A quick way to start a fight among sports fans is to ask who is the greatest. For example, since this is football season, who is the greater football quarterback, Tom Brady or Peyton Manning? Among golfers you might ask, how would Jack Nicolaus have done against Tiger Woods? To go back a few years, how about Magic Johnson and Larry Bird?
I was reading recently about a Larry Bird fan named Eric Torpy. Let me tell you just how much Torpy admires Larry Bird. In 2005 when Torpy was sentenced to 30 years in prison for armed robbery and attempted murder, he said to the judge, “Why not make it 33 years?” The reason he was willing to add three years to his sentence was that 33 was Larry Bird’s jersey number.
Amazingly, the judge granted Torpy’s request. However, after serving the first few years of his sentence, Torpy wasn’t happy with the situation any more. “Now I wish that I had said 30 years instead of 33,” he said in 2011. “I’ve wisened up.” (1)
Well, I hope so, but some sports fans are truly fanatic. And one thing they are fanatic about is, who is the greatest in any particular sport.
Some of you may remember a soccer player named Pelé. Whether he was the greatest international sports star of all time is a matter of conjecture. But he was an amazing sports celebrity. Pelé was such an internationally acclaimed soccer star that even a war stopped for him.
When Nigeria and Biafra were at war with each other, Pelé needed to go from Nigeria to Biafra so that he could play soccer. So what did these two countries do? They stopped fighting so that Pelé could travel safely between the two countries, and the war stayed stopped until the two opposing armies could escort Pelé safely out of the war zone. (2) On any sports greatness scale PelJ stands pretty tall.
In our own nation, there are those who will contend that Michael Jordan was the greatest athlete of all time. In the golden age of the NBA, also known as the Michael Jordan era, there was a television ad campaign built solely around Jordan and the dreams of little boys to “be like Mike.” (3)
Some of you are probably already upset with me for leaving out your favorite sports star. Some of you may be hockey fans. Edmonton Oilers head coach Ted Green got word that Shaun Van Allen, one of his star players, had suffered a concussion and couldn’t remember who he was. Coach Green said, “Tell him he’s Wayne Gretzky”-- Gretsky being the greatest hockey player of his time. (4)
Seeking to be no.1, of course, is as old as Cain and Abel, Jacob and Esau, Joseph and his brothers. The drive to be recognized as the greatest even infected Jesus’ disciples.
Jesus and his disciples were passing through northeastern Galilee heading toward Capernaum. It was the first leg of their final journey toward Jerusalem. Jesus wanted to keep their presence from becoming known because his public ministry in Galilee had ended and now he wanted to prepare his disciples for what lay ahead.
They came to Capernaum after an absence of some months. Jesus had noted some bickering by his disciples while they had been on the road. When they were in the house, Jesus asked them what it was they had been arguing about. They kept quiet because they were ashamed to admit that they had been arguing about who among them was the greatest. Matters of rank are important in any organization so it was only natural for the disciples to be concerned about their status in his coming Messianic Kingdom.
We might think that such conversations would produce a migraine for the Master. They did not. At least this one didn’t. He understood such feelings. He understood that such drives were part of being human. These drives to be No. 1 come from God.
After sitting down (which was the recognized position of a Jewish teacher) Jesus gathered the twelve around him and began to teach them. If anyone wants to be first in God’s kingdom, he said, he must be willing to be the very last--and servant of all.
Note this: Jesus did not chastise them for wanting to be first. He was not condemning anyone’s desire to improve their position in life. This is a criticism that has been thrown at Christianity, that we have counseled the poor and the oppressed to be content with their situation and not cause trouble, and thus we have contributed to their lowly situation. That’s a misunderstanding of Jesus’ teachings.
Notice how the verse reads, “Sitting down, Jesus called the Twelve and said, ‘Anyone who wants to be first must be the very last, and the servant of all.’”
In other words, Jesus is not saying to his disciples that it is wrong to want to be the greatest. He is saying, “If you want to be first, if you want to be great, here is what you must do . . . be willing to serve.”
He is not condemning their ambition. Ambition is an impulse given to us by God to help us better our lives. A person with no ambition is a drag on society.
I derived the title of today’s message from a theme song from a television show of the 70s and 80s many of you will remember, “The Jeffersons.” Do you recall how the theme song went? It was sung by Ja’net Dubois accompanied by a Gospel choir:
“Well we’re movin’ on up,
To the east side.
To a deluxe apartment in the sky.
Movin’ on up,
To the east side.
We finally got a piece of the pie. (5)
“The Jeffersons” was one of the longest-running sitcoms in the history of American television. The show focused on George and Louise Jefferson, an affluent African-American couple living in New York City. The show was one of the first to portray a successful black family, paving the way for future sitcoms like “The Cosby Show” and “The Fresh Prince of Bel-Air.” And who could argue with the idea that it is a good thing for African-Americans to see examples of success among their own people--even if it is in a sit-com? Life has been hard enough for people of color in this country. It is not against Christian values to achieve a comfortable lifestyle for your family. As long as attaining material success doesn’t become the primary drive in your life, Christ understands the drive to move up in life. Such a drive is necessary to provide for yourself and those you love.
Author Steve May tells about a working mother in the 1930s named Mildred Benson who was a columnist for the Toledo Blade in Toledo, Ohio. Benson’s husband was terminally ill. To help provide for her family, Benson devoted her spare time to a dream she had nurtured for many years. Under the pen name of Carolyn Keene she began writing mysteries for young girls. You may have heard of the main character in those mysteries, Nancy Drew. Benson was surprised at the impact this resourceful fictional character had on the lives of her readers. Many women found the inspiration to improve their lives through Nancy’s example. Benson’s parents didn’t think she should write; her father was convinced she could never make a living at it. But she had a dream, a lofty ambition, and she became internationally known and improved the lives of many young people at the same time. (6)
There is no shame in being ambitious as long as you don’t abuse other people in achieving your ambitions, and as long as you balance that ambition with your love for God and your neighbor.
Jesus was not condemning the disciples for their ambition. Nothing great in life is accomplished without ambition. Rather he was making the point that greatness in his kingdom is determined by service and not status. Jesus was saying to his disciples, “If you want to be first, here is what you must do. You must learn to serve others.” Actually Jesus was conducting one of history’s first success seminars. Every business person in the room knows it: you want to be number one in business--get a reputation for service.
When Thomas J. Watson Sr. started IBM, he laid out the three core values of the company. Those values were excellent products and services, excellent customer service, and respect for the individual. Watson wanted IBM to be all about service. Want to move on up in any field? Learn to serve.
Note this: In the Greek, Mark uses the word “diakonos” for servant and not “doulos,” which can also be interpreted as slave. The word “diakonos” suggests one who attends to the needs of others freely and willingly. This is quite in contrast to “doulos” which refers to one who acts in servitude and under obligation and compulsion. This is an important distinction. We are to serve God and others freely and joyfully out of a sense of love and not a sense of obligation.
It is interesting how Jesus made his point. He set a child among the disciples (it has been suggested that this might have been Simon Peter’s child). Taking the child in his arms, he said to them, “Whoever welcomes one of these little children in my name welcomes me; and whoever welcomes me does not welcome me but the One who sent me.”
It is important for us to know that in both Jewish and Greco-Roman societies children were considered the least important human beings. These societies idealized the mature adult (males in particular).
Jesus took the child in his arms and continued his teaching. To welcome or show kindness to one of these little children in his name, he said, is equivalent to welcoming Jesus himself and not him only but also his Father in heaven. It is this perspective that dignifies the act of serving others.
God is not concerned about titles and position and status. He cares not if you are the CEO or if you’re the one who sweeps the floors of the building. Titles do not impress God or qualify you to be a great man or woman. What qualifies you is a willingness to serve. In God’s kingdom, greatness is servanthood.
I like Martin Luther King, Jr.’s interpretation of this passage. “True greatness,” he said, “comes not by favoritism, but by fitness . . . That’s your new definition of greatness, and by this definition everyone can be great. Because everybody can serve. You don’t have to have a college degree to serve. You don’t have to make your subject and your verb agree to serve. You don’t have to know about Plato and Aristotle to serve. You don’t have to know Einstein’s theory of relativity to serve. You don’t have to know the second theory of thermodynamics in physics to serve. You only need a heart full of grace. A soul generated by love. And you can be that servant.” (7)
Author Calvin Miller was in India when Mother Teresa died. He says he was struck by a Hindu city of eleven million people raising billboards to Mother Teresa’s honor all over that vast sea of poverty the world calls Calcutta. “Her sermons,” says Miller, “. . . were not reputed to be great. It was her life that called for transformation and conversion.” (8)
I hope, as you look ahead to what remains of your life, that you will determine to make this your legacy: whatever else you leave behind, you will seek to leave this world a better place because you have been here.
In his play Julius Caesar, William Shakespeare wrote these lines: “The evil that men do lives after them, the good is oft interred with their bones . . .” How sad.
What kind of legacy will you leave? I’m not worried about you leaving behind a legacy of evil, but how much good will you leave? Will people be blessed because you have been here? You know what the secret is to a great legacy: service--service to your church, service to your community, service to little children and young people, service to the poor and to the lonely, service to the elderly.
A few years ago there was a popular television show called The Weakest Link.
Contestants were dismissed from the show with the humiliating phrase, “You are the weakest link. Good-bye!”
Dr. Daniel Lioy once proposed a more uplifting contest in a much more important game. Why not become the STRONGEST link in a lineage that will change the world? (9) That lineage is one that stretches back all the way to the day when the Master held a little child in his arms.
Some of you will remember Dave Thomas, the founder of Wendy’s, who died in 2002. Dave’s congenial face became a familiar sight to millions of people through his company’s television commercials. Dave also appeared in training films for Wendy’s employees. He was unique in his ability to identify with his employees.
Dave Thomas was a remarkable success story. Adopted as a child, he never finished high school. In his book, Well Done: the Common Guy’s Guide to Everyday Success, Dave said he got his MBA long before his G.E.D. He says he has a photograph of himself in his MBA graduation outfit--a snazzy knee-length work apron. He claims to be the only founder among America’s big companies whose picture in the corporate annual report shows him wielding a mop and a plastic bucket. That wasn’t a gag. He calls it leading by example. At Wendy’s, he says, MBA doesn’t mean Master of Business Administration. It means Mop Bucket Attitude. It means a commitment to service.
Dave Thomas taught all of his employees that service comes before success. The Wendy’s owner could have learned that lesson, of course, from Jesus. (10) But that was the legacy that Dave Thomas left the Wendy’s restaurant chain.
Jesus also left a legacy of service for his followers. He did it by wrapping a towel around his waist on the night when he was betrayed and washing their feet. He taught them to serve by his own example.
How are you doing while you’re moving on up? Are you learning to serve?
Philip Yancey wrote in his book The Jesus I Never Knew, “You can gauge the size of a ship that has passed out of sight by the huge wake it leaves behind.”
What kind of wake will you leave behind? Will the water ripple at all because you’ve been here? The word is service--service to your church, service to your community, service to those who need it most. Are you moving on up?
1. Uncle John’s 24-Karat Gold Bathroom Reader, Bathroom Readers’ Institute, (Kindle Edition).
2. S. H. Burchard, Pelé, (New York: Harcourt Brace Jovanovich, Publishers, 1976).
3. Kenny Luck, Dream: Have You Caught God’s Vision? (Colorado Springs: Water Brook Press, 2007).
4. The Jokesmith, www.Jokesmith.com, Volume XXV Number II, 2009, p. 8.
5. Composed by Ja’net Dubois and Jeff Barry.
6. Steve May, Alderson Press Corporation.
7. I Have A Dream: Writings & Speeches That Changed the World, Edited by James M. Washington (HarperCollins Publishers: SanFrancisco, 1992), pg. 189-190. Cited by Rev. Eldonna Hazen http://www.firstcongmadison.org/sermons/srm102206.pdf.
8. Calvin Miller, Preaching: The Art of Narrative Exposition (Grand Rapids: Baker Books, 2006).
9. Tarbell’s Lesson Commentary, September 2004?August 2005 (Colorado Springs: Cook Communications).
10. (Harper Collins, 1994), p. 159. Cited by Dave Redick, http://preacherstudy.com/bestseat.html.