Mark 9:33-37 · Who Is the Greatest?
Things a Child Can Teach Us
Mark 9:30-37
Sermon
by King Duncan
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Some of you of a certain age will remember when Roman Catholic Bishop Fulton J. Sheen was one of television’s brightest stars. For those of you who were not even born when Sheen was giving his televised talks, you might be amazed that he twice won an Emmy Award for Most Outstanding Television Personality, and was featured on the cover of Time magazine. He also received thousands of letters from his viewers.

One mother wrote that her son was under her feet while she was working in the kitchen. She said to him: “Go into the parlor, turn on the television, listen to Bishop Sheen. He’s smart. You will learn something.”

The boy did as he was told. At the moment Sheen appeared on television, he was writing the word “sex” on the blackboard. Obviously that was the theme of his broadcast that day.

The boy ran back to his mother and said: “Bishop Sheen isn’t so smart. He doesn’t know how to spell six.” (1)

Children will keep you on your toes, won’t they?

A woman wrote to Reader’s Digest recently to tell about an incident involving one of her five children. She said they had just finished tucking the kids into bed when three-year-old Billy began to wail. Turns out, he had accidentally swallowed a penny and was sure he was going to die.

Desperate to calm him, she said her husband palmed a penny that he had in his pocket and pretended to pull it from Billy’s ear. Billy was delighted. In a flash, he snatched it from his father’s hand, swallowed it, and demanded, “Do it again!”

Yes, they keep us on our toes. But, the truth is, if you pay attention to them, there is much you can learn from children.

You may know a story told on scientist Albert Einstein. One of his neighbors, the mother of a ten-year-old girl, noticed that the child often visited Einstein’s house. The woman wondered at this, and the child explained: “I had trouble with my homework in arithmetic. People said that at No. 112 there lives a very big mathematician, who is also a very good man. I asked him to help me. He was very willing, and explained everything very well. He said I should return whenever I find a problem too difficult.”

Alarmed at the child’s boldness, the girl’s mother went to Einstein to apologize. Einstein said, “You don’t have to excuse yourself. I have learned more from the conversations with the child than she has from me.”

Jesus would have understood what Dr. Einstein was saying.

Jesus and his disciples were traveling through Galilee. They returned to Capernaum. When they got settled in from their journey Jesus asked his disciples, “What were you arguing about on the road?”

The disciples were embarrassed and didn’t say anything. Why? Because they had been arguing about which of them was the greatest. Jesus sat down and, as if they were children, called his disciples to gather around him. Then he said, “Anyone who wants to be first,” Jesus said to his disciples, “must be the very last, and the servant of all.”

And then as if to drive his point home Jesus gave the disciples an object lesson. He took a child and placed it among them. Taking the child into his arms he said, “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.”

I am so thankful that this passage is in the New Testament. It reminds us that Jesus had a high regard for children. This is interesting because children were not viewed favorably in ancient Israel. They were considered one of the lowest elements in society. (2) Children, along with women, old men, and slaves, were viewed as physically weak burdens on society who had little value to the wider life of the community. In Greece and Rome, it was an accepted practice to abandon unwanted children along the roadsides to die. Jesus’ attitude toward children could not have been more different. He warned his followers not to despise children nor to cause them to stumble.

This passage is not the only place in Scripture where we find Jesus glorifying children. He enjoyed the presence of children. You remember that wonderful scene where the disciples were keeping the children away from Jesus, afraid that they might bother the Master. And Jesus said, as translated in the King James English Version, “Suffer the little children to come to me.” (Mt. 19:14)

Some of us smile at that particular archaic translation: “Suffer the little children . . .” We can remember “suffering” through Sunday school and worship as children ourselves. The modern translation “Let the children to come unto me . . .” is far more accurate.

Jesus even elevated children higher than this when he said, “Truly I tell you, anyone who will not receive the kingdom of God like a little child will never enter it.” (Luke 18:17)

We don’t know everything Christ meant by that, but it reminds us how precious the children of our church are, and the children of our community, and all the children of the world.

Today’s lesson reminds us that children are great teachers. An anonymous author has made a list of some things you don’t know until you have kids. For example, without kids you wouldn’t know:

  • Who John Jacob Jingleheimer Schmidt is.
  • You wouldn’t know how to change a diaper in the dark, in a parked car, on a standing child, and all of the above simultaneously . . .
  • You wouldn’t know which lines of “The Cat in the Hat” and “If I Ran the Circus” can be skipped over without a child noticing.
  • Or the locations of public restrooms all across town.
  • Or, how little sleep a human body truly needs to function.
  • You wouldn’t know almost every Disney lyric ever penned.
  • Or why they call them Happy Meals.
  • Or the blessedness of naps.
  • And finally, without children you wouldn’t know how much you can love one human being. (3)

There are many more things we can learn from our children. Let me suggest a few.

For one thing, we wouldn’t know what unrestrained joy is. Watch a child at play and you will usually hear the wonderful sound of laughter.

According to experts in the field, children laugh four hundred times per day on average, whereas adults laugh only seventeen times per day. As we grow older, we lose the exuberant happiness of childhood. If it gets to you that your children are too exuberant at times, remind yourself to thank God for that exuberance. It is a sign that they are happy and healthy.

Rodger Nishioka, a professor at Columbia Seminary, had something to say on this subject when he returned from a trip to Africa one year. He was speaking to his students who would one day be pastors. He said that he never wanted to hear of any pastor complaining about a crying baby in worship. 

One Sunday on his trip, he had been in a rural, remote village assisting with a baptism.  Hundreds of people had come to the open air ceremony.  In the middle of the baptism, Rodger was surprised to find that the congregation was totally quiet.  All he could hear was the buzzing sound of the flies all around, but not a peep out of any of the parishioners or their many children.  Then he looked around into the vacant face of one child, then another, then another--they were silent from sickness and hunger. (5)

Every time you hear a child laugh, give thanks to God. And don’t allow your responsibilities to rob you of the gift of laughter. I know, for us adults life can be stressful.

Bill Vamos tells about a cartoon that he saw of a mother driving home with her four small children, the family dog, and several bags of groceries. On her face you can see a combination of tension, frustration, anger, and near hysteria, as the steering wheel begins to vibrate under her ever-tightening grip.

Behind her all four small children are talking at the same time. Listen to the conversation behind her: “Tell Billy to stop waving at the car behind us.” “Daddy’s good hat is back here and Dolly’s standing on it.” “Which bags are the lollipops in?” “Blow your horn and make that police car get out of the way, Mom.” “Janie just dropped the ketchup bottle on top of the prune juice, and the bag’s leaking.” “Drive faster, we’re missing a good program on TV.” “Stop bouncing the car, I can’t read the message on the cereal box.” “It’s cold back here, sitting on the frozen food.” “Who put the fingerprints on the back window?” “Why’d you turn the radio off?” “Jimmy’s opening the cookie bag.” And finally, this one revealing comment: “You don’t smile very much when you drive, do you Mommy?”  (6)

We all understand. Life is stressful. We need children or grandchildren to remind us what unrestrained joy is all about.

Children also teach us about unrestrained love. Most of us have encountered that love at some time in our lives and it brought us indescribable joy.

Children know how to express love in the most beautiful ways. And their love moves beyond the boundaries we adults put on our love. For example, they don’t reserve their love for people who are like them.

Business writer Ann Crittenden tells about a friend who found a three‑and‑a‑half‑year‑old boy sitting and staring at a little box containing wooden figures around a table, depict­ing the Last Supper. She asked him what he was thinking. The three‑and‑a‑half‑year‑old looked up and said, “You know, if Jesus could give a friend a party, he’d invite the whole world.” (7)

And that’s true. Sometimes children understand the heart of Jesus better than adults. Maybe that’s the point Jesus was trying to get across. Children teach us about unrestrained joy, unrestrained love, and most of all, about unrestrained faith.

Author and business consultant Ken Blanchard tells the wonderful story of a little girl named Schia. Maybe you remember that beautiful story. When Schia was 4 years old, her baby brother was born.

Says Blanchard, “Little Schia began to ask her parents to leave her alone with the new baby. They worried that, like most 4-year-olds, she might want to hit or shake him, so they said no.

“Over time, though, since Schia wasn’t showing signs of jealousy, they changed their minds and decided to let Schia have her private conference with the baby.

“Elated, Schia went into the baby’s room and shut the door, but it opened a crack--enough for her curious parents to peek in and listen. They saw little Schia walk quietly up to her baby brother, put her face close to his, and say, ‘Baby, tell me what God feels like. I’m starting to forget.’” (8)

What a beautiful story. But faith is the natural state of a child.

Robert Coles is an author, child psychiatrist, and professor emeritus at Harvard University. Years ago, he wrote an important book titled, The Spiritual Life of Children. Coles spent three decades meeting and interviewing children in many parts of the world to find out what they thought about life and God.

He discovered that children can be quite insightful in their thinking about faith and life. For example, he cited Mary, only ten years old, who said she wants to put her time on earth to good use. “The Lord wants you to do something,” she said. “If you don’t know what, then you’ve got to try hard to find out what. It may take time. You may make mistakes. But you must pray. [God will] lead you to your direction. He won’t hand you a piece of paper with a map on it, no, sir. He’ll whisper something, and at first you may not even hear, but if you trust in him and you keep turning to him, it will be all right.” (9)

That’s pretty good advice at any age. Listen to your children. God gave them to you so that you may guide them as they grow and mature. But God also gave them to you so that they may teach you about what is really important in life like unrestrained joy, love and faith.

What would we do without children--children to teach in Sunday school, and children to run through the halls on the way to worship? As we minister to them, we grow. They keep us in touch with what really matters. When we think that life is a matter of accumulation, domination and accommodation, the sound of a baby’s cry can bring us back to earth. A child’s laughter can brighten our entire world. A child’s love can give us something to live for, and a child’s faith can help keep a parent on the right track. “Whoever welcomes one of these little children in my name welcomes me,” says Christ. “And whoever welcomes me does not welcome me but the one who sent me.”

Amen.


1. Fulton J. Sheen, Treasure in Clay, The Autobiography of Fulton J. Sheen (Garden City, NY: Doubleday & Company, Inc., 1980), pp. 302-303.

2. Rodney L. Cooper, Holman New Testament Commentary, Mark: 2 (Kindle Edition).

3. Contributed. From the Internet. Source unknown.

4. Will Bowen, Happy Stories!: Real-Life Inspirational Stories from Around the World That Will Raise Your Happiness Level (Kindle Edition).

5. Andrew Foster Connors,

http://www.brownmemorialparkavenue.org/september%2024%202006.htm.

6. Bill J. Vamos, The Life that Listens (Waco: Word Books, 1980).

7. If You’ve Raised Kids, You Can Manage Anything (New York, NY: Gotham Books, 2004), pp. 236-237.

8. Executive Edge newsletter. Source: http://www.trinityurcvisalia.com/OTSer/ex34v5-7.html.

9. (Mariner Books, Reprint edition, 1991).

Dynamic Preaching, Collected Sermons, by King Duncan