From
beginning to end, the Gospel of Matthew is about who will rule Israel, and it is about how that ruler will rule Israel. In this sense, the Gospel of
Matthew is about Jesus. As Jesus makes his way to Jerusalem, he remains in
constant conflict with those who are in some sense currently seeking to keep
the rule of Israel for themselves. As soon as Jesus is born, we come across
Herod who kills to ensure his own fragile power, and throughout the rest of the
gospel those with some degree of power such as the temple leaders plot to kill Jesus because he
threatens their power and influence.
It
is little surprise then that Jesus’ disciples continually ask him right up
until the end who will be the greatest in his kingdom. The Gospel of Luke shows
the disciples asking Jesus this questions at the Last Supper (Luke 22:24-27).
They, like others in the gospel story, want to know because they are on the
cusp of entering Jerusalem with the new king of Israel. They are about to
witness Jesus become the newly inaugurated king, and so they want to know and
to ensure their place alongside him in his kingdom.
Also,
their question comes right after Jesus singled out Peter, James, and John to go
with him to a private place. Their question also comes right after Jesus sends
Peter to be his representative for paying a temple tax. And so now the
disciples are curious: who is the greatest in Jesus’ kingdom?
Jesus
likely knows what and why they are asking. However, he turns their question and
assumptions upside down. Jesus is the one who will rule Israel, but he will not
rule in the same way as rulers such as Herod who rule by fear and violence.
Jesus does not answer their question on its own terms. He reshapes their question
by calling a child into their midst.
By
calling a child into their midst, Jesus shows that the values and orientation
of his kingdom are not what they expected nor are they what we probably expect
today. By calling a child into their midst, Jesus shows that the values of our
world are turned upside down: in order to enter his kingdom we must enter as
children.
Judging
by the Gospel of Matthew’s constant theme of who will rule Israel taken
together with the disciples’ question and Jesus’ response, it appears that
Jesus is not talking about childlike innocence. Jesus is talking about
hierarchy; Jesus is talking about social status. Children were not in the 1st
nor are they today the ones with power and authority. In the 1st
century world much like our 21st century world, children lack what
the world values most: power, wealth, and influence. In this sense, children do
not have high status. A child is dependant on others. A child is not someone
with whom you network in order to climb the social ladder. For example, if you
wanted to run for a political office in the United States, you would be wasting
your time if you spent all your time lobbying children. In this sense, Jesus’
calling a child in their midst is a refusal to participate in status games so
common in the 1st century and for that matter in our 21st
century. Jesus calls his disciples to be humble, to be low on the social
ladder.
Stanley
Hauerwas, a professor at Duke, explains, “Children, because they depend on
others for their very existence, cannot help but live by humility” (Matthew, BrazosPress 2009, 162).
However,
those of you who are parents will likely tell me, “Sam, I appreciate that you
think children are humble, but that’s a naïve picture of children. Children are
not humble. They are anything but humble. They do greedy and prideful things
all the time.” If that’s what you’re thinking, then you are right.
However,
when we see a small child, when we hold a newly born infant in our arms, we
know that child is completely dependant on us for his very existence. However
prideful that child may act from time to time, we know that child needs us for
food and shelter. That child needs us to tie his shoes, and when that child puts
his shoes on the wrong feet we help him rearrange his shoes (or we leave them
because it’s cute). That child needs us to drop him off and pick him up from
school. That child needs us to ensure his safety and his future. In this sense,
whether or not that child realizes it, that child is completely humbled by his
dependency on us. And this is what Jesus is seeking to show his disciples about
themselves, and this is what Jesus is seeking to show us about ourselves.
Whether we want to admit it or not, we enter Jesus’ kingdom as children.
Jesus
calls his disciples into a life of dependency like children, and so he taught
them to pray to their father in heaven as children teaching them to pray, “Give
this day our daily bread.” And as children, we pray to our father in heaven,
“Deliver us from evil.”
What
Jesus is saying here runs against probably most of our cultural values and
priorities. We praise self-reliance and the self-made man. We praise people of
strength and influence such as athletes and successful businessmen. But Jesus
tells us to be like children who are not self-reliant nor are they self-made.
Jesus,
however, does not end by saying that his disciples must be like children. As we
follow the Matthew story, we will probably notice that Jesus is constantly
gathering people around himself, but he is not gathering people who could bring
him high acclaim; they are people on the fringes of society who have no status
and could certainly not give him status by association. Instead of linking with
key leaders of his day in order to climb the social ladder, Jesus networks with
the unconnected on the fringes of society.
Jesus
heals lepers and women neither of whom were highly regarded in the 1st
century and neither of whom could have imagined giving Jesus high status. Jesus
also heals the lame and the blind. Jesus gathers people to himself who are like
children because they are vulnerable and cannot extend to Jesus higher status.
Jesus gives to them and to us what we cannot give him in return.
Jesus
explains that not only do people enter his kingdom by being as humble as
children, but we are also to welcome those who are like children, who are not
high in status, not self-reliant, and not exactly the sort of people who could
get us a raise. And all this requires that we are to be people of patience who
tirelessly welcome those who need help and cannot help themselves. It should
probably be said in passing that the Bible does not say, “God helps those who
themselves.” But it does say we are to be like children who cannot help
themselves, and we are to welcome people like children who cannot help
themselves.
As
we follow the Matthew story, we will likely notice that Jesus is constantly
gathering people around himself. Jesus is forming a community, and so when we
hear Jesus calling his disciples to be like children, he is not merely calling
isolated individuals to be like children. He is calling and forming a community
to be as humble as children, a community that does not seek higher status, a
community that does not welcome people according to achievement but welcomes
people in need.
A
few days ago, I watched the new musical Les
Miserables. Invariably, I was reminded of Victor Hugo’s novel, Les Miserables. Near the beginning of Hugo’s
novel, there is an ex-convict named Jean Valjean, and he had been released from
prison only a few days before. When he comes to a town at night, he cannot find
lodging anywhere. As soon as people find out he is an ex-convict, they cast him
out. He is completely unconnected socially. Then finally he arrives at a little
old house where a little old bishop lives. Jean Valjean knocks, and the door
swings open. Instead of going through the labor of the old bishop finding out
who he is, Jean Valjean tells the old bishop to begin with that he is an
ex-convict. Then the old bishop says something unexpected. The old bishop says,
“You did not have to tell me who you were. This is not my house. It’s the house
of Jesus Christ. The door does not ask who enters whether he has a name but
whether he has any pain. You are suffering. You are hungry. You are welcome.”
I
recently heard a story about a young lady who is a mother of three children.
The father is no longer in the picture. She has two jobs, a fulltime and
part-time job, totaling roughly sixty hours per week. She works that much
because that’s what it takes for her to put food on the table and a roof over
her children’s heads. Not long ago,
she found out she is pregnant, but as I just mentioned, the father is longer in
the picture. She is contemplating abortion not because she wants to exercise
her free choice but because she feels she doesn’t have a choice. (I am sure stories like this one could be enumerated ten thousand times over).
Jesus
is forming a community that lives by childlike humility recognizing that its
life is dependant on God, a community that thereby extends its hospitality to
those who are most vulnerable. Jesus calls us to network with the
unconnected.
As
we follow Jesus’ footsteps as children, we will most likely do a lot of
stumbling along the way like toddlers first learning to walk. And as we do, let
us remember that we are to be a community as humble as children; we are to be a
community that welcomes children and where children are safe. This will be
difficult, and the trouble about being a hospitable community is that it
doesn’t get any easier by saying it a bunch of times. Like toddlers learning to
walk, we have to try it. We will
likely take a few steps and then take a tumble. Fortunately, our father in heaven
will pick us up so we can try again. We need each other in this process, and
because we are like children we are called to forgive each other inexhaustibly.
From
beginning to end, the Gospel of Matthew is about who will rule Israel, and it is about how that ruler will rule Israel. The Gospel of Matthew is about
Jesus. However, by the end of the story, we do not have a king on a throne with
hosts of armies to conquer the world thereby establishing his empire. That is
not Jesus’ kingdom. Instead, we see a king who has been crucified and who sends
humble children into a dangerous world. That is Jesus’ kingdom. And for this
reason the apostle Paul says that this kingdom with a crucified king and
childlike subjects is foolishness to pagans (1 Cor. 1:23). And perhaps it seems
like foolishness to us also. This is a topsy-turvy kingdom. Jesus’ kingdom
turns our assumptions upside down by placing a child in our midst, and Jesus
tells us this is how we enter his
kingdom and this is whom we are to
welcome into his kingdom.
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