It is all too easy to start out with love and end up with
ambition, to start out in a rush of admiration and conviction, putting
everything else aside for the sake of the one in whom you had glimpsed, in that
transcendent moment, the glory of God, but then you let other motives intrude. They
had been there then, on that day, by the Sea of Galilee, engrossed in their
mundane tasks when He had come to them (to them!!!!) and told them to cast
aside their nets, and follow Him, and He would make them “Fishers of Men.” They
weren’t quite sure what that meant, what that could mean, but there was a hard,
bright glory in those words, and something about Him that was different to
every other man they had ever met.
Of course it wasn’t easy being the disciples of an itinerant
preacher with no home of His own, and they were very aware of the things that
they had given up for His sake, but His words were like springs of living
water, and the signs and the wonders He performed turned their whole world inside
out. He confused them and sometimes annoyed them, expecting and proclaiming
impossibilities, but they would no more have forsaken Him than they would have
forsaken their own beating hearts. And gradually their confidence grew.
He talked a lot about the “kingdom”, and since by then they
believed Him to be the promised Messiah, it was inevitable that eventually they
would start to speculate what their own role in this coming kingdom might be.
Obviously, as His first disciples, they would be very, very important, but how
would that work? Some would obviously be more important than others, and, since
Jesus said nothing on the subject, they wondered how this would be decided. Of
course, being human, they each started marshalling their arguments to support
their own case:
“Well, I believed in Him first.”
“I have cast out demons in His name.”
“I was with Him when …”
Tensions escalated, grumblings increased. Each of them had a
secret dream of being the one in charge, His right hand man, a person of great
glory. Each of them made his own case for superiority over the others. Things
were starting to get tense. In the end they had to ask Jesus, they had to
resolve this. “Which of us is the greatest?” they asked.
He took His time. He looked each of them in the eye in that
uncomfortable way He had that made each of them feel that the secret thoughts
of their hearts were not as glorious as they had imagined, but actually rather
shabby and shoddy. They stood there, almost shuffling their feet with awkwardness.
Somehow the question, which had seemed so urgent a moment before, now seemed
rather silly.
Then Jesus turned away from them and called a little child
to come over and stand with them. What was He about? Jesus looked at them,
looked at the child, and then back at them again. “I tell you,” He said, “unless
you change, unless you give up your hunger for power and position, and become a
nobody, like a small child, and humble yourselves, you haven’t begun to
understand my Kingdom. Whoever is willing to let go of power, and pride and
prestige, he is the greatest in the Kingdom.”