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Tuesday, October 02, 2012

9/30/12 - Pentecost 18 - Matthew 18:1-4

WHO IS THE GREATEST?

Criteria

            Who is the greatest?  It’s a question that has been asked by many different people for many different reasons.  Who is the greatest baseball player of all time?  Who is the greatest president this country has ever had?  Who is the greatest composer that this world has ever seen?  And we ask that question because we like to rank people; we like to know who is the best of the best.  But what criteria are you going to use?  Is the greatest baseball player going to be a pitcher or a position player?  It’s difficult to compare the two.  Is the greatest president going to be determined by what he was able to accomplish or by the outside situations that he was able to handle?  Is the greatest composer the one who is credited with the most ground-breaking innovations in music or the one who is considered the epitome of one particular style?  The question: “Who is the greatest” depends on the criteria people use to determine the answer.

            So who is the greatest Christian in the pages of Scripture?  That’s a tough question to answer, isn’t it?  We might be able to throw some names out there at least, but I don’t know if we could come up with an agreed-upon #1.  Was it Abraham?  Moses?  David?  Paul?  Ruth?  Esther?  Rebekah?  All of them could be considered in the running because they all had commendable qualities.  But how would you determine which one of these Christians was “greater” than the other?  It’s almost a silly question, isn’t it?

            Of course, Jesus’ disciples asked that very question.  And they were serious!  The disciples came to Jesus and asked, “Who is the greatest in the kingdom of heaven?”  We don’t know if they were including people like Abraham and Moses and David in this question or if they just wanted to rank themselves, but they actually wanted to know whom Jesus considered the best of the best!  Jesus didn’t shrug off their question even though it was a little silly; instead he gave them the one criterion he was looking for: He called a little child and had him stand among them.  And he said: “I tell you the truth, unless you change and become like little children, you will never enter the kingdom of heaven.  Therefore, whoever humbles himself like this little child is the greatest in the kingdom of heaven.”

            I doubt this was the answer the disciples were looking for.  They probably wanted a specific name; in fact, each one of them probably wanted his own name to be called by Jesus.  But to be fair, when we look at the circumstances we can understand why they might have been arguing about this.  Because just before this story, Jesus had taken only Peter, James, and John up onto a mountain and there he was transformed in front of them to show them a little bit of his power.  But none of the other disciples had been allowed to go; they had to stay down at the foot of the mountain by themselves.  There could have been quite a bit of jealousy swirling around after that incident.  But only six days before that, Jesus had verbally rebuked Peter and had even called him “Satan” for speaking against God’s plans.  Were some of the disciples now thinking that it was time to move on to a new leader instead of this out-spoken disciple whom Jesus had just scolded in front of them all?  And so who was the greatest?  Was it still Peter?  Maybe James or John?  Or Judas Iscariot who had already been elected the treasurer of the group?  Maybe it was Andrew who introduced his brother Peter to Jesus or Philip who brought Nathanael to his Lord.  “Who is the greatest in the kingdom of heaven, Lord?  Come on, tell us!  We really want to know!”

            “I tell you the truth, unless you change and become like little children, you will never enter the kingdom of heaven.  Therefore, whoever humbles himself like this little child is the greatest in the kingdom of heaven.”  That must have crushed the disciples’ egos.  “Unless you humble yourself like a little child, you won’t even get into the kingdom of heaven, let alone be the greatest!”  The one criterion that Jesus gave them must have made them feel tremendously guilty for even thinking the question.  It makes me feel guilty.

Child-Like Humility

            I am supposed to humble myself as if I were a child in order to enter the kingdom of heaven?  I’m supposed to lower myself to a level that I haven’t been at for decades?  I’m supposed to give up my hard-earned status in life at those times it would be a benefit to others?  I’m supposed to surrender my rights as an adult and my freedoms as a mature human being at those times when doing those things would be for the good of somebody else?  What if someone takes advantage of me?   What if someone abuses my attempts at humility?  Do I still have to humble myself like a little child in situations like that and for the sake of people who won’t care?  If that’s what it takes to be the greatest, then I am far from it!  In fact, if we take God at his Word and believe that being a child is the criterion for entering the kingdom of heaven, then I’m pretty sure that I’m not going to get there.

            Maybe you will.  Maybe you like humbling yourself as if you were a little child.  Maybe you have no problem setting aside the respect you’ve earned over the years just to give that respect to someone else.  Maybe you are willing to take orders like a little child does from someone you could be giving orders to.  Maybe you voluntarily bend to the wills and wishes of other people as a child must bend to the wills and wishes of adults.  And if so - and you do it all the time and you do it because you are only concerned about other people and never concerned about yourself - then congratulations!  You’ve met the criterion.  You are the greatest in the kingdom of heaven because you have humbled yourself to be the lowest.

            I hope you caught my sarcasm there…  I don’t know anyone who wants to humble themselves like a little child.  Even children don’t want to be treated like children!  Because we like to keep our rights and use our freedoms; we like to voice our own opinions and do our own thing and if someone doesn’t like it, tough!  But “I tell you the truth, unless you change and become like little children, you will never enter the kingdom of heaven.”  Those are strong words.  Harsh words.  “Be a child or you don’t get in.”  And I’m sure the disciples realized it too.  The question was no longer: “Who is the greatest in the kingdom of heaven?”  Jesus had changed it into: “Who is even going to make it there?” 

Christ-Like Humility

            If only the disciples had asked Jesus a different question.  And what I mean by that is the disciples should have asked Jesus about what he was talking about right before they got into the argument about who was the greatest.   If you look at this story in the book of Mark, immediately before the disciples got into the discussion that we are dealing with right now, this is what Jesus said to them, “The Son of Man is going to be betrayed into the hands of men. They will kill him, and after three days he will rise.”  But they did not understand what he meant and were afraid to ask him about it (Mark 9:31-32).  They should have asked!  They should have followed up on Jesus’ comments and asked him to explain what he meant.  Because if they had, Jesus would elaborated on his betrayal, his death, and his resurrection.  He would have given them insight into their salvation and the price that he was going to have to pay.  If they had asked that question then they never would have asked “Who was the greatest” later on because they would have realized someone already was greatest: Jesus himself.  Because Jesus was the only one who could meet the criterion he required.

            Jesus was the only one who was able to humble himself like a little child.  Jesus was the only one willing to humble himself like a little child.  And he was the only one who actually did it.  Consider the fact that Jesus always was and will always remain true God.  But he decided to humble himself, not just like a little child but actually as a little child in the womb of a girl named Mary!  The God of this universe visibly confined himself to the body of a little baby boy!  And remember how Jesus humbled himself throughout this life: the King of everything did not even have a home to live in while he was on this earth; the Creator of everything did not have a means of income to buy his own food; the Ruler of everything did not have a single possession other than the clothes on his body.  And think of the kinds of things that Jesus did while he was here: he allowed Satan to tempt him for 40 straight days in the middle of the desert as if the devil had some sort of authority over him; Jesus asked John to baptize him as if he were the worst sinner in this world; Jesus got down on his hands and knees and scrubbed the dirt off of the feet of his disciples on the night before he would die.  And later that night: as the Knower-of-All-Things, Jesus allowed a betrayer to kiss him on the cheek; as the Great High Priest, he allowed the local high priest to accuse him of blasphemy; as the King of kings and Lord of lords he allowed a Roman ruler to decide his fate; as the almighty powerful God he allowed soldiers to manhandle him and make him bleed; as the Life-Giver he allowed death to overtake him.

            Everything that Jesus did to humble himself is really summed up beautifully in Philippians 2: “Christ Jesus, who, being in very nature God, did not consider equality with God something to be grasped, but made himself nothing, taking the very nature of a servant, being made in human likeness.  And being found in appearance as a man, he humbled himself and became obedient to death — even death on a cross!”  Jesus humbled himself not just to the level of a child, but beneath a child: a servant.  And Jesus humbled himself to the point of death not just for the sake of those around him, but for the salvation of everyone who has ever lived.  Jesus met the criterion.  Jesus was the one followed the example of that little child he had stand before the disciples.  And because he did, we are now his children.    
       
We are Already Children

            Isn’t that an interesting twist in this story line?  We are not capable of humbling ourselves to the level of a child in order to get into the kingdom of heaven.  But Jesus was and Jesus did.  And because of that we are now considered children anyway regardless of our inability to humble ourselves that way.  It reminds me of that great Christmas-time passage in the book of Galatians: “When the time had fully come, God sent his Son, born of a woman, born under law, to redeem those under law, that we might receive the full rights of sons…  So you are no longer a slave, but a son; and since you are a son, God has made you also an heir” (Gal. 4:4-5,7).

            We have proved that we cannot humble ourselves to the level of children, and so God made us his children through the humility of Christ.  And because we are his children - his first-born sons - we will receive the inheritance.  And that inheritance is heaven.  “I tell you the truth, unless you change and become like little children, you will never enter the kingdom of heaven.”  We are children of God.  And we will one day enter the kingdom of heaven.  Not because we are so humble, but because Jesus humbled himself for us. 

            And so who is the greatest in the kingdom of heaven?  Jesus is, certainly.  But because he is, so are you.  You are the greatest in the kingdom of heaven.  Because you are a forgiven child of God, you have been washed in his blood, you have been given the name Christian, you are an heir of eternal life.  Through faith in him, Jesus considers you the greatest in the kingdom of heaven.  And who could be any greater than that?

            Amen.

“To him who is able to keep you from falling and to present you before his glorious presence without fault and with great joy— 25 to the only God our Savior be glory, majesty, power and authority, through Jesus Christ our Lord, before all ages, now and forevermore! Amen.” - Jude 24-25