Mark 9:33-37 · Who Is the Greatest?
Repetition, Repetition, Repetition
Mark 9:30-37 · Proverbs 31:10-31 · Psalm 1
Sermon
by Thomas C. Willadsen
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They were on the road, going up to Jerusalem, and Jesus was walking ahead of them; they were amazed, and those who followed were afraid. He took the twelve aside again and began to tell them what was to happen to him, saying, See, we are going up to Jerusalem, and the Son of Man will be handed over to the chief priests and the scribes, and they will condemn him to death; then they will hand him over to the Gentiles; they will mock him, and spit upon him, and flog him, and kill him; and after three days he will rise again.  Mark 10:32-34 (NRSV).

In two chapters of Mark’s gospel, Jesus told his disciples in plain, concrete language that he was going to be tortured, killed, and would rise after three days. He did not speak metaphorically or with hidden meaning or intention. He told the inner circle, his session (Yes, I assume that Jesus was Presbyterian, but please substitute for own denomination’s name for your congregational ruling board.) what lay ahead of him. The first time, Peter rebuked him. Six days later Jesus told them again, but they did not understand and were afraid to ask. The third time he told them, it doesn’t say how they reacted. But the very next thing that happened was a dispute between James and John, two of the disciples on the executive committee who were brothers, who requested to sit on either side of Jesus in glory. This indicates to me that they still didn’t get what Jesus was talking about. Jesus told them, repeated the message again, and repeated it a third time. Each time he told those closest to him and each time they didn’t understand.

I take a great interest in helping and mentoring people who are new to the ministry. The way I see it, I learned so much from my mistakes that it’s a shame to waste them, so I try to teach others from my experiences. One bit of advice I give to new ministers is, “Listen to the stories that people tell. When people repeat their stories, repeat your listening. Try to find out why this story is so important.”

I used to visit a member of my church who would tell me what he did during World War II. He worked as an electrical engineer, designing equipment for planes. He had several patents to his credit and was quite proud of the work he had done in the war effort. But he also told me how hard he had tried to enlist in the army. One day he enlisted and the next day he was sent back to work. The next week he tried to enlist in a different city but was prevented from doing so. The government and his employer conspired to keep him out of uniform and keep him at his drafting table. It was quite a story, — and when I heard it the third time I realized that he felt guilty, embarrassed, maybe even ashamed — 40 plus years after the war ended, that he had served his country from the safety of his office, rather than in the trenches of war.

It wasn’t so much what the man said, but that he said it several times that I began to look deeper to see what was really important.

There aren’t many things that Jesus told his disciples three times in one gospel. He certainly did not repeat himself three times in three chapters about anything else but his coming death and resurrection. He told them openly, plainly, to put it in modern terms he was completely transparent and still they just… didn’t… get… it….

I was at a preaching conference two decades ago and at the start of the first meeting we were asked, “What’s your greatest fear as a preacher?”

Someone shouted, “Repeating myself!”

“Okay. What’s your second greatest fear as preacher?”

A voice from the other side of the room shouted, “Repeating myself!” Preachers live in fear of repeating ourselves. I keep a log on my desk and I record in it stories and illustrations I use to make a particular point, lest I repeat one. When I’m teaching Bible classes, I watch people’s faces carefully, because I often forget which session I have given the speech about digging biblical manuscripts out of the ground, scribal errors, or Hebrew vowel points. I love to give these speeches, I treasure, even seek, to make these digressions, but do not want to repeat myself-- especially when there is so little time for the class in the first place.

Jesus repeated himself as he spoke to his disciples. He gave the same message to them three times in the course of about two weeks. He spoke bluntly and they didn’t understand. Jesus didn’t fear repeating himself because his message was so important.

I know that repetition is an important part of education. My two- year-old is learning to count these days. I count the steps for him as we go down and he repeats. Now he knows there’s a number past two. He won’t learn his numbers if we only count one time. He needs to hear them and repeat them.

At our last church supper, we were talking about Matthew’s version of the Lord’s Prayer; it’s different from Luke’s. There were about a dozen people there and none of us remembered when we learned the Lord’s prayer. We must have learned it in Sunday school, or at home, or maybe even from reciting it every week during worship. It was the repetition that etched the words permanently into our memories.

Jesus told his disciples three times that he was going to be tortured and killed. He told them he would rise again after three days. He told them. Six days later he told them again. He told them a third time, just before going into Jerusalem, on the eve of what we call Palm Sunday. He kept telling them.

Each time, the very next thing that happened in scripture was a discussion of personal status. Maybe a better term would be something like “our personal response” to Jesus’ news of death and resurrection. First, Jesus said that to follow him one must deny oneself and take up one’s cross. Next, in the gospel lesson for this morning, the disciples had been arguing about which of them was the greatest — but Jesus pointed out that the last shall be first, and welcoming a child is the same as welcoming God.

Jesus’ call to service and sacrifice in this week’s gospel lesson, just like last week’s lesson, doesn’t have any immediate, obvious appeal. To be great we are instructed to be servants. To be exalted and praised we are instructed to reach out to the people who are the least able to repay us for our efforts. We are to offer hospitality — that is, we are to say, and mean — that strangers are welcome, that it is well that they have come to visit, that we are pleased that they have to come to visit — to people who do not have homes to which they can welcome us in return. Jesus told his disciples that there was no quid pro quo offered to those who follow him.

And yet… and yet…

I assure you that there is compensation to taking up one’s cross and following Christ. And there is compensation for those who agree to serve as deacons and elders in this congregation. Let me very clear about this right now — the compensation I speak of is not monetary. No one will make any money by being a deacon. But there is reward.

Our deacons visit the members of the congregation who cannot attend worship. Many of these people have been members for decades. The joy they feel in having contact with this church, in hearing what’s going on here, in knowing that the work of the church continues is contagious.

Two years ago, I did a funeral for one of our long-standing members. This man’s grandson told me he believed in God, but he also believed he could do good (yes, “good” is a noun here.) without taking part in the life of a church. He gave donations to food pantries and homeless shelters when he felt like it. It made him feel good. Maybe it even made him feel virtuous. What he didn’t see was that his grandfather’s church, especially the deacons, had looked after his grandfather faithfully. They did this, not because there was anything in it for them, but because that’s what we do. Every one of the deacons who visited this man felt a friendship with him that was its own reward. In offering kindness, attention, or time to those who cannot pay us back we witness to the gospel faithfully.

This month we have started looking for deacons and elders to serve on our boards. While the deacons oversee ministries of caring, elders who serve on the session make virtually every decision that we make as a congregation.

There is power one could say, in service as an elder, but I’ve never known anyone at this church agree to serve because they were seeking power. Many agree to serve because they know their gifts are needed by the church. Others agree to serve because they believe passionately that the church needs to move in new directions. I try to emphasize that leadership in the church is servant leadership, after the model of Christ’s sacrifice. I think it’s irresponsible to say that taking a term on the board of deacons or the session will be easy or that the commitment is negligible. Serving has costs, it takes time and energy; it requires us to use our minds, our hearts, and our hands.

And yet… and yet… responding to the Holy Spirit’s call to serve also has rewards. You may discover that you have interests and abilities you didn’t realize. You will make new friends and deepen existing friendships. You will learn — I insist on that! — and you will be given opportunities to respond to Christ’s call, to Christ’s sacrifice. Something he told us about openly and plainly. In working for the church, using the energy, intelligence, imagination and love that God has given you, you will find joy and compensation. When the call comes — remember the call comes from God, through the voice of the congregation — please give the congregation’s request of the spirit to use for the common good, give the request some serious, prayerful consideration.

Amen.

CSS Publishing Company, Inc., Gratitude on the prairie: cycle B sermons for Proper 18-Thanksgiving based on the gospel texts, by Thomas C. Willadsen