Twenty Fifth Sunday in Ordinary Time Year B
The behaviour of the Lord’s disciples, is both pitiful and amusing. Once again, He attempts to prepare them for what lies ahead by spelling it out clearly: “The Son of Man will be delivered into the hands of men; they will put him to death; and three days after he has been put to death he will rise again.” This is the second time our Lord speaks to them of His passion and yet, they remain confounded but were too ashamed to seek clarification. Perhaps, they did not want a repeat of what happened to Peter when our Lord publicly and harshly rebuked him. Or perhaps they were terrified that their worst fears might be confirmed - that our Lord will die as He had predicted.
There is deep irony in the disciples’
misplaced attention. Our Lord had barely finished describing His humiliating
and excruciating death, and they are already conspiring to grab some glory of
their own. We can only imagine what they were thinking as our Lord repeated His
disturbing prediction. “We healed people in your name. We hung with you when
others rejected you. We handed out the bread and fish to the 5,000. Don’t we
deserve a little more than everyone else?” It’s ironic, foolish, and entitled
thinking but it’s also outrageous and tragic.
But perhaps there is a little more
understanding this time round. The fact that they were in the midst of
discussing who is the greatest, may suggest that they were preparing for a
succession plan - who will take over the mantle of leadership after our Lord’s
departure? And in their simple but not so unreasonable reasoning, they believed
that the most important criterion is this - the one who possesses all the
necessary qualities to step into those massive shoes of our Lord - in other
words, the one who is the greatest among them.
As they argued about the proper criteria
which greatness is to be measured, they failed to see that our Lord had already
shown them the example of greatness demonstrated by His own willingness to
accept the cross - and they had totally missed this because their definition of
greatness would have excluded failure, defeat, and humiliation. Suffering
wasn’t on their checklist. They found this confusing and even offensive. Christ
had just emphasised the reality of His death, and that His followers must
follow Him, but these images of powerlessness and sacrifice have had little
impact on the disciples’ values. They are grasping for power and status in the
kingdom of heaven, whilst avoiding the cross.
Instead of hearing our Lord talk about His
death and redefining greatness in terms of sacrifice — in terms of coming in
last, for the sake of love — they are still fighting to be first. But our Lord
had to remind them, “If anyone wants to be first, he must make himself last of
all and servant of all”. This flies against the common understanding of
greatness which entails priority or superiority over others. Great men are
expected to have more influence, prestige and power over ordinary folks.
Instead, our Lord turns human thinking on
its head: the only way for a Christian to be great is to put oneself last in
priority. And this is not just a pious thought but must be expressed in
concrete action - one must become a servant of all. In both the ancient and
modern world, meekness and even humility are not seen as natural ingredients
for success but rather, signs of weakness. The powerful expect to be served and
showered with honour and only the weak end up shamefully having to serve
others. But according to our Lord, true greatness will often engender weakness,
surrender, defeat, and even death.
How would true Greatness look like? We
have seen it as St John attests: “We are declaring to you what we have seen and
heard, so that you too may share our life. Our life is shared with the Father
and with his Son Jesus Christ” (1 John 1:3). Jesus Christ is the face of
greatness! When true Greatness came into our world, He was born in a stable and
laid in a feeding trough for animals. He walked from town to town without a
home, without a place to stay. He made some headlines with His message and
miracles, but He made many more enemies. When the Son of God came, calling
lowly fishermen to be His disciples, He kneeled and washed their filthy,
undeserving feet. The King of kings — the greatest of all time — humbled
Himself to the point of death, even the most shameful, painful kind of death.
True Greatness lost His life in love for us. And true Greatness was revealed
and glorified, not defeated at that grave.
Greatness, He says, belongs only to those
who humble themselves like a child. The word for “child” in Aramaic and Greek,
can also mean servant. So, the discussion on disciple servant-hood naturally
transitions into disciple child-likeness. Our Lord is not claiming that
children are naturally humble. What our Lord is emphasising is the objective
reality of childhood. Adults are not expected to listen to children; it is
children who are expected to listen and obey the adults. While adults teach and
command, the child’s duty is to listen and obey. Children rely almost entirely
on adults to survive, their lot is that of dependence, not independence.
Likewise, Christians must cast off dreams of power or status, and like a child,
learn to listen and obey and admit their ultimate dependence on God for all
things.
But our Lord is not only using the child
as a model for discipleship but also to explain the object of our service. We
do not only show hospitality and serve the powerful and the rich, those who can
reward us with favours or who can spare us their disfavours. Our Lord tells us:
“Anyone who welcomes one of these little children in my name, welcomes me; and
anyone who welcomes me welcomes not me but the one who sent me.” In other
words, we have responsibilities toward those who seem the most helpless or
inconsequential, those who are unable to repay us. In welcoming them, we are
also welcoming the Lord and the One who sent Him. By according the respect and
dignity to the powerless, the disciples are offering great honour to God.
Such principles are entirely at odds with
the world’s way of doing things. So many around us are motivated by a desire to
get ahead of the next guy. The VIPs get priority and enjoy privileges over the
common folk. The underlings are meant to serve their superiors and not the
other way round. And yet, our Lord teaches us otherwise: “If anyone wants to be
first, he must make himself last of all and servant of all.” If you aspire to
be great, give yourself to the small, mundane, easily over-looked needs around
you, especially of the powerless and the voiceless. Always remember that
authority is about service, not about gaining power. Expect no special
privileges or benefits for being a Christian; instead, remember that your duty
is to serve.
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