Jeremiah 11:18-20
James 3:13-4:3 & 7-8a
Mark 9:30-37
+ In the name of God, Father, Son and Holy Spirit. Amen.
Ambition!
It’s something which we all probably experienced at some
stage in our lives. Most of us would quite likely have harboured childhood
ambitions in our younger days……..some more realistic and attainable than others
I’m sure! The days are long gone when little boys wanted nothing more to be an
engine driver or a footballer and little girls had dreams of becoming a nurse
or some kind of fairy-tale princess (if those days ever really existed in the
first place).
I loved books as a child (I still do), and most evenings
after school would see me heading to my local library where I would frequently
stay until it closed. Thus were the seeds sown for my own childhood ambition to
become a librarian. Ok, perhaps not the most glamorous or exciting thing in the
world and in the end it wasn’t to happen, but at that time it was all I really
wanted to be.
Our gospel reading this morning sees the disciples behaving
in a way that I’m sure is unfortunately familiar to many of us, fighting and
bickering amongst themselves as they jostle for the number one spot! Their own
ambition seems to be pretty clear at this point, who amongst them was the
greatest?
These were the twelve, who spent
the most time with Jesus, living, walking, talking, working with him for three
years, and one day, as they’re walking along with Jesus, they indulge in this
kind of Christian of the Year award. Arguing with one another about who was the
greatest. Not the greatest mathematician, or the greatest footballer, but who
is the “greatest” disciple!
You can just imagine them walking
along, Jesus out in front leading his disciples towards Capernaum (and
ultimately on his way to Jerusalem), and the disciples ‘discussing’ amongst
themselves, trying to show how they are greater than each other. Each convinced
that they are somehow a better disciple than the one next to them. Jesus,
having to listen to all this must have shaken his head in despair. How could
they have got it all so wrong? How could their priorities have moved so far
from the one who they followed?
It’s not too difficult I guess for
us to understand perhaps a little of where they were coming from. Throughout
life we are told we should constantly aim to be the “best”, never mind if that
means sometimes stepping on other people or shoving them out of the way to get
to where we think we ought to be. We will somehow get to the top in whatever
area of life we happen to choose, perhaps in our career or in our personal
life, and if other people lose out or get left behind………well that’s a shame,
can’t be helped!
And yet, the path to greatness lay
not in their self-praise or their elbowing one another out of the way in their
quest to be top dog. True greatness lay in emulating and following the example
of the one who they had already recognised as the Son of God. Greatness is in
the laying down of self and personal ambition. We hear one of Jesus’s
occasionally puzzling and seemingly contradictory statements as he says, “Whoever wants to be first must be last of
all and servant of all” (Mk 9:35). On the face of it, just another of his
cryptic sayings, yet it was a lesson that was so vital for the disciples to
understand.
He came, not as some great all conquering
hero, but as the one who washed the feet of his disciples. He may have been the
Son of God, but he was also the servant of all who came to him. For Jesus it
was not about being put on some kind of unreachable pedestal where he could
keep a distance from those whom society deemed unworthy. It was about being in
the middle of an often messy humanity, loving, sharing with and serving people
whoever they were in their situations.
So
may we embrace the vulnerability of the cross and put aside our own ego and
ambition as we seek to love God and love one another, and serve as he came to
serve.
+
In the name of God, Father, Son and Holy Spirit.
AMEN
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