Mark 10:35-45 · The Request of James and John
Operation Omega
Mark 10:35-45
Sermon
by Leonard Sweet
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Sometimes we can get things so perfectly wrong that we don’t have even a hint that we’ve stepped in it again. Here’s one example:

Drive through any town or suburb in America and you will see signs announcing the names of local churches. There will be a “First Presbyterian, a “First United Methodist,” a “First Baptist,” a “First United Church of Christ.” Only after the “First” designation has been snapped up to later churches start to shop around for a different name. “Second” isn’t very popular. Better to be “Third” or “Fourth.” There is even one “Twelfth Presbyterian Church” that I know of. Every church wants to be “First.” And if they can’t be first, most abandon being numbered altogether.

There is a church in Dayton, Ohio, founded and pastored by the Rev. Dr. Daryl Ward, that has taken a step out of that traditional line up. They call themselves “Omega Baptist Church.” What is “Omega?” “Omega” is the last letter of the Greek alphabet. The divine declaration of being “the alpha and the omega” is another way of saying “the first and the last.” In other words, “Omega Baptist Church” isn’t claiming “first” place for itself. It is putting itself at the end of the line. It’s another way of calling itself the “Last Baptist Church.”

Being last, being the bottom of the heap, being so far out of the competition that the competition doesn’t even know you are there, is so NOT the place any of us want to be. The American dream of “pulling yourself up by your bootstraps,” of homegrown grit and a gimcrack, “go-get-‘em” spirit, is the capstone of our society. The reward of hard work is to get ahead, get to the top, to be first in all you do. Second place is second rate. We all want to “go for the gold.” We all want to win.

James and John, the “Sons of Zebedee,” certainly did. In today’s gospel text they try to shake Jesus down. “Teacher we want you to do for us whatever we ask of you.” Isn’t that a shake-down? They want to ensure for themselves the best seats in the house at the messianic banquet in the glorified future. They want to sit at the head of the table, on the right and the left hand of Jesus himself. They want the honor that they think should come from following Jesus.

But Jesus turns their hoped-for hierarchy on its head. It is the world, the Gentile “tyrants,” Jesus insists, that adhere to a “top-down” power structure. Jesus commands his disciples to be different: “it is not to be so among you.” Discipleship isn’t about attaining a special place of great honor. Discipleship is about embracing the identity of servant and offering service “to all.”

Here is a tale of two restaurants:

Restaurant #1: The Hard Rock Café is a big restaurant franchise themed with rock-and-roll memorabilia. What started out as a kind of iconoclastic dining experience is now just another corporate chain with its eye on the bottom line. But the new owners of the “Hard Rock Café” brand, the Seminole Native Americans of Florida, have chosen for their new rallying motto “Love All/Serve All.” And they are now opening up Hard Rock Hotels around the world with the same motto. “Love All/Serve All” is now the official brand of a global restaurant and hotel chain.

Restaurant #2: In the small community of Cannon Beach, Oregon a caffeine quest led me to a local coffee shop. The door was locked. I pulled harder. Still locked. Then I saw a hand-written sign inserted into the screen door: “Out to Lunch. Be back at 1:30.” Still not believing my eyes, I walked to the front window and peeked in. Sure enough, the lights were on, but no one was inside. Then my eye caught another handmade notice: “Store for sale. Great business location and opportunity.”

A café closed for lunch. A proprietor who was more concerned about feeding himself and taking care of his own stomach than serving hungry people walking the streets looking for a place to eat. A restaurant that didn’t know what business it was in.

No wonder he was going out of business. (For more, see my book Jesus Drives Me Crazy, pp.98ff)

The Hard Rock Café has it right. That little local coffee shop had it wrong. But it is not the only one.

No wonder 75% of the churches in America are going out of business — either declining or dying.” Out to Lunch” says it all. We’re so busy feeding our faces, taking care of our own needs, that we’re ignoring the hungry and thirsty who are being sent away empty.

Jesus challenges his disciples to embrace a “theology of lastness.” The church, the Body of Christ on earth, isn’t called to be “the first.” It is challenged to be “the last.” What does Jesus want his disciples to be “last” at?

We should be the last to leave the side of a sick bed.
We should be the last to let a grieving spouse sit alone.
We should be the last to write off the children whose parents have failed them or thrown them away.
We should be the last to ignore the homeless camped out along our streets.
We should be the last to allow hunger to gnaw at the bellies of our neighbors.
We should be the last to shrug our shoulders at ongoing environment degradation.
We should be the last to let despair grind down the powerless.
We should be the last to condone cruelty of any kind, to any living thing.
We should be the last to let human hatred triumph over divine love.

What if we were to implement an Operation Omega — where holding last place, last ditch, last stand options isn’t a last gasp, but is evidence of the first new deep breaths of the Spirit of Christ reborn in our midst?

How low can we go? Jesus told his disciples that they must be “slave to all.” Whatever heap we stand before — we are to burrow to the bottom of it. There is only one way for disciples to reach these new lows. Climbing to the top is a human achievement, but sinking to the bottom of the barrel takes the divine presence. To be “slave to all” requires the incarnation of Christ in our lives every day — “I can do all things through Christ who strengthens me” (Philippians 4:13).

The secret to being last is the three letter word “all.”

For mortals it is impossible, but not for God: “for God all things are possible” (Mark 10:27).

If you are Christ’s, “all things are yours” (1 Corinthians 3:21). God wants to do in your life “above all that we ask or think” (Ephesians 3:20).

God will supply “all your need” (Philippians 4:19).

You want it all? The only way you can “have it all” is if you realize you can’t have it all! You can only have all that you are willing to sacrifice for, value most, pay the cost for, counting “all things but loss” (Philippians 3:8). That is the only way we can become “slaves to all.”

As Elvis Presley’s song “Big Hunk of Love” put it, “I ain’t greedy, Baby, all I want is all you got!”

All God wants is all you got. Nothing more, nothing less. In the words of the Jewish Shema, spoken daily by the observant — words I like to call “God for Dummies” God is to be loved “with all”

with all your heart,
with all your soul,
with all your strength,
and with all your mind.”

“Love All. Serve All.” That’s how you launch Operation Omega.

So let’s each of us launch Operation Omega this week. Here are some suggestions of how you’d conduct Operation Omega:

1) Purposively let others get in line before you.

2) Try to be the last in line. And pray for those who seem most hurried and stressed because they’re not first in line.

3) If someone in back of you at the check-out line has less items than you do, or even if they don’t but seem in a hurry, let them go in front of you.

4) Let other cars “in” when they need an assist.

5) Measure your success at sporting events not by how many points you can score, but how many assists you can generate.

Let’s remember our mantra: What is the motto and mantra of Operation Omega? “Love All. Serve All.” (I can’t hear you!)

“Love All. Serve All.”

ChristianGlobe Networks, Inc., Leonard Sweet Sermons, by Leonard Sweet