Mark 10:35-45
35James and John, the sons of Zebedee, came forward to
Jesus and said, “Teacher, we want you to do for us whatever we ask of you.” 36And Jesus said to them, “What is it you
want me to do for you?” 37And
they said, “Grant us to sit, one at your right hand and one at your left, in
your glory.” 38But Jesus said to
them, “You do not know what you are asking. Are you able to drink the cup that
I drink, or be baptized with the baptism that I am baptized with?” 39They replied, “We are able.” Then Jesus said to them,
“The cup that I drink you will drink; and with the baptism with which I am
baptized, you will be baptized; 40but
to sit at my right hand or at my left is not mine to grant, but it is for those
for whom it has been prepared.”
41When the ten heard this, they began to be angry with
James and John. 42So Jesus called
them and said to them, “You know that among the Gentiles those whom they
recognize as their rulers lord it over them, and their great ones are tyrants
over them. 43But it is not so
among you; but whoever wishes to become great among you must be your
servant, 44and whoever wishes to
be first among you must be servant of all. 45For
the Son of Man came not to be served but to serve, and to give his life a
ransom for many.”
Anybody have a
file of all of the really stupid things you’ve said or done over the course of
your lifetime? Probably not a physical
file—wouldn’t want anybody reading that!
But a file you keep in your brain.
And take out every so often to review, to remind yourself that “yeah, I
really did say that.” Kind of like you
worry a sore tooth with your tongue.
I find 3 am to
be prime time for reviewing my Stupid Stuff File. The dead of night always brings our misdeeds
into sharp relief.
Now, the
impulse to review these things isn’t necessarily a bad one. We want to learn from the things we have
done, in order to maybe do better the next time. That’s a primary task of adulting—learning
from mistakes and trying to be, you know, decent.
Don’t you
wonder if James and John, the Sons of Zebedee, and [play thunder noise] had a
Stupid Stuff File? If they did, I’m not
sure there was a lot of reviewing and learning going on in the time that they
were with Jesus. They seem to move
pretty seamlessly from being the ones who want to “call down fire” on
inhospitable Samaritans to asking for the seats of honor next to Jesus
in his glory, without much time for self-reflection.
The Sons of
Thunder.
There’s no
explanation for why Jesus named them Boanerges—the Sons of Thunder.
And we don’t
need one, do we?
As you have
probably figured out by now, I love the Sons of Thunder. I love their thunder-y-ness. I love their boldness.
I love what they teach us, through what Jesus taught them.
The lesson
before us this morning is one of the best examples in the gospels of Jesus the
Pedagogue. Jesus at his professorial
best. Good teachers don’t just make good
lesson plans—they are ready to turn any moment into a teachable moment.
And luckily
for Jesus, the disciples are pretty good at presenting opportunities for daily
lessons on ethics and agriculture, fishing and forgiveness.
James and John
are among the best. And this is their
crowning achievement as unsuspecting object lessons.
“Jesus,” they
thunder, “We want you to do for us whatever we ask.”
Oh,
really?! I’ve had a lot of teachers in
my thirty years of schooling—I added it up—exactly thirty—I can tell you how
99% of them would respond to that opening salvo.
But Jesus
simply asks, “What is it you want?”
“Grant us to
sit, one at your right hand and one at your left, in your glory.”
An impertinent
request, yes?
More than
that, in fact. They want the seats of
glory, of honor. They want the seat that
belongs to God, in fact. What is it we
say about Jesus in the creed?
On the third day he rose again,
ascended into heaven,
he is seated at the right hand of the Father.
ascended into heaven,
he is seated at the right hand of the Father.
Jesus sits at
the right hand of God, tradition holds, because the earliest scriptural
record—from the Psalms on—teaches that the place of greatest honor is at God’s
right hand.
So when they
ask to sit at the right and left hand, they are asking to take a seat of honor,
and a seat reserved for God (if Jesus is on the right—God is on the left).
The one who
sits at the right hand of God shares honor, and power, and authority, with God.
This is not a small request.
And the other
disciples are not amused.
“How dare
they presume to have the seats of honor!
What jerks!”
The other
disciples are human.
Jesus is human…and also God. God’s incarnate one, come to be our object lesson in power, authority,
and humility.
Rather than
joining the disciples in their anger and frustration, Jesus realizes that this
is the moment to try once again to explain what this discipleship thing is all
about. How is God calling us to live
together?
So Jesus
calmly turns to the Sons of Zebedee and says, “you think this is about power,
right?”
“Yeah, yeah
yeah, Jesus!” they reply. We wanna do
the deeds of power like you do!
“Can you drink
the cup I drink? Can you be baptized
with the baptism with which I am baptized?”
“Yeah yeah
yeah, Jesus! Cup. Baptism. Check!”
This has to be
entry one in their Shared Stupid Stuff File.
Has to be. Because, of course,
they have no idea what they are saying. It’s
pretty clear to us, looking back on it
with our great 20/20 History Vision, that no
one in this story understands what it means to drink the cup that Jesus
will drink and to be baptized with the baptism with which he is baptized.
No one truly
understands it, and no one ever has.
That’s why
there was an Incarnation. God became
human because despite all the burning bushes and parted seas and prophetic
words and deeds, people have persisted in struggling to understand how God has
called us to live together. We have been
mired in the foggy vision of James and John forever. Believing that what God wants is for us to be
all-powerful, to have authority over others, so that we can bend them to our
will.
And we’ve used
everything at our disposal, including
the Christian faith, to try to get there.
So God decided to just come down here. To stand before us in the flesh, to look
through our bluster and our naivete and our lust for power…and love us
anyway. Just as Jesus looked at
James and John that day, when he said, “Yes, you can drink the cup.” And then
turned calmly to the other disciples and explained about The Power.
“The Power
isn’t in lording it over each other. It
isn’t in having the seats of honor.
“The Power is Love,
children. Loving and serving each other. Giving your life as a ransom for
others. The cup that I drink is a cup of
suffering alongside those who suffer.
It is a cup of forgiveness. A cup of joy born of true humility.
It’s hard to
imagine it from what we know, but history records that James and John did in
fact drink that cup. They became the
bookends of the martyred apostles—witnesses to Jesus Christ from both sides of
his passion.
According to the
Book of Acts, Chapter 12, James was so zealous in teaching the Way of Jesus
that he was the first of the Apostles martyred by the Empire.
John, his
younger brother, was the only one of the disciples who did not die a martyr’s
death. History holds that he died of
natural causes as late as 98 CE, after a long career of preaching Jesus Christ
to thousands of new Christians.
They could drink
the cup. They did drink the cup. Jesus
reminds us this morning that we are all able to drink the cup.
James and John
remind us that no matter who we are…no matter where we’ve been and what we’ve
done…we can be witnesses to the Way of Jesus Christ. No matter what’s in our Stupid Stuff File, we
can be the ones who share a servant love with the world. No matter what’s going on in the world—how
coarse and unforgiving the rhetoric, how cruel and greedy the leadership—we can
love and serve each other. We can love
and serve the world.
Because we are
loved.
And we are
forgiven.
And Loved and
Forgiven people have a power beyond any gold or silver or conquest. We have the power of the cup, the power that
lies within us at all times and can never be taken away.
My prayer for
you, people of God, is that you feel that power today. You feel how much you are loved and how fully
you’ve been forgiven by our God, and by our great teacher Jesus Christ. I pray that being loved and forgiven helps
you to unleash the power of love and forgiveness on a world that seems tilted
another way.
We can tilt it
back. We can drink the cup.
Amen
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