Mark 10:35-45 · The Request of James and John
Are Ye Able?
Mark 10:35-45
Sermon
by Frank Ramirez
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Although Christianity was an illegal religion during much of the first three centuries of the faith, there were both times when authorities turned a blind eye to their existence, and other times when persecution was intensified.

During the reign of the Emperor Trajan (98-117AD) persecution intensified. In 108 AD, one of those arrested and condemned to be thrown to the wild beasts for the entertainment of the cheering crowds was Ignatius, the overseer of the church at Antioch.

Antioch had been a center of the Christian faith from the early days of the apostles. It was at Antioch that the term ‘Christian’ was first used. But though Ignatius was arrested, tried, and sentenced in Antioch, he was sent by ship to Rome to meet his fate.

As was the custom, the ship that transported him in the Mediterranean Sea probably hugged the coast and docked every night for safety’s sake. All along the way he seemed to have received delegations of Christians dockside. We know this because he was allowed to write letters that he used to encourage the church folks he met on his journey.

In his letter to the Romans, written to the church at his ultimate destination, he encouraged them to pray for him so he could prove he was able to meet his appointment with the wild beasts.

He asked them “This one thing — pray for me to be strong inwardly and outwardly, in order that I not only speak, but have the will, so that I will not only be called a Christian, but be found one” (Romans 3.2). Complaining of his treatment by the ten fierce guards who kept watch over him, he said he longed for the wild beasts to tear him apart so that he could attain Jesus Christ. Seeming to echo the prison letters of Paul, he wrote at one point: “I will profit nothing from the world, nor the kingdoms of this world. It is better to die in Christ Jesus compared to being king over the ends of the earth. I am zealous for him who died for us. I long for he who rose for us. Birth pangs are upon me.”

Ignatius took seriously the words of Jesus to his apostles that they would share his suffering. Ignatius was willing to die for Christ. Like the hymn written by C. Michael Hawn nearly a century ago asks and answers:

“Are ye able?” said the Master to be crucified with me?

“Yes,” the sturdy dreamers answered, to the death we follow thee.”

Lord, we are able. Our spirits are thine. Remold them, make us, like thee, divine.

Thy guiding radiance above us shall be a beacon to God, to love, and loyalty. (in the public domain)

Ignatius spoke about earnestly desiring to share in the way of Jesus. In today’s Bible passage the disciples want a spot next to Jesus. They just don’t quite yet understand exactly what that meant.

Mark wrote that James and John, the sons of Zebedee, came to Jesus with a request — that he grant them whatever they asked of him.

That kind of request probably got alarm bells ringing and red flags waving. Parents know that when a kid requests that,  they are probably going to be asked to do something they’d never do otherwise!

Jesus patiently asked them what that might be, and the two replied, “Grant us to sit, one at your right hand and one at your left, in your glory (Mark 10:37).

Now these two have been with Peter and Jesus on some special occasions — they were there at the Mount of Transfiguration, and they were also together for the raising of Jairus’ daughter. They would also be together to ask Jesus for information about the coming tribulation and end of the world.

The two of them, known by the nickname the Sons of Thunder, may have been loud and boisterous, so it’s no surprise that the other ten apostles heard what they said about having places of honor when Jesus comes into his glory. Jesus squelched their jealousy.

But 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 (10:38)?

Jesus had been speaking very openly about his coming arrest and death at the hands of the authorities, but the two did not seem to have understood what Jesus was talking about. Neither had the others.

Give James and John credit. Whether they understood fully or not, they said that they were able to drink this cup, to which Jesus assured them, “The cup that I drink you will drink; and with the baptism with which I am baptized, you will be baptized…” (10:39). Jesus went on to say that those spots were not for him to pass out, but the one who sent him. Still, the apostles were going to learn firsthand that the road to glory is filled with suffering and triumph. You can’t bypass the suffering.

James would be martyred in the early 40’s, beheaded by Herod Antipas (see Acts 12:2). We don’t know if John the apostle was martyred, but it seems likely from the tone used in the gospel of Mark that the prophecy came true.

Actually, if you think about it, the first two given places at his right hand and left hand at his moment of glory were the two rebels crucified with Jesus.

This led Jesus to share a crucial point in his lesson. After the other ten reacted angrily at the request by John and James:

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. But it is not so among you; but whoever wishes to become great among you must be your servant, and whoever wishes to be first among you must be slave of all. For the Son of Man came not to be served but to serve, and to give his life a ransom for many (Mark 10:42-45).”

In the Roman world the great ones so-called not only lorded it over others, but lesser people went out of their way to flatter them to a sickening degree. To be willing to serve, and be slave to all, after the manner of Jesus, was the path chosen by many of the martyrs. Augustine, the fourth-century African theologian told the Christians under his care, many of whom would be martyred in their time:

Ponder how profound this is. They were conferring with him about glory. He intended to precede loftiness with humility and, only through humility to ready the way for loftiness itself. For, of course, even those disciples who wanted to sit, the one on his right, the other on his left, were looking to glory. They were on the lookout, but did not see by what way. In order that they might come to their homeland in due order, the Lord called them back to the Narrow way. For the homeland is on high and the way to it is lowly. The homeland is life in Christ; the way is dying with Christ. The way is suffering with Christ; the goal is abiding with him eternally. Why do you seek the homeland if you are not seeking the way to it? (Augustine, Sermons on the Gospel of John 28.5.2)

There’s a book of over 1,100 pages found in nearly every Amish home — it’s full title is “The Bloody Theater or The Martyrs Mirror of the Defenseless Christians Who Baptized Only Upon Confession of Faith, and Who Suffered and Died for the Testimony of Jesus, Their Savior, From the Time of Christ to the Year A.D. 1600.” Known more simply as the Martyr’s Mirror, this book recounts the martyrs of Christianity’s early centuries, as well as the thousands who were martyred by so-called fellow Christians because they refused to attend the official state churches, but met to worship in their homes, and were baptized as adults rather than infants.

Just as most of those murdered by Islamic terrorists are their fellow Muslims, in the same way so many Christians have been martyred by fellow Christians.

One of the stories from the book concerns Jan Portier of Flanders. It describes the brutal tortures used upon him, and tells how he and others were sentenced in 1568 to be strangled and their bodies burnt. However there were companies of Spanish soldiers stationed in the city, and the commander-in-chief commanded that they be burned alive.

When the brethren heard that they were to be burnt alive, they raised their voices and sang: “I call upon thee, O heavenly Father.” Then the Spaniards beat them so dreadfully with sticks that the eye of one fell out on his cheek. And thus they were burnt alive, the Spaniards loudly vociferating, and throwing sticks in the fire at a rapid rate, as desiring to have part in this madness, as though they thought to do God service thereby.

In the book Amish Grace, which concerns the criminal assault on the West Nickel Mines Amish School, resulting in the shooting of eight children, and the death of five of them, along with the suicide of the shooter, the authors talk about the effect stories from the Martyr’s Mirror had on the way the children tried to save others, and how the Amish community was determined to forgive the murderer, after the manner of Jesus. Amish are often harassed and reviled by some of their neighbors for living a different lifestyle. They are sometimes injured or killed when cars crash into their horse and buggies, and are assaulted and robbed because of their Christian non-resistance.

Through the centuries Christians have been willing to die for Jesus.

Christians have also been willing to live for Jesus.

While Christians in the Roman world experienced the difficulties of persecution and martyrdom, Celtic Christians, especially in Ireland had a different experience. They were not called to die for their faith, so they created new classifications of martyrdom. They referred to persecution and death as ‘red martyrdom.’ The terms ‘white martyrdom’ and ‘green martyrdom’ referred to those who left home to serve Christ, and those who left homeland and family and served Christ cut off from everything they knew. They recognized that while some are called to die for Christ, some are called to live for Christ.

Living for Christ involves a measure of self-sacrifice. Jesus very deliberately used the word slave — not a popular word at all — to describe how we are to serve each other. The difference is that we are doing it willingly. No one is forcing us to be Jesus in a suffering world.

We began with a story of persecution and martyrdom at the beginning of this sermon. Now I want to talk about an example of resistance to evil of a totally different kind. There’s a letter from a Christian named Kopres to his wife Serapias. During a time of persecution Kopres writes about a trip from Oxyrhynchus, Egypt, to Alexandria where he has to take care of some legal matters. When he got there he found there was a problem, but he took care of it with a little help from a friend. Here’s a quotation from his letter, and a little code that’s attached to the end.

Before all things I pray to the Lord God y’all are healthy. I want you to know that we arrived on the eleventh and it was made known to us that all newcomers were required to make a sacrifice, so I made my brother my power of attorney.…99.

Kopres noted that newcomers, people who were not residents from Alexandria, were required to make a sacrifice. At one point everyone in the empire was required to make a sacrifice, either to a pagan god or to the emperor as a god. It was a loyalty test. Christians could not perform such an act and this could lead to arrest, loss of property, and death.

Kopres got around this requirement by getting a brother (this could mean literally a brother or refer to a friend) to act as his power of attorney so he didn’t have to show up in court. He didn’t have to get this receipt, called a ‘libelli,’ which proved he’d made the sacrifice.

The letter closes with the number 99, which is a numerical code for “Amen.” Christians used this code as a way of indicating their faith without broadcasting it.

Evidently Kopres could count on a non-Christian friend to make the sacrifice for him. This suggested that some non-Christians respected their Christians friends and did their best to protect them. If Kopres did not have to die for his faith he chose not to — and he continued to live for his faith.

There are similar examples from Christian Egypt of others who resisted in this way. There was a small rural congregation which, when an edict from Rome demanded all their gold and silver made it clear that their simple meetinghouse has nothing of the sort, aside from a few brass plates.

There was a Christian whose title was “Reader,” which means he was the one in charge of reading scripture during worship. While giving a deposition, he claimed to be illiterate and knew nothing of any Christian books owned by the church when, during a time of persecution, all Christian books were confiscated to be burned.

Whether we die for our faith or whether we live for our faith, whether we suffer red, green, or white martyrdom, or whether we live a quiet peaceful life all our days, we are to follow the example of Jesus, serving others, living for others, and praising God.

Are you able to do this? I think so. We can all do this. That’s because we’re not worried about whether we’re seated on the right hand or the left hand of Jesus when he returns in glory.

If we follow Jesus we do it, not for the reward, but for the regard we bear toward Jesus, and the joy we find in serving him.

We can all do this. Amen.

CSS Publishing Company, Inc., Mark His word: sermons on the Gospel lessons for Proper 16-29, Cycle B, by Frank Ramirez