Mark 9:33-37 · Who Is the Greatest?
The Way Up Is Down!
Mark 9:30-37
Sermon
by Robert Leslie Holmes
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There once was a palace servant who longed more than anything else in life to be a knight. He yearned to represent his king and vowed within himself that if he ever had a chance to be a knight he would serve his king as the noblest knight who ever lived. His dream came true. His great day came. At his knighthood ceremony, the former servant, now a knight, made a special oath within himself. He vowed that from that day forward he would bow his knees and lift his arms in homage to no one but his king.

As a knight, he was assigned to guard a remote city on the edge of the kingdom. On the day he took up his duties standing at attention in full armor at the city gate, an elderly peasant woman passed by on her way to the market. In a rickety cart, she carried some vegetables she had grown and hoped to sell. As she passed the knight, her rickety old vegetable cart hit a bump on the road and turned over. Potatoes, onions, carrots, and peas spilled everywhere. The peasant woman scurried to get them all back in her cart to no avail. She looked toward the knight in hopes he would help her but already he had forgotten what it was to be a servant. The knight stood there, unmoved, holding his pose. He would not bend to help her. He just stood at attention keeping his vow to never again bow his knees or lift his arms in homage to anyone but his king.

Years passed, and one day an elderly one-legged man hobbled by on his old crutch. Directly in front of the knight, the old man's crutch finally gave out and broke in two. "Sir knight," the old one-legged man begged, "please reach down and help me to get up again." The knight, unmoved by the old man's predicament, made no response. He held his pose proudly and remembered he had vowed that he would neither stoop nor lift a hand to help anyone but his king.

Decades passed, and the knight grew older. One day his granddaughter came by and said, "Papa, pick me up and take me to the fair." But, even for his own granddaughter the knight would not stoop, for within himself he had made a vow to bow only to his king. Finally, the day came for the king to come. This was the day for which the knight had longed since the day of his knighthood. As the king approached to inspect him, the knight stood proudly and stiffly at attention. As he did, the king noticed a tear rolling down the proud knight's cheek. "You are one of my noblest knights," said the king, "why are you crying?"

"Your majesty," the knight replied, "I took a vow that I would bow and lift my arms in homage to you alone, but now that you are here I am an old man unable to keep my vow any more. The years of standing here stiffly at attention, waiting for you to come, have taken their toll. The joints of my armor are rusted and I can no longer lift my arms or bend my knees." The wise king replied, "Perhaps if you had knelt to help all those people who passed by you, and lifted your arms to reach out to all the people who asked for your help, you would have been able to keep your vow to pay me homage today."

The Way Down Is Up!

Jesus Christ says, "If anyone wants to be first, he must be the very last, and the servant of all" (v. 35). Do you want to be first with God? Then get in the habit of stooping low, for the way up is down and the way down is up! Reach down to give a hand to someone in need. Sacrifice your wants for the needs of another. Practice the art of humility. Jesus, to illustrate this lesson, embraces a small child and says, "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" (v. 37). In a society that regarded its children as little more than trophies, most people overlooked children, but not Jesus. The King of kings is not found by prideful pomp and circumstance but by servitude.

When Leonard Bernstein was conductor of the New York Philharmonic Orchestra, a reporter asked him to name the most difficult instrument to play. Without hesitation, Bernstein replied, "Second fiddle. I can get plenty of first violinists, but to find someone who wants to play second fiddle with enthusiasm, that's a real problem. Yet, without the second fiddle, we have no harmony in the orchestra."

Pride Is A Baseless Emotion

Pride is perhaps the one thing above all things that we have no right to have because we did not create ourselves. Pride by its very nature sets itself up in competition with God who made us. It supplants who God is and what he has done to redeem us on Christ's cross and replaces it with a "me-first" mentality.

None of us lives to himself alone and none of us dies to himself alone. If we live, we live to the Lord; and if we die, we die to the Lord. So, whether we live or die, we belong to the Lord. — Romans 14:7-8

The praise song of pride is not "How Great Thou Art" but "How Great I Am!"

God alone created us and anything good about us. At the end of the creation week, the scriptures declare, "God saw all that he had made, and it was very good" (Genesis 1:31). Scripture further records,

Don't be deceived, my dear brothers. Every good and perfect gift is from above, coming down from the Father of the heavenly lights. — James 1:16-17

Therefore, we can say that human pride is a baseless thing. It is like Little Jack Horner within us screaming for attention and declaring, "What a good boy am I!" But, we are not good.

For all have sinned and fall short of the glory of God, and are justified freely by his grace through the redemption that came by Christ Jesus. — Romans 3:23-24

There is no one righteous, not even one. — Romans 3:10

Pride Is A Brainless Emotion

A proud person is like someone standing on bubbles and bragging blindly unaware that the bubbles soon will burst under the weight. Pride is like the gaudily dressed fellow on a Mardi Gras float. He looks good but for only a moment. The reality is that he is hiding behind his self-created grandeur. The proverb says, "Before his downfall a man's heart is proud, but humility comes before honor" (Proverbs 18:12). Pride is a brainless thing because it begins in our heart then breaks it.

Golfing great, Arnold Palmer, tells a story about the price his pride demanded in the 1961 Masters tournament in Augusta, Georgia: "I had a one-stroke lead and had just hit a very satisfying tee shot. I was in real good shape. As I approached my ball, I saw an old friend standing at the edge of the gallery. He motioned to me and held out his hand. I proudly took his congratulatory handshake. As soon as I did, I knew I had lost my focus. On my next two shots, I hit the ball into a sand trap, then put it over the edge of the green. I missed a putt and lost the Masters because for a moment pride overcame me. It was a stupid mistake." Arnie has won a lot of Masters in the meantime but he will never forget that one! Pride is not just a brainless emotion; pride can be a humiliating and expensive one.

Pride Is An Erratic Emotion

A certain minister told his congregation, "I have just composed the most magnificent sermon on humility you will ever hear but I will not preach it until I have a congregation big enough to deserve it." That is how pride works!

A master of disguise, pride can dress itself up in the Calvinist who boasts about his eternal security or in the Arminian who speaks about his salvation through constant personal righteousness. In each case, they forget their master, of whom the scripture teaches is the giver of faith.

[Salvation is] not from yourselves, it is the gift of God — not by works, so that no one can boast. For we are God's workmanship, created in Christ Jesus to do good works, which God prepared in advance for us to do. — Ephesians 2:8-10

Sometimes pride attends church and goes home bragging about what it did there. Pride forgets that church is never about us. It is only about Jesus who calls it "my church" (Matthew 16:18).

Be careful about pride for just about the time we think we have licked it, it secretly overcomes. It sneaks up on our blind side as we find ourselves thinking that we are not as bad as some other person, but we are! The person who says, "I do not have a problem with pride," does. We cannot whip pride! But, it can, and will, whip us.

Pride's Throne Room

"Before his downfall a man's heart is proud" (Proverbs 18:12). Pride originates in the human heart. Legend says that Benjamin Franklin learned this lesson well on a visit to Cotton Mather's house. Franklin later recalled, "Mather was showing me out of the house, and there was a very low beam near the doorway. I was still talking when Mather began shouting, ‘Stoop! Stoop!' I didn't understand what he meant and promptly banged my head on the beam. Mather smiled, ‘You're young, and have the world before you. Stoop as you go through life, and you will avoid many hard thumps.' That advice has been very useful to me. I avoided many misfortunes by not carrying my head too high in pride."

The heart is the throne room of pride. "The heart is deceitful above all things and beyond cure. Who can understand it?" (Jeremiah 17:9). This is what makes pride so hard for us to spot within us. It comes from the seat of deceitfulness. The spiritually healthy heart is one that bows down in humility and rises in praise and adoration for God alone.

Journey through Saint Paul's life via his letters and you see pride overcome in the power of the Holy Spirit. In 57 AD, Paul asserts his perception of authority to the Romans: "Inasmuch as I am an apostle of Gentiles, I make much of my ministry" (Romans 11:13). Two years later, in 59 AD, he writes to the Corinthians, "I am the least of the apostles and do not even deserve to be called an apostle" (1 Corinthians 15:9). Four years later, as Paul grows older and wiser in the Lord's service, he writes to the Ephesians, "I am less than the least of all God's people" (Ephesians 3:8). Then, after two more years of spiritual maturity, Paul tells young Timothy, "Christ Jesus came into the world to save sinners — of whom I am the worst." (1 Timothy 1:15). As Paul progresses in years and service for Christ he becomes smaller and smaller and Christ becomes larger. As his sense of self-importance sinks, so his praise and adoration for the God who so wonderfully saved him rises, and his desire to serve God grows. If you would be like Paul, crush pride and cultivate a passion for directing all your praise toward Christ.

The Way Up Is Down!

"If anyone wants to be first, he must be the very last, and the servant of all" (v. 35). The disciples discuss among themselves who would become "number one." Having just heard Jesus say that he must be betrayed and killed, their biggest concern is about who will be the next leader. Their conversation was insensitive at best. That they would forget so soon the impact of this one they followed should tell us something about human nature that none of us should like to hear. The Lord takes this moment to teach them a lesson about pride and servitude. If you want to be first among your brothers, he tells them, aim for being last. If you would be the greatest, start out by being a servant. It turns this world's way of thinking upside down. Well, actually, it turns it right side up! The lesson seems simple but the disciples do not understand. Later, near the end of his ministry, Jesus returns to this theme and demonstrates what he means by stooping to wash the disciples' feet. On the day after he washes their feet, Jesus takes up the cross, society's ultimate symbol of sin and shame, and dies the death we all deserve. After his resurrection, God exalts him and makes that cross the world's ultimate plus sign.

D. L. Moody was a shoe sales clerk when he overheard someone in the store where he worked say that the world had not yet seen what God might do with someone completely sold out to Jesus Christ. Moody prayed and asked God to help him be that person. He laid down his life in Christ's service. God used Moody as no other man in his generation. One example of Moody's servant heart happened when a large group of European pastors came to study at one of D. L. Moody's Northfield Bible Conferences in Massachusetts not long before the end of the nineteenth century. Following the European tradition of that time, each visitor put his shoes outside his room, expecting that hall servants would gather them up and clean them overnight. The visitors did not realize that this custom was uniquely European.

Walking along the dormitory halls late that night, D. L. Moody noticed the shoes and remembered the custom from his days of ministry in Europe. He determined that those shoes would be cleaned and mentioned the need to some ministerial students. They met Moody's suggestion with silence and pseudo-pious excuses. Moody would not stop. He returned to the dormitory hallway and gathered up the shoes. Alone in his room, the world's most famous evangelist of his time began to clean and polish the shoes. The incident might have never been known had not a friend's unexpected arrival at Moody's room revealed the secret. When the European visitors opened their doors the next morning, their shoes were shining. The Europeans had no idea who had cleaned their shoes. Moody told no one. It seems he believed no one needed to know. His unexpected visitor friend told a few people and for the rest of the conference there was no shortage of secret shoe shiners.

It is likely that the European pastors returned home never knowing this happened. The whole episode, however, is a vital insight into why God blessed D. L. Moody's ministry as he did. Famous or not, Moody never forgot what it was to be a shoe salesperson. Moody's servant heart was probably the reason for his true greatness. Jesus says, "If anyone wants to be first, he must be ... the servant of all" (v. 35).

If the Jesus you follow allows you to feel comfortable promoting your own agenda, then either he is not the Jesus of the Bible or you are not following closely enough. All who follow Jesus are called to be servants whose lives are marked by humility and service to others.

Ponder our Lord's own example.

Your attitude should be the same as that of Christ Jesus: Who, being in very nature God, did not consider equality with God something to be grasped, but made himself nothing, taking the very nature of a servant, being made in human likeness. And being found in appearance as a man, he humbled himself and became obedient to death — even death on a cross! Therefore God exalted him to the highest place and gave him the name that is above every name, that at the name of Jesus every knee should bow, in heaven and on earth and under the earth, and every tongue confess that Jesus Christ is Lord, to the glory of God the Father. — Philippians 2:5-11

"Humility comes before honor" (Proverbs 18:12). Our Lord "humbled himself" all the way to the cross. There is a difference between pride and honor. Nowhere does God's word say that we are not to have honor. He forbids only that we would be proud of our honors. In his time, D. L. Moody's name was a household word on both sides of the Atlantic. Yet, he did not deem polishing others' shoes too low an office for him to fill. Moody thought rightly of himself. He was a servant of Christ and therefore of Christ's servants.

Vanquishing a prideful heart does not mean that we are to consider ourselves of no use. To the contrary! As Christ's disciples, we are endowed with extraordinary gifts from on high. We do not say, "I am no good. There is nothing I can do." Rather, we say, "God has made me better than I once was and has equipped me with this gift. Therefore, I must use it for the advancement of his kingdom." In that spirit, we live mindful that whatever we have we have received from Christ.

Nor does crushing pride mean that we are not to be ambitious about improving ourselves. Considering what it cost Christ to redeem us, we owe it to him to be the very best we can be in every way. We will settle for no less than that. People who are truly great know their greatness is not in themselves but that it is Christ's greatness living through them. Therefore, they will work to improve themselves so that they can give their best for the master.

What, then, are the rewards of replacing pride with humility? Jesus says, "If anyone wants to be first, he must be the very last, and the servant of all" (v. 35). The reward is simply that just as God "exalted (Jesus) to the highest place," so also God will exalt all who surrender their pride at the foot of Jesus' cross. The more we can remove pride from our hearts, the more we will be used and exalted. The end of pride is the beginning of a new life in Jesus Christ. Thanks be to God that we can resolve to defeat pride and live in humility before the face of him who left heaven to take our cross upon himself. Amen.

CSS Publishing Company, Inc., Sermons for Sundays after Pentecost (Middle Third): Bread and More! Forever! For Free!, by Robert Leslie Holmes