Greatness is in Serving
Mark 10:35-45. This sermon was preached by Pastor Marty Bonner on Sunday, March 22, 2020.
It is easy in our country to give lip service to the issue of being a leader who serves the people. Our Christian foundations have affected the ways that we talk about such things, and even the words used by some politicians to manipulate people into voting for them.
In the last sentence of the Gettysburg Address, President Lincoln challenged the nation with these words. “It is rather for us to be here dedicated to the great task remaining before us – that from these honored dead we take increased devotion to that cause for which they gave the last full measure of devotion – that we here highly resolve that these dead shall not have died in vain – that this nation shall have a new birth of freedom and that government of the people, by the people, for the people, shall not perish from the earth.” Our human tendency, in its immaturity, is to look for leaders who will tell us what to do and to save us from threatening conditions. However, our country was built upon the premise of a government that is made up of the people who are governing themselves for the sake of the whole nation. The ability of the group to govern lives or dies upon the ability of individuals to govern themselves.
The founding fathers were working off of a biblical foundation and world view. God’s word challenges believers to walk in freedom, but not a freedom to do whatever you want. In our passage today, Jesus teaches us how leadership should work in the Church, and it is the opposite of how this world tends to do it, regardless of what words they use.
The request of James and John
Our passage begins with a request that comes from the two disciples, James & John. They are brothers who had been fishermen on the Sea of Galilee just like Peter and Andrew. It is worth noting that Matthew 20:20-28 tells us that this request was actually made through their mother. Since this is not in our passage today, I will only make a passing comment. No doubt, James and John knew that this request was in bad taste and bad form. They attempted to moderate its ambitious nature by having their mom ask. However, Jesus addresses them and not their mother. That coupled with its absence in Mark’s account tells us that everyone knew James and John were ultimately behind the request.
Their request is this. “Grant us that we may sit, one on your right hand and the other on your left, in your glory.” It has two parts. First, they want to have the highest place next to him. And, second, the time frame that they are talking about is “in his glory.” This is directly referring to the time when he would be ruling over Israel as the promised Messianic King in what is generally called the Kingdom of God. We would call this the Millennial Kingdom, which they thought would begin shortly.
Now, to give them some credit, Jesus had already told his disciples in Matthew 19:28 that “in the regeneration [the resurrection], when the Son of Man sits on the throne of his glory, you who have followed me will also sit on twelve thrones, judging the twelve tribes of Israel.” So, he had already promised them a high position in his coming kingdom. They are not content with that apparently, and desire to ask for the two top spots.
What we are going to see in this passage is that the problem is not that we might desire great positions or even to do greatly in those positions. The real problem is that our desires are riddled with impure motives and misunderstandings of just what true greatness is. They want the highest positions to be given to them outright before they have done anything to deserve it. Instead of seeking to promote ourselves further in this life, we should focus on serving well in the position that we are in right now. If God promotes us beyond that position then that is His prerogative, and if He doesn’t then we should not take it as a slight. It really doesn’t matter what our placement in the age to come is going to be. What really matters is our service for the Lord today. How is my service?
Jesus prefaces his response to James and John with the statement that they don’t realize what they are asking. When we ask for promotion, we generally only see the “good” things connected to being the boss. Yes, we see power, authority, freedom to do what you want, people looking up to you, and a great reputation. It is like looking at a virtuoso who plays their instrument so well and wanting to do what they do. It only takes a week of practicing (and sometimes less) to realize that 99.9999% of us really do not want to be a virtuoso. We tend to want the good stuff of being a virtuoso without the grueling and unrelenting practice, a.k.a. price, that goes with it.
So, Jesus gives them two metaphors to help us understand the hard part of getting those two top spots. The first metaphor is that of a cup that one has to drink. It is clear that he is talking about his upcoming sufferings. In the garden on the night he was betrayed, Jesus asks the Father to take this cup away from him. He ends by saying, “Nevertheless, your will be done.” The picture is of a cup that is filled with suffering and you are being asked to drink it. Most people would take a sip and cast the cup aside. We are typically unwilling to drain it to its dregs. However, Jesus did drink the cup to its dregs, and he asked his disciples to pick up their cross and follow him.
The second metaphor is that of something into which they need to be baptized (immersed). This is a full body immersion into a particular pain and difficulty that goes along with doing the hard work that God has called him and us to do. Both metaphors work together to show us the internal and external suffering that goes along with doing God’s will.
Our future kingdom rewards in the Millennium are directly related to the hardships and sufferings that we have gone through in this life in order to accomplish God’s will. The suffering itself is not what we seek. It is not suffering in general that gives us reward. It is the particular suffering that comes from doing the will and purpose of God. As we do God’s will, certain hardships and sufferings will arise up and threaten to turn us back. Christ will reward those who press through the sufferings in order to serve his purposes.
In response to the challenge that Jesus gives to them, James and John both declare that they are able to drink this cup and be baptized with this baptism. It is not clear just what they think this means, but even if they understood that it involved suffering, they would be inclined to think that this suffering would be very quick and the glory would come soon. Jesus then agrees that they are right. They will drink this cup of suffering and be baptized in this pool of suffering in following him. Acts 12:2 tells us that Herod Agrippa had James executed and then seized Peter to do the same. Peter escapes by the help of an angel from God. Why didn’t James have an angelic escape? It has nothing to do with which of them was a better disciple or had more faith. It had to do with the purposes of God in their life. The apostle James became the first of the 12 to be put to death for Christ. On the other hand, the apostle John is the last of the 12 to die. The Bible does not record his death, but we have several stories from the 2nd century that say that there were attempts to kill John that did not work. They poisoned him, but he still lived. They threw him in boiling oil and survived. Then he was exiled on the island of Patmos where he wrote the Revelation, the last book of the Bible. His suffering was a long slow burn that was different then his brother.
Jesus ends this point about suffering by telling them that it is not up to him who gets these positions. The positions are for those “for whom they have been prepared.” The emphasis is not on the fact that Jesus has no say, but rather on his ability to give the positions in the way James and John are asking, as a favor. Jesus cannot just give them out to family members or favorite disciples. The emphasis is on how they are to be handed out. Isaiah 11:3-4 tells us that the Messiah would not judge by what he sees or hears, but rather in righteousness. In other words, he won’t judge like we do. His judgments will be perfect and just right. Thus, Jesus would not agree to favoring James and John. Instead, they would receive what they deserved in the Kingdom.
Make no mistake. God will reward us for our faithfulness in the face of difficulty and suffering, but let’s trust Him to make the measurement of our service and determine what it deserves. Self-ambition can side-track the true work that must be done in our hearts in order to save people who are lost.
Jesus teaches on greatness
This sets up a situation for Jesus to remind his disciples about leadership in God’s Kingdom, whether now or in the age to come, in verses 41-45. God does not see leadership like we do. Our flesh gets mixed up in how we approach it.
However, let’s deal first with how the other disciples respond to this request of James and John. They are angered, and greatly displeased. We should stop and ask why they are angry. If the Messiah, Jesus, only judges based upon righteousness and doesn’t play favorites then what do they have to fear? I believe that they are angry because they desired the same thing and were afraid that the audacity of James and John just might secure the positions for them. Their own sinful flesh is annoyed at the thought that those two might get ahead of them. They knew that it wasn’t right to ask for such things, but in their hearts, they still desired it.
We need to stop such nonsense. Promotion is not all that it is cracked up to be. The more people you are called to lead the harder the burden is upon your shoulders. We should neither shrink back from promotion out of fear or laziness, nor should we grasp at it out of selfish ambition. Let’s simply trust God to direct our lives into the positions that he has for us, both in this life and in the next. He is just and does all things well. We should not wrestle against one another like these disciples were doing.
In verse 42, Jesus then points out how the Gentile leaders act. Yes, they exercise authority over their people, but the operative phrase is, “Lord it over them.” It is the idea of dominating and bringing those under your authority into subjection. It is a heavy-handed leadership. This tends to be the case among the nations because they didn’t have the teachings of God’s Word and such leadership tends to be very productive and focused. It often gets results in this life.
This is not the kind of leadership that God wants among His people, both in this life and the life to come. In fact, let’s remember that God Himself is not nearly as heavy-handed in His leadership as people often like to accuse Him of being. He gives us room to repent and choose how we will live our life. He wants us to choose love and service to Him freely, rather than to be subjugated into such roles. Sadly, many leaders of the Church today and throughout history have failed in this respect. Many of the great leaders throughout history are not great in God’s eyes. They failed miserably to demonstrate the image of God to those they were tasked with leading. We must not look to the greats of this world to determine how we should lead the Church of Jesus. We must look to the greatest leader, Jesus.
Jesus counters the Gentile-way with how it should be among the Church. Those who want to be great must become a servant. Jesus had already told them this back in Mark 9:35 when he brought a little kid in their midst. They had been arguing that day about which of them was the greatest, that is deserved the number one spot next to Jesus. In our passage today, they have not learned their lesson, clearly.
Those who want to be great in the Kingdom of Jesus, both now and in the Millennium, must become a servant to everyone else. Instead of using your position to build your reputation and personal kingdom, you must always recognize that you are not a god to the people you lead, but rather you are to represent “The God of Heaven” to those you lead. You are to be a servant, not just to God by doing His purposes, but also to individuals by meeting the needs in their life that God sends you to meet.
The phrase that has been connected to this teaching is “Servant-Leadership.” Among Christ’s Church, this is the only leadership that is acceptable to him because it is the only leadership that truly reflects him to believers and the world. Christ has made you free, now use your freedom to serve your fellow man in regards to God’s purposes in their life. Whatever level of leadership you have, parents with children all the way up to denominational leaders to their churches, we must learn to reflect Christ in our leadership. The children and the people are not yours to do with what you want. They belong to God and you will be rewarded or not for how you led them to walk in their own freedom before God.
In case this point hasn’t hit home, Jesus uses himself as an example. Everyone agrees that he should get the first place, but how did he get first place? How did he lead. The Father didn’t just give it to him because he was his favorite son. Jesus earned first place by coming down, humbling himself, taking on the nature of a man, and becoming a ransom for you and me. Some people have rejected this notion of Jesus being our ransom because they think it sounds barbaric and uncouth. Why can’t God just decree that we are all saved? Such a question goes to the heart of the issue and why we tend towards totalitarianism instead of freedom. Humans are always looking for techniques and tools to bring the world around them under their desires, but God simply serves people with the things that they actually need, and not to manipulate them. Instead, He is willing to suffer in order that we might be free to choose life or death. Choose life this morning and not death. Put your faith in the one who has paid the ransom to free you from sin and judgment. Become a follower of Jesus today if you aren’t already, and learn from him what it means to be great in God’s eyes.