The servant of all (Mark 9:33-35) August 13, 2016

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Read it in a year – John 5-6

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Today’s Devotional

Mark 9:33-35
At last, they came to Capernaum where they gathered in a house.
Jesus: What was it I heard you arguing about along the way?
They looked down at the floor and wouldn’t answer, for they had been arguing among themselves about who was the greatest of Jesus’ disciples.
Jesus: Whoever wants to be first must be last, and whoever wants to be the greatest must be the servant of all.

What do Jesus’ words mean for us today?

There is a lot of talk about servant leadership, especially in Christian circles. We’re told if you want to really make an impact on the world you need to lead, but you need to serve the people you lead. You need to show others the way, guide them to the truth, teach them about God and His plans for this world and for all humankind, but do it as a servant. Leader and servant are pretty contradictory terms when you think about it.

A leader is defined as a person who leads: as a : guide, conductor b (1) : a person who directs a military force or unit (2) : a person who has commanding authority or influence c (1) : the principal officer of a British political party (2) : a party member chosen to manage party activities in a legislative body (3) : such a party member presiding over the whole legislative body when the party constitutes a majority d (1) : conductor c (2) : a first or principal performer of a group

While a servant is defined as one that serves others ; especially : one that performs duties about the person or home of a master or personal employer.

So how do you help others find their way to Christ, lead them toward Him, guide them to the truth, do the things that are described as the roles of a leader and yet live the life of a servant? Isn’t that an oxymoron, to ask someone to be both, to be a servant-leader? Does Jesus know what He’s saying when He tells us to lead from the back of the line instead of the front? How can we do that? What does He really mean?

I think the answer comes in two areas. First, we must check our character and our attitude. Jesus starts His ministry with the Sermon on the Mount. You can read it in Matthew chapters five through seven. He opens that sermon with a section we have title the Beatitudes. Stick a pause after the first sylable and you get His meaning in that sermonette. They are the Be Attitudes. He asks us to change how we think about ourselves and about others. He asks us to love God and love our all of His creation. He asks us to let God change our internal wiring so the way we think is transformed to the way He thinks about things. He wants our character, our attitude to mimic His.

When our character comes in line with His, we see others on an equal footing. All races, all socio-economic levels, all nationalities, both genders, all ages, everyone is created by God and for His purposes. When we recognize that, our attitude toward them changes. We begin to love all people. We begin to sorrow for those who cannot see the truth of God’s word because it is available to them and they know what it says about Jesus, the only way into God’s kingdom. If they choose to rebel against God, it is to their eternal peril. When we see the doom individuals bring upon themselves through God’s eyes, it should break our hearts.

The second thing this servant leader concept brings to mind is we must not only have Jesus’ attitude, but we must act like Jesus. No one can say Jesus did not serve those around Him. He proved Himself a servant day after day as He fed and healed and exorcised demons and preached and raised the dead and did anything and everything He could to ease the misery of those with whom He came in contact. Jesus served. I think He often served to the point of exhaustion. It why He sometimes had to get away and be alone with His Father. He just had to rest. He even washed His disciples feet as an example of His servanthood.

So are we to wash the feet of those we lead? Maybe. That’s not so necessary today since most people wear shoes and socks and we don’t have animals defecating in the streets anymore. But the point Jesus makes is that nothing is too demeaning for leaders to do if it furthers God’s kingdom. Nothing is below the level of what a leader should be willing to perform as we work along side those who work for us.

I have to tell you, the military and most organizations have their organization charts upside down. If we really focused on who is important in an organization, it’s the people at the bottom of those charts that do the work that make the products and clean the offices and answer the phones. Yes, the CEOs and the generals make decisions and take a lot of risk with their careers as they lead those within their organizations, but without all those people below them, the missions would never be accomplished. As a leadership consultant, I often shock those senior folks by showing those charts just that way, upside down, to get the point across. The people at the top should be the servant of all those they lead.

Jesus was a servant and He is the Son of God. If He can lower Himself to perform the lowliest task of the lowest servant in the household, washing animal feces off the feet of the guests before dinner, don’t you think we should serve those we lead as well? People flocked to His leadership style. If you want to be first, be last, the servant of all.

The Voice Bible Copyright © 2012 Thomas Nelson, Inc. The Voice™ translation © 2012 Ecclesia Bible Society All rights reserved.
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