Saturday, September 29, 2012

Who Are We? We Are Servants

   This is another message in the series on our identity as Christians.  Keep in mind that expressing our role as Christian servants may vary from culture to culture, situation to situation.

 

Mark 10:42-45

In most Christian bookstores youll find a section of books on evangelism and witness.  Some of these books will offer you psychological and sociological insights into the nature of the non-Christian.  Some will include apologetic insights to answer the objections to Christianity you may meet. Other books simply provide you sample dialogues for the would-be witness to memorize and use when attempting to lead a person to faith in Christ.

To my knowledge none of these books suggests you should attempt to persuade non-Christians to place faith in Christ by saying, Place your faith in Christ and you will become a servant.

Im not your servant, we protest when we feel someone has crossed a line in what their demanding of us.  Being a servant seems to lack dignity.  We may enjoy the movie butlers like Jeeves but only because they are obviously so much more clever than their masters.  We feel sorry for the servile scullery maid who trembles before the mistress's rebukes.  No one wants to be someone elses servant.

We watch Downton Abbey or Upstairs/Downstairs and wonder if this might be a sanitized version of how servants were treated in the manor houses of Victorian or Edwardian England.  Servants were to be virtually invisible.  In some homes they were expected to hide if they heard a family member or guest coming.  Tradesmen and even the police were expected to use the servants' entrance. "Going into service" usually meant a lifetime of long hours and thankless drudgery.

It wasnt much better in Biblical times.  Both the Greeks and the Jews tended to look down on servants.  The Jews were a little less harsh but the disdain was still there.

Yet, one of the most frequently used metaphors for Christians in the New Testament is servant.  The usual Greek word is doulos, a word that implies one who gives himself up to anothers will. Paul uses the word to describe himself, his co-workers, and calls his readers to "serve one another," just like common servants (Gal. 5:13).

The very idea of being a Christian servant may inspire protest.  After all, don't we preach the liberating power of the gospel?  Certainly.  Few understood that better than Martin Luther.  Yet, as he studied the Bible he found there was a paradox.  He defined it in one of his early works, The Freedom of the Christian Man.  He put it this way:

"A Christian man is the most free lord of all, and subject to none; a Christian man is the most dutiful servant of all and subject to everyone"                                             

So, liberated brothers and sisters, what does it mean when we say, "We are servants?" 

TO BE A SERVANT IS TO BE OBEDIENT.

Use your imagination to picture yourself in one of those manor houses.  You are one of several servants.  Unless you are fortunate enough to work in the kitchen, you may find yourself doing all kinds of tasks.

The master tells you to muck out the stables in preparation for the fox hunt the following day.  You obediently muck out the smelly, filthy, fly-infested stables, the stables that may be better heated and lighted than your own tiny room in the servants' quarter.

The mistress tells you to empty the chamber pots in the guest rooms and polish them so they gleam.  You obediently empty the chamber pots and polish them so they gleam, all the while making sure none of the guests see you--so they will think the pots magically clean themselves.

You muck out stables and empty chamber pots because you were told to do these odious tasks and you are an obedient servant.

Mucking out stables and emptying chamber pots is hard work.  But servants do what they are told to do.

The tasks Christian servants are asked to do are not so easy.  Let me mention just a few of the things we Christian servants are asked to do.

We Christian servants are asked to love our enemies.  In that English manor house, the cook could hate the footman but as long as they did their jobs the master couldn't have cared less about one servant's feelings for another.  And the master certainly didn't care what animosity the English butler might have for the Irish, for example.  This might be because the master, being a good Englishman, doesn't particularly care for the Irish.

The Christian servant's master has an entirely different attitude.  Our master knows that hatred is destructive.  It will impact how we do our work. More important, he loves the most unlovely and wants us to do the same.

We Christian servants are asked to forgive.  Of all the things our Master Jesus asks, this may be the most difficult.  We long to retaliate, to strike back.  We relish payback.  But Jesus says, "Forgive."  Sometimes emptying those chamber pots seems easy in comparison to forgiving our enemies.

When the wounds are superficial, we might find the strength to forgive by remembering we all make mistakes.  But when the wounds are deep and life-changing, it's a different matter.  How do you forgive that spouse who betrayed you?  How do you forgive that uncle who stole your innocence?  How do you forgive that faceless soldier who took your loved one's life?  How do you forgive the drunk who devastated your family?

These are hard questions and we should keep in mind that even the best servant could not do some tasks alone.

We Christian servants are asked to tell others of our Master.  This might be hard to imagine but there might have been occasions when some masters were so kind, generous, and good that servants naturally praised them wherever they went.  Servants from other households might get tired of hearing about this wonderful master, but that wouldn't silence the servants fortunate enough to work for him.

It seems different for us.  We know our Master is benevolence incarnate yet fear of ridicule, criticism, and censure often keeps us quiet. 

 I could list other tasks but I want to move on to a remarkable truth we Christian servants need to keep in mind.

As we do our work as servants we have to keep in mind that our experience differs from that of other servants.   The master of the manor house has never mucked out the stables, emptied the chamber pots; nor, perhaps, ever even made the tea.  (On occasion he may have said, Ill be mother and poured the tea but not because he had to.)  But we Christian servants know our master has done the most difficult of tasks before us.  He loved his enemies in a way we could never hope to emulate, he forgave those who mistreated him, he proclaimed Gods message though it meant his death.

Jesus drove home this reality on the night before the crucifixion when he stunned the disciples by washing their feeta task only a lowly servant would do.  He offered this explanation:

Do you know what I have done to you? 13 You call me Teacher and Lordand you are right, for that is what I am. 14 So if I, your Lord and Teacher, have washed your feet, you also ought to wash one anothers feet. 15 For I have set you an example, that you also should do as I have done to you. 16 Very truly, I tell you, servants are not greater than their master[1]

 

Jesus modeled servanthood for them. 

This was not the first time that Jesus had told his disciples that their demeanor was to be one of service rather than privilege.  Earlier in his ministry Jesus had responded to James and Johns request to sit beside him in his kingdom.  His response was hardly what they expected.

42 So Jesus called them and said to them, You know that among the Gentiles those whom they recognize as their rulers lord it over them, and their great ones are tyrants over them. 43 But it is not so among you; but whoever wishes to become great among you must be your servant, 44 and whoever wishes to be first among you must be slave of all. 45 For the Son of Man came not to be served but to serve, and to give his life a ransom for many. [2]

 

Still, it was a hard lesson for the disciples to learn, just as it is hard for us to learn.

Gordon MacDonald reminds us of just how hard that lesson is in his poem called Obedience.



I said, Let me walk in the fields.

            He said, No, walk in the town.

I said, There are no flowers there.

            He said, No flowers, but a crown.

 

I said, But the skies are black;

            There is nothing but noise and din.

And He wept as He sent me back;

            There is more, He said, there is sin.

 

I said, But the air is thick,

            And fogs are veiling the sun.

He answered, Yet souls are sick,

            And souls in the dark undone.

 

I said, I shall miss the light,

            And friends will miss me, they say.

He answered, Choose to-night

            If I am to miss you or they.

 

I pleaded for time to be given.

            He said, Is it hard to decide?

It will not seem hard in heaven

            To have followed the steps of your Guide.

 

I cast one look at the fields,

            Then set my face to the town;

He said, My child, do you yield?

            Will you leave the flowers for the crown?

 

Then into His hand went mine

            And into my heart came He;

And I walk in a light divine

            The path I had feared to see.


 

With this we come to the second mark of the Christian servant.

Christian Servants Should Be Known for Their Commitment.

 

In the Sermon on the Mount, Jesus observes that servants must be committed; there can be no divided loyalties.  The Contemporary English Version puts it this way, You cannot be the slave of two masters! You will like one more than the other or be more loyal to one than the other.  You cannot serve God and Mammon. (Matthew 6:24)

Mammon is an interesting word and after more than two-thousand years Bible scholars still arent entirely certain where it comes from.  Apparently it means money or wealth.  This prompted Peterson to paraphrase the warning as, You cant worship God and Money both.   It certainly is important that Jesus drops this statement into his teachings on wealth.  Many Christian servants have lost sight of their Master's agenda because the pursuit of wealth has been so enticing.  F. F. Bruce writes:

Since the service of mammon is presented in this saying as an alternative to the service of God, mammon seems to be a rival to God. Service of mammon and service of God are mutually exclusive. The servant of mammon, in other words, is an idol worshiper: mammon, wealth, money has become an idol, the object of worship.[3]

 

While Jesus uses wealth here, I think its appropriate to say that anything that competes for the Christian servants loyalty to God is to be avoided or controlled.  Certainly wealth is a major competitor but so are other things.  Our relationships can challenge our devotion to Christ.  This is why Paul warned the Corinthians: Do not be unequally yoked with unbelievers.

Of course this command doesnt mean we should have no contact or association with unbelievers.  Unless we withdraw to caves or monasteries, like hermits or monks, we cant escape associating with non-Christians.  Nor would we want to if we take Jesus evangelism mandate seriously.

I dont think Paul is forbidding association with non-Christians.  We might even enter into contracts with them or business arrangements. 

So, what does he mean?  On one level, what Paul has in mind is yoking ourselves to the non-Christian in such a way that we find our capacity to display our commitment and loyalty to Christ at jeopardy.

Many a Christian young person, blinded by love or false-promises, has ignored this warning and married a non-Christian only to find that even so basic a matter as regular church attendance becomes a battleground issue in the marriage.

On a deeper level, it may a matter of surrendered loyalties. 

Thus to be yoked with unbelievers is to be of one heart and mind with them, co-opted by the values that guide them, seduced by their commitments to various gods and lords (1 Cor 8:5), conformed to a view of things which dismisses absolute truth and moral absolutes[4]

 

No Christian servant can take live that way.

Being a true Christian servant involves more than saying the right words at the right time in our conversation.  That may be nothing more than giving homage to the prevailing civil religion.  In that same Sermon on the Mount, Jesus warned:  "Not everyone who says to me, 'Lord, Lord,' will enter the kingdom of heaven, but only the one who does the will of my Father who is in heaven."

Living as a Christian servant doesn't win our place in heaven; living as a Christian servant is evidence we have the reservation.

 

  Conclusion

In most Christian bookstores youll find a section of books on evangelism and witness. 

To my knowledge none of these books suggests you should attempt to persuade non-Christians to place faith in Christ by saying, Place your faith in Christ and you will become a servant.

There are two reasons why that is just a little ironic.

First, in the history of Christianity, those selfless Christian servants who have devoted themselves to others have often reached the hardened critics who would never hear a sermon or stand still for a gospel presentation.  In the early centuries of the church, when plague struck some of the cities, non-Christians would flee, leaving behind the sick and dying.  Usually Christians would remain behind to care for their sick and for the non-Christian sick.  The offered comfort as they nursed the stricken, comforted the dying, and buried the dead.  Their service won the admiration of their critics and led many to faith in Christ. Christian servants have sometimes been the best evangelists.

At the same time, some of the best-loved words in Christ's parables are addressed to servants.  In the Parable of the Talents found in Matthew 25, the master commends his servants by saying, "Well done, good and faithful servant!  Come in and share your Master's joy."  So that servant would do what few servants could hope to do, share the table with the master--not filling empty cups or clearing away empty dishes, but enjoying the bounty with the master. 

Certainly the parable implies that we will be judged as Christian servants. But on what basis?  Not solely on the basis of outward success, though nothing suggests that outward success might not mark the work of a faithful servant. 

At the same time, Christian servants might be judged by less tangible standards.  Have we kept the Master's purposes in view or have we confused them with our own agendas?  Have our hearts been filled with a desire to serve or a desire to be served?  Have we been as willing to do the hidden work as we have been to do the work in the spotlight?  Do we serve because our service brings glory to the Master or because our service brings glory to us? 

We might hope that these questions are answered in such a way that we might hear those words. "Well done."

 

 

 







[1] The Holy Bible: New Revised Standard Version. 1989 (Jn 13:1216). Nashville: Thomas Nelson Publishers.


[2] The Holy Bible: New Revised Standard Version. 1989 (Mk 10:4245). Nashville: Thomas Nelson Publishers.


[3]  Walther Kaiser, F. F. Bruce, et al, Hard Sayings of the Bible, New Testament, IVP, 1996.


[4] Kaiser, W. C., Jr., Davids, P. H., Bruce, F. F., & Brauch, M. T. (1996). Hard sayings of the Bible (626). Downers Grove, IL: InterVarsity.