Monday, September 21, 2015

Servants of All

"Jesus asked them, 'What were you arguing about on the way?' But they were silent, for on the way they had argued with one another who was the greatest.  He sat down, called the 12, and said to them, 'Whoever wants to be first must be last of all and servant of all.'"
-Mark 9: 33b-35


They were arguing over which one of them was the greatest.  One said he could be trusted over all the others. Another said that his track record spoke for itself.  Another said he knew what the great plan was and would help see it through as he had done over the past few years.  And another told all of the rest of them that they were morons, losers, that he alone had it all figured out.  This was the scene. 

That may have been the scene on that road to Capernaum, but I've noticed it's a repeated scene every time I turn on the TV and see a presidential candidate speaking!  There is truly nothing new under the sun, is there?  Perhaps it is simple human nature to try and one-up each other.  Maybe we cant help but seek our own fortune, our own fame and prestige, and to hell with anyone else.  It doesnt matter if we are actually in the right or know what we 're talking about, all that matters is that we continue to build ourselves up, that we keep climbing that ladder higher and higher and higher. 

The apostles, er, Republican presidential candidates, argue about who among them is the greatest.

It's not hard to imagine the apostles throwing each other under the bus in the same manner.  Simon Peter was probably called out for always stepping up first to say or do something:  who does he think he is trying to impress Jesus like that?  Matthews past as a tax collector surely couldnt be trusted.  James and John, Jesus called them the Sons of Thunder, he mustve thought pretty highly of them; surely theyre the best.  I dont even wanna know what Judas said to make his case.  All the while Jesus is walking ahead of them, listening.  Probably shaking his head.  And when he finally calls them on it theyre silent, like children caught misbehaving. All this time they have been walking around with him, performing miracles and preaching about the kingdom, and they still dont get it.  I mentioned last week that one theme of Marks gospel is that the apostles just dont get it.

To hammer his point home Jesus sits down.  Whenever he sits he means business.  Thats because whenever a rabbi or a philosopher was teaching in the ancient world and really wanted to make a pronouncement he sat down.  Jesus deliberately takes up this position so that his point would be made more clearly.  And here he spells it out:  whoever wants to be first among you must be last of all and servant of all.  In other words,  if you seek the greatness of the kingdom you will only find it by being last, not first, by being servants, not masters.  It was not that Jesus told them to abolish their ambitions.  Rather he transforms ambition.  He turns the ambition to rule into the ambition to serve.  He turns the ambition to have things done for us into the ambition to do things for others. 

Im a pretty a-political person, so maybe Ive missed a few things, but Ive never noticed anyone vying for a position of public trust whose ambitions look like this.  What if they did?  There is a story about a man in ancient Sparta named Paedaretos, and if you dont know who he is, dont feel bad, theres really no reason that you should.  The story goes that Paedaretos was running for the Spartan council, which consisted of 300 men who assisted Spartas two kings in their rule.  He was not elected, and several of his fellow candidates and his friends said what a shame it was that he didnt make it, that he would have been great for the council and that those who made it couldn't hold a candle to him.  But Paedaretos response was, I am glad that in Sparta there are 300 men better than I am.  Here is a figure whom history remembers not because he won or threw a fit after losing.  He is instead remembered because of his selflessness, his willingness to put the needs of the whole ahead of his own.  Could you imagine any person running for public office saying something like that?

It sounds like an impossibly idealistic view, but it is Jesus view.  The truly great among us must be the one who works for the benefit of not his or her own life but for the the lives of others.  It flies right in the face of what our modern sensibilities tell us.  Get more money, get better job, gain more prestige, look out for yourself.  But what would it look like if we changed that narrative?  Give more money.  Get the job that benefits others.  Retreat from prestige.  Look out for our neighbors.  What if, instead of trying to get higher and higher, we got lower and lower and lower?

We have a model for what this kind of life looks like, and weve had it for almost 2000 years.  Its called the diaconate.  It began when a small number of people were commissioned by the apostles to go and take care of a group of neglected Greek widows in the midst of a famine.  Those individuals sought no power, no prestige, and gave of themselves for the sake of others.  One of them, named Stephen, was even killed.  Deacons embody the call to serve that is given to each and every one of us.  Ask any deacon why they do what they do and they will tell you the same thing, that they are called to serve.  Deacon means servant," and in our tradition--and the tradition of the One Holy Catholic and Apostolic Church--all ordained people begin their lives as deacons because no matter where they may go their ministry is grounded in that of the servant. In my time at Christ Church Cathedral I was blessed to serve with The Rev. Paula Ott, our cathedral deacon, and she taught me what being a servant looked like.  In a time when all I could think of was becoming a priest, Deacon Paula called me back to where I was and showed me that my place was that of a servant.  It's a lesson I've tried taking with me into the priesthood.  I've seen that servant spirit embodied by my Dad, Preston Mitchell, who was made a deacon six months after I was.  And in the parish I currently serve, my people will tell you all about Deacon Jack Ogburn, their faithful deacon who served for more than 30 years, retiring earlier this summer.  He continues to inspire them--and me--with his selflessness. These folks have heard Jesus voice and they have responded to it.  They sit at bedsides with those who are dying, they work food pantries and organize mission work.  They sit on church councils, proclaim the gospel, send us out into the world, and they do it all for absolutely no money.  Talk about flying in the face of modern sensibilities!  Who among us would dare do anything without getting something in return?!  But they DO get something.  They get that grace that Jesus is talking about that comes when we put the needs of others ahead of our own.  They get glimpses of the kingdom.  And so do we because they are our model.  Not priests.  Not bishops.  But the ones who St. Ignatius of Antioch said were the highest of ministers because they embody the very ministry of Jesus Christ.  Ask any deacon why they do what they do, and you'll get the same answer:  because I'm called to serve and because this is what God would have me do.  If you haven't before, spend a few minutes with a deacon and see what servant ministry really looks like.  

A few of the deacons who have shown me how to be a servant.  
(Clockwise) The Rev. Lois Howard, The Rev. L. Sue Von Rautenkranz, The Rev. Paula Ott, & The Rev. Preston Mitchell

Being a servant does not mean giving everything up.  No one is being asked to take a vow of poverty and join a monastery or a convent.  Jesus knows that that is not for everyone.  But being a servant does mean transforming our ambition, our very outlook on life.  It means focusing our energies outward, rather than inward. It means redefining what leadership really looks like.  It means asking God, "What would you have me do?" and asking ourselves how we can use what God has given us, not for our own prestige and our own glorification, but for the building up of God’s people; for when we do it to others, we do and for the Lord Jesus.  How can I use what I have to take care of someone who is sick, to provide a meal for someone who is hungry, to give hope to someone who is in prison, to show welcome to someone who is a stranger or who has been hurt by the church.  How can I transform my ambition and be servant of all? Will you be a servant?  Be as Christ to your brothers and sisters?  Will you have the grace to let them be your servant too?