The humility of a child
Mark 9:30 They left that
place and passed through Galilee. Jesus did not want anyone to know where they
were, 31 because he was teaching his disciples. He said to them,
"The Son of Man is going to be betrayed into the hands of men. They will
kill him, and after three days he will rise." 32 But they did
not understand what he meant and were afraid to ask him about it. 33
They came to Capernaum .
When he was in the house, he asked them, "What were you arguing about on
the road?" 34 But they kept quiet because on the way they had
argued about who was the greatest. 35 Sitting down, Jesus called the
Twelve and said, "If anyone wants to be first, he must be the very last,
and the servant of all." 36 He took a little child and had him
stand among them. Taking him in his arms, he said to them, 37
"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."
We don’t know her name. We only know her as the Israeli servant girl to
Naaman’s wife. This little girl had been ripped out of her parent’s hands by
bands of raiders from Aram. Her parents knew her and loved her, but she remains
anonymous to us. That does not mean that she was unimportant or powerless,
though.
When Naaman, the commander of Aram’s army – and this little girl’s master –
contracts leprosy, it is this little girl who says, “If only my master would
see the prophet who is in Samaria! He would cure him of his leprosy” (2 Kings
5:34). She doesn’t appear to have any animosity or ill will toward her master.
She doesn’t delight in her master’s misfortune. She doesn’t announce to Naaman,
“See, this is God’s judgment on you for kidnapping me from my home! You get
what you deserve!”
No, she is humble and unassuming and respectful. Because of her, Naaman
goes to Israel, washes in the Jordan River, and he is miraculously healed of
his leprosy. One of the greatest miracles happens because of the humility of an
anonymous servant girl.
The little girl is easily forgotten for
she is in the shadows. Not even her name is remembered. Yet without her — without
her humility, without her compassion, without her taking no thought for being
last — this miracle would never have occurred. The most powerless person in
this story is the key to it all. God uses her who is nothing to affect
everything. (Chad Bird, The Nameless
Little Girl Who Changed a General’s Life)
Jesus very well could have used this
example when speaking with His disciples when they arrived in Capernaum. None
of them had the guts to answer His question, “What were you arguing about on the road?” Jesus
might then have said to them, “I heard you arguing about which of you is the
greatest. I do have divine hearing, after all. Peter thinks he’s cooler because
he got to walk on water. Matthew thinks he’s superior because he left a
lucrative tax collecting scheme. Nathaniel thinks he’s more illustrious because
I saw him under a fig tree. Andrew thinks he’s special because he followed me
first. Judas thinks he’s more talented because he controls the money purse. But
let me tell you, until you are like this little unnamed servant girl who
rescued her servant’s life with her unassuming character and powerful witness
of God’s wonders, then you’ve got it all wrong. I exalted her in my kingdom.
She allowed herself to be nothing and allowed me to make her everything.”
Then He added, “If
anyone wants to be first, he must be the very last, and the servant of all.”
The disciples found it necessary to figure out who
among them was the greatest. Their sinful pride was getting the better of them.
The Bible preaches that humility is wisdom (James 3:13) but that God detests
the proud (Proverbs 16:5). In fact, Solomon writes that God opposes the proud
but gives grace to the humble (Proverbs 3:34). The Bible is filled with people
who fell from their lofty perch of self-promoted greatness. Miriam mocked her
younger brother Moses for marrying a foreigner and the Lord gave her leprosy
for seven days. Naaman didn’t want to get into the Jordan River because it was
dirty and almost missed out on his cleansing. King Solomon had built a
magnificent temple for the Lord, but his faith became lost in too much worldly
wisdom, too much money and too much sex. King Hezekiah was proud and did not
thank God for curing his illness, so the Lord’s wrath was on Judah and
Jerusalem.
Jesus knew the danger of pride
when He watched Satan rebel against God’s authority in the beginning of
creation. Pride was then the bait that Satan used to lure Adam and Eve away
from God and into eating the forbidden fruit.
Ever since then, we have been
infected with pride. Whenever we sin, we are arrogantly asserting that we know
better than God does. Husbands and wives hurt the one they love because they
don’t want to put the other first in their marriage. Teenagers remain sullen and
locked in their rooms, thinking they are fine while fighting their depression.
The addict won’t seek counseling for his or her addiction – the arguing that
ruins the marriage, the alcohol that rules the mind, or the sexual images that
control the computer.
We don’t want to pray because
we don’t want to admit we need help. We don’t read the Bible because we don’t
want God telling us what to do. We don’t want to go to church because we don’t
want to hang around with all those hypocrites. “Sunday after Sunday, sermons,
children’s devotions and Bible classes, the pastor just keeps harping on sin,
sin, sin. I don’t want to hear all that talk. I’m better than that!”
It’s all pride! And pride is a
terrible master. Pride makes “Me, Myself and I” into the new three persons of
my own personal trinity. Then we refuse to bow before the real Trinity of
Father, Son, and Holy Spirit.
Jesus settles the argument by
bringing a child into the disciples’ discussion and teaches, “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.” With this, Jesus not only shatters their pride and explodes their
notion of greatness, but He also gives them a picture of Himself. The Son of
God, who, though the greatest, became for us the least. Who came down from
heaven and became a child. The Creator became a creature. He emptied Himself of
all His heavenly splendor, taking the very nature of a slave. The One who was
subject to no laws, put Himself under the laws of both God and Caesar. The One
who is Life and the Giver of Life, surrendering His life to be executed on a
cross.
Jesus is the answer to the disciples’ argument. The Greatest One was
standing right in the midst of them, serving them as a labor of love. Coming
and serving the least, the lowest, the outcast, the sinner, and even those
twelve who were arguing that day about who was the greatest. Coming in humility
and compassion toward us helpless children. Giving His life so we might have
life. Risen and glorified, He now calls us to believe in Him and be like Him,
“proud” to be a humble servant.
In Jesus we see true greatness and glory in the eyes of God – in His
humility, in lowering Himself, in His self-sacrifice. Greatness in the eyes of
God is not ascending to the heights, but descending to the depths. It is not to
be served, but to serve. It is not to elevate yourself, but to lay down your
life for others. It is not to act like a proud adult, but to act like a humble
child.
God shows us that a little servant girl, nameless and powerless, is the
perfect choice for Him to do great things. Rather than building a tower to make
a name for ourselves like the builders of the tower of Babel, the Lord wants us
to submit to His will. To understand that when we allow ourselves to serve
others, Christ is serving them through us. To appreciate that when we don’t try
to become great and powerful, Christ makes us truly great and powerful in Him.
We simply believe in the God who made Himself the last of all, the servant of
all, that He might make us first of all – kings and queens, coheirs with Him of
the glory of the heavenly Father.
Jesus took a little child into His arms and said to the disciples, “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.”
The radical nature of Jesus’ words is hidden in this simple statement He
made about children. In Jesus’ day, children were largely unseen and unheard.
It was not that they were not valued, but that they were valued about what they
would become and not valued by what they were. Today we live in a world that is
even more unfriendly to children. There has been a holocaust among our children
for over four decades. Parents use their children as pawns in their chess game in
the courts. Parents are consumed with their careers and desires and personal
happiness, and the kids are secondary. Children are kept busy with sports and
entertained by television so that parents do not actually spend time conversing
and communicating with their own kids. Children often grow up strangers within
their own homes.
How do you demonstrate the humility of a child? You
can begin by taking care of God’s children – your children. Husbands, love your
wives as Christ loved the Church. Put your wife on a pedestal. Make your
desires secondary to those of your wife. Serve her the way Christ served us.
Your children will see that love. They will experience that love. Then they
will demonstrate that love.
Mothers, respect your husbands the way the Church
respects Christ. Build him up. Encourage him. Speak well of him – to his face,
to your children, among your friends. Submit your desires to the will of the
leader in your home. Serve him the way the Church serves Christ. Your children
will see that respect. They will experience that respect. Then they will
demonstrate that respect.
Together, raise your children in God’s Word. Train
them from little on so that when they are older they will not turn from that
Word implanted in their hearts. Naaman’s servant girl shared a miraculous
message with her master. Miriam kept her younger brother safe while he was
floating in a reed basket down the Nile River. Joseph remained respectful to
Potiphar as a teenager sold into his employ. The little boy gave his lunch
basket to the Son of God. All of these children must have had God’s Word
implanted in their hearts by their parents so that when the time came, they
demonstrated humility in their godly service to others.
None of you will become famous or great in the eyes of
the world by loving her wife or respecting your husband or teaching God’s Word
to your children. But that’s OK. You will be an unsung hero to your children. You
will be humble before the Lord and therefore great in the kingdom of God. You
will be welcomed to sit on the lap of Jesus. To be the greatest is to be the
servant of all. We learn that from an anonymous servant girl. Amen.
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