God never intended leaders to be idolized and served by everyone else. He intended for them to use the gifts that He gave them in order to serve the people that they lead.
May God help us to quit worrying about who is the greatest, when the only answer that matters is this. Jesus is the greatest of us all and without him I would be nothing!