"Being Humble Servants"
Twelfth Sunday after Pentecost
Commemoration of Moses
Rally Day
September 4, 2011
Romans 13:1-10

On one occasion the disciples asked Jesus, “Who is the greatest in the
Kingdom of Heaven?” Without missing a beat, Jesus said, “You’re
lookin’ at ’im.” They all, without missing a beat, said, “Well, yes,
of course we know that. What we meant was, among us. You know, the
greatest apart from You.”

Because it wasn’t enough to know that Jesus was the greatest. They
needed to know among themselves. They couldn’t be content with just
knowing that He is the greatest. Not enough to know that they must be
humble and simply submit to His Lordship.

Maybe the insistence on being the greatest is more of a male trait,
but each one of us as Christians, male or female, tends to look at
Jesus and not see Him for who He is. Each of us tends to look at Him
and see someone who can help us get to where we want to go. We tend
not to look at Him and simply see that He is the one we should be
concentrating on and not ourselves.

How this plays out in daily life is that we so often forget how we are
to view others and interact with them. It doesn’t matter if we are
related to them or are friends with them or they are our brother or
sister Christians or they are neighbors or co-workers or anyone. So
often we just interact with others as if they are just other people.
We often forget that God has called us to serve others. When we are
wrapped up in our own world we forget who it is we said we were in the
Collect we prayed a little bit ago: we are humble servants.

That’s why Jesus put a child before the disciples. Not because that
child was greater than they were. Because they thought of themselves
more highly than they ought to. Because it’s in being as a child that
we see what greatness is all about.

That’s why it’s so difficult when it comes to living in this world.
It’s hard enough to deal with temptations and people who run roughshod
over the Christian faith and people run roughshod over us and a lot of
difficult situations and decisions we face. But then we are confronted
by our Lord who puts a little child in front of us. We are faced with
the reality that we too often think that putting away childish things
means thinking highly of ourselves rather than humbling ourselves. We
are met with our Lord basically telling us that if you want to know
who is the greatest in the Kingdom of Heaven, it certainly isn’t you.

Today in our congregation we are starting our new Sunday School year.
If you were to go to any school in the country and talk to the
students about what the first day of school means they’d probably talk
about the fact that a new school year is starting and that this is the
day it’s starting. It’s often not until you’re out of school and an
adult that you see that the first day of each school year was far less
important than each day of each year and every day of your life. You
don’t just learn in school. You learn in life. Hopefully you will
continue to be learning throughout your life.

Rally Day in the big picture is nothing more than a day to realize the
importance that it’s not just today but everyday that we are to be
learning the Word of God. Learning the Word of God is looking at Jesus
and instead of asking Him about yourself you ask Him about how you can
serve Him. The way you serve Him is by serving others.

Imagine if Paul addressed our interaction with government the way the
disciples asked their question of Jesus. Christians, you are not of
this world, you are of the Kingdom of God. Have nothing to do with
government. It is secular, it is not spiritual, it is not of the
things of God. Do not submit yourselves to government for you are to
submit yourselves to God alone.

This sounds really spiritual but it’s the opposite of what Paul says.
He says that we are to submit to government. We are honor government
and pay what we owe to government. As little children are to honor
those in authority so are we adults to honor those in authority over
us. That’s government. Try telling that to those in countries that
suffer under repressive regimes. Try telling that to the conservatives
when those in office are liberal, or the liberals when conservatives
are in office.

But Paul doesn’t talk about those nuances. He just says, Be subject to
the government. It is the authority. Talk about being humbled. God
knows how to humble us. We have no right to go against the authority
of government, even if it’s a pagan government like what was in place
when Jesus and Paul were alive. But even more astonishing is the
reason we are to submit to the authority of the government. It is
because the authority of government is actually the authority of God.
Even more, God is the one who instituted the government to carry out
law and order in society. As Christians we won’t take issue with
submitting to God, but to the government?

That shows how turned in on ourselves we are. We look at government
and see conservatives or liberals. Jesus shakes His head and says,
“No, you’re not getting it. You’re not supposed to see that. You’re
supposed to see Me.” So He puts a little child before us. He says,
“There. Be as a child. Be a humble servant. When you see others, see
Me. When you look at government, see Me.” This is how we learn to
submit.

We won’t always be able to obey government or others in authority over
us. If they command us to go against God’s Word then we must obey God
and not the human beings commanding us to sin. But we nevertheless
give them due honor, because the honor is given to God in this way.

And while we owe that to government, to others we owe nothing except
to love them. We look at the commandments and instead of seeing things
that we are compelled to do, we see opportunities to look at others
and see Jesus. How does Paul say it? The one who loves another has
fulfilled the Law. When you or I love others we so often hold back. We
invariably do not give our all. Inevitably we steer circumstances so
that they can turn out for what we will get out of it. True love
doesn’t work that way. True love sees Jesus. And if you start looking
at others and seeing Him you will see how the Law, the Ten
Commandments, is fulfilled. Be as a little child. Don’t think of
yourself but what the other person needs.

It’s a sad commentary on us Christians that we even need to be told
what Paul says about the Ten Commandments: You shall love your
neighbor as yourself. If we weren’t so stuck on ourselves we wouldn’t
need to be told to love others as ourselves. Sometimes it takes Jesus
putting a little child before us and saying, If you are so high on
yourself then consider for a moment that being as a little child will
make you great in the Kingdom. It’s not who you are or what you do
that makes you great. It’s not about you. So look at the Commandments
and see opportunities. Opportunities to love others and do what is
best for others.

On one occasion the disciples asked Jesus, “Who is the greatest in the
Kingdom of Heaven?” You might have thought I was being facetious when
I said that without missing a beat, Jesus said, “You’re lookin’ at
’im.” But I wasn’t. This really was Jesus’ answer. As is so often the
case when Jesus answered questions He made a deeper point than the
surface level questions so often asked of Him were seeking. In putting
a little child before them Jesus was given them and us a picture of
Himself. He easily could have said, “My dear disciples, who do you
think is the greatest in the Kingdom of Heaven? Why, you know deep in
your hearts that it’s Me.” But what would that have accomplished but
nods of assent without any understanding.

Instead, He brought forward a little child and showed them Himself.
“This is who I am. I am the one who comes before you as a child. I the
one who alone is Lord comes before you as a humble servant. I come
before you as the one who walked the path of the Commandments, loving
others as I love Myself. The one who alone walked the path of going to
the cross as punishment for not obeying the commandments. It’s not
that I was guilty, it’s that I wasn’t asking, ‘Who is the greatest?’ I
was rather asking, ‘What do these people need, these people whom I
love?’ What they need is a servant. It’s not going to happen if I’m
stuck on Myself and My eternal throne of Lordship. It will happen if I
humbly submit to My Heavenly Father and walk the path of suffering and
death for the sin of the world. It will happen if I fulfill the Law in
this way. It will happen if I see that it is here and in this My true
glory is shown.

And that, my friends, is what you need to see each day. See that it is
not in what you so often think is what God is all about, but rather
simply how God gives you to think about others and serve them. He
gives you His Son. You live in Him and by Him and through Him. You
live each day with the awesome opportunity to be as a little child.
Seeing instead of yourself, your Lord and Savior. Seeing instead of
burdens, opportunities to serve others and love them as Christ has
loved you. Seeing instead of drudgery the amazing opportunity to be in
God’s Word and grow in it. Seeing instead of a life where you try to
think about what is best for yourself you rejoice in what God has
given you.

In Baptism, new life. In the declaration of the forgiveness of your
sins, the very Gospel that sustains you. In the proclamation of that
Gospel, the power of God unto salvation. In the Lord’s Holy Supper,
the strength you need to go into each day as God has called you. By
being Himself the greatest humble servant He has called you and
enabled you to be humble servants. Amen.

SDG


--
Pastor Paul L. Willweber
Prince of Peace Lutheran Church [LCMS]
6801 Easton Ct., San Diego, California 92120
619.583.1436
princeofpeacesd.net
three-taverns.net

It is the spirit and genius of Lutheranism to be liberal in everything
except where the marks of the Church are concerned.
[Henry Hamann, On Being a Christian]
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