Firstly then what does this tell us about the man who actually
wrote the gospel, and what's the significance of his way of retelling
the story?
You see, the same story is in Matthew's gospel but here it's
not James and John who make that embarrassing request
'Let one of us sit at your right and the other at your left in
your glory' but their mother who knelt at Jesus' feet and asked
this favour for her sons.
Bearing in mind that Mark's gospel was written first, and Matthew
used it as a source for his own gospel it begs the question 'Why
did Matthew feel the need to involve Mum in the equation, and
Mark not?'
There's a story about Oliver Cromwell which has a bearing on
this. It's said that a court painter was once commissioned to
paint a portrait of the great man. Well, these days of course
there is the digital technology to enhance photographs so that
all those little skin blemishes that might detract from the beauty
of the image can be edited out - rough and craggy skin made to
look smooth, and wrinkles literally iron out. (If only they could
do that in real life!).
In those days the only available technology was the practised
eye and brush of the painter, who would look at the subject and
make important decisions as to which parts of the face required
emphasising, and which parts might better be left understated.
The painter did what he thought was best, and painted a portrait
that would flatter Cromwell's ego. So imagine his surprise when
Cromwell took one look at the result and turned on the painter.
'Take it away!' he cried. 'And paint me warts and all!'
Was this Mark's intention as he wrote his gospel? Was he showing
us here two disciples, and two of the closest of the twelve warts
and all, rather than shifting the emphasis onto a third person
as Matthew seems to have done.
And why not, because the disciples were not perfect, they weren't
saints (in the 'holier than me' sense of the word) They were ordinary
folk like you and me, with good points, bad points, good days
and bad hair days. Some days they made sensible decisions and
other days they seem to have missed the point altogether.
Isn't it reassuring to read in the bible about people who have
faults like us?
It's something to think about - Jesus set out to change the world
with people just like us…….. AND DID IT.
So what does this story tell us about James and John, other than
they showed themselves up at that moment t be still thinking in
human terms rather than spiritual.
'Teacher, we want you to do for us whatever we ask …………
let one of us sit at your right hand and the other at your left
in your glory.'
Jesus was about to set up a new Kingdom, they wanted a piece
of the action
Let's put this in perspective, because this little story comes
as the disciples and Jesus travel towards Jerusalem. We're coming
to the end of Jesus' short time on earth, and he's told his disciples
for at least the third time that he's not going to be crowned
with anything other than thorns; that this is no victory march
in the human understanding of the word, it would involve pain
and tears.
'We are going up to Jerusalem,' he said. 'and the Son of Man
will be betrayed….. they will condemn him to death, and
will turn him over to the Gentiles, who will mock him and spit
on him, flog him and kill him. Three days later he will rise'
Jesus spelt out to his disciples the way in which he would be
put to death. It was the most detailed explanation that they'd
heard - and yet they still don't seem to have understood what
Jesus was saying to them. They couldn't see the wood for the trees,
and later it would take a cross of wood to open their eyes.
So where's the good news in all this? Are we just to condemn
James and John as being so dense that they failed totally to comprehend
the person they were following - that they couldn't look beyond
the hope for an earthly Messiah which all believers hoped for.
Or are there any redeeming features in this account from Mark's
gospel?
Well, there are indeed, because however much James and John failed
to understand Jesus' purpose, they still believed in Him. Here
they were, ordinary men, possibly well educated men, following
a charismatic carpenter on what seemed in earthly terms to be
a one way trip to a rather sticky end. Yet follow they did, and
with the confidence to feel that Jesus was, in a way that they
couldn't fully comprehend, heading for a triumph that would lead
to something new, something wonderful, something that they wanted
to be involved in. They understood enough to know that they were
on the right track, it was the journey that they seemed unsure
of.
Their hearts were in the right place.
And doesn't that give us confidence? I know it does for me. These
were not super-spiritual men who had dotted the 'Is' and crossed
the 'Ts' of their theology so that they had a ready answer to
every situation. They were ordinary mortals who were on a journey
with their Lord, learning on the job and gaining the experience
and knowledge that would serve them well in the days after Jesus'
death.
And that gives me a lot of comfort, as it does when I read about
Peter and his big mouth, doubting Thomas, and Paul and some of
his rather outspoken views. These were people like you and I,
complete with doubts, misunderstandings and preconceptions about
what our relationship with Jesus should be, and how that affects
our relationships with others.
But that's the sort of people that Jesus wants. He didn't look
for the religious leaders of the day to follow him because he
knew that they would see him as a threat to the establishment;
he wanted ordinary people like you and me because he wanted hearts
that were open for business.
The reply that Jesus gave James and John to their strange request
was typically 'Jesus'.
'Can you drink the cup I drink or be
baptised with the baptism that I am baptised with?'
No simple 'Don't be silly!' 'Yes' or 'No', but Jesus uses Jewish
metaphors instead - makes the disciples think hard about the question
that they've just asked.
It was the custom at a royal banquet for the king to hand the
cup to his guests, and the cup became a metaphor for the life
and experience that God handed out to men. Listen to the Psalmist;
'You anoint my head with oil; my cup
overflows' (23:5)
'In the hand of the Lord is a cup full
of foaming wine mixed with spices; he pours it out, and all the
wicked of the earth drink it down to its very dregs.' (75:8)
One speaks of the life and happiness given to the writer by God,
the other of the fate in store for the wicked.
'Are you able and willing to accept all that this commitment
that you have made to me might involve?' asks Jesus. '
'Yes!' they reply.
The other metaphor that Jesus used was that of baptism. 'Can
you be baptised with the baptism that I am baptised with?' he
asks James and John, and here we have a problem with the literal
translation to English because it would seem that Jesus did not
mean baptism in the sense that we know it - a sprinkling of water.
The Greek word as used here more correctly means 'submerged',
and is often used in the sense of being submerged in an experience
- for instance, someone recently bereaved being submerged in grief.
A wrecked ship is submerged beneath the waves.
The Psalmist uses a similar idea when in Psalm 42;7 he says
'All your waves and breakers have swept over me'
Do you see how Jesus was joining these two metaphors together
to challenge the disciples into seriously considering their commitment?
'Are you up to the task of going through the experiences that
I'm about to go through? To be submerged in the hatred, the pain
and possibly also death that I have to endure?'
This was Jesus laying it firmly on the line concerning the demands
that might be made on anyone who followed him. This was no easy
option, it was a decision that demanded a lot of thought because
the outcome might not be an easy or comfortable life. There could
not be a victory without a cross, and there is only one standard
of greatness in the Kingdom of Heaven and that is the standard
of the cross.
'We can' replied James and John. 'We can share in your experiences,
we are willing to be submerged in the experience of following
you.'
And these were in a sense prophetic words, because James was
beheaded by the order Herod Agrippa and John, though not martyred
suffered for his Lord in exile.
They may not have fully appreciated the consequences of their
decision, but they gladly accepted the challenge of their Lord
and Master and the ultimate triumph that would be theirs.
Greatness in the Kingdom of Heaven, Jesus tells his disciples,
is not based upon rank or privilege. In the world a symbol of
greatness is how many people you have working under your direct
command. But not so in the Kingdom of God where the rules are
turned upside down and inside out. Whoever wants to become first
must be slave or servant of all. Here it's not so much how many
people you can boss around, but how many people you can serve.
There's a poem by Kipling called Mary's Son
"If you stop to find out what your wages will be
and how they will clothe and feed you,
Willie, my son, don't you go to the sea,
For the sea will never need you.
"If you ask for the reason of every command,
And argue with people about you,
Willie, my son, don’t you go to the land,
For the land will do better without you.
"If you stop to consider the work that you've done
And to boast what your labour is worth, dear,
Angels may come for you, Willie my son,
But you'll never be wanted on earth dear!"
As an example he pointed to his own life. 'For even the Son of
Man did not come to be served, but to serve, and to give his life
as a ransom for many.'
The Kingdom of God is populated by people who realise the common
sense of what Jesus said, that the standards of the world are
wrong and plainly seen by the inequalities in the world. The Kingdom
of God is populated by people who are more ready to serve than
to be served, who have looked at the supreme example of Jesus
and said 'Yes' when asked if they too can drink the cup and be
submerged in the experience of being a Christian.
The Kingdom of God is populated by ordinary people like James
and John who at crucial moments in their lives were perfectly
able to put their foot in it and say the most ridiculous things
- yes, people just like you and I. But people who, while perhaps
not fully understanding the implications of their commitment are
still able to say with confidence 'I'm prepared to take the risk'
The cost might be great. It cost the life of Jesus to bring mankind
back from sin into fellowship with God. It cost James his life
by the sword, and John his freedom in exile. But through their
lives and the lives of generations afterwards who took up the
challenge of life in the Kingdom, we are here today worshipping
the same God that James and John worshipped. We may have the same
doubts and misconceptions as James and John in the reasons why
we are here, but the challenge that Jesus made to those two disciples
is the same one that he gives to each one of us today.
Are we willing to take up this life of service? Are we willing
to take the cup that he offers - accept all that God might put
our way? Are we willing to go all the way with Jesus, as James
and John so obviously were?
As I said at the start, Jesus deliberately chose those twelve
disciples. They were ordinary people, just like you and I. He
set out to change the world with this most unlikely assortment
of individuals - and did it!