Sermon
Whose
Servant Am I?
Sunday, March 25, 2012
John 12:20-33
I had just
settled into a comfortable seat in a real restaurant. The lights were dim;
there was no muzak, just a live piano player who was amazingly sensitive to one’s
need to think, talk and be heard; my glass of pinot grigio had arrived and was
just perfect. After an incredibly long and complex week I was settling in for a
quiet evening all by myself – just me, my wine, my grilled salmon, and then
onto a soft, cozy bed. What could be better!
Fasting and penitence have always been Christian practices intended, not as a means of punishment, but as a means of drawing us into a deeper knowledge of the life-changing meaning of the paschal mystery: Christ’s life, ministry, death, and resurrection. The forty days of Lent give us a time and an opportunity to vary and rethink the rhythm of our daily individual and weekly common life. It gives us a time in which we can discover new dimensions of our relationships with God, one another, and the world. It gives us a time in which we can see and understand more clearly the life we have been given by God in Christ; the life of a servant.
Today’s Good News in all of our readings is loud and clear: The road to glory is servanthood: Servanthood to God; not servanthood to this life.
In Psalm 119
the psalmist expresses so beautifully his servanthood to God when he says, “I have taken greater delight in the way
of your decrees than in all manner of riches. I will meditate on your
commandments and give attention to your ways. My delight is in your statutes; I
will not forget your word.”
In the
Letter to the Hebrews, an anonymous sermon written to encourage an early
Christian community to continued faith and hope in the face of hardship, we are
told: In the days of his flesh, Jesus
offered up prayers and supplications with loud cries and tears, to the one who
was able to save him from death, and he was heard because of his reverent
submission. Although he was a Son, he learned obedience through what he
suffered; and having been made perfect, he became the source of eternal
salvation for all who obey him…”
Finally, in
John’s Gospel Jesus tells his followers, “Those
who love their life will lose it, and those who hate their life in this world
will keep it for eternal life. Whoever serves me must follow me, and where I
am, there will my servant be also. Whoever serves me, the Father will honor.”
As we draw
to the close of this Lenten season, perhaps it is more important than ever to recall
the reflections, meditations, conversations, and other activities in which we have
engaged over this brief forty day period, and to focus our hearts and our minds
on our call to “repent and return” to the way of the Lord by losing our life.
When Christ
says to his disciples, “Now is the
judgment of this world; now the ruler will be driven out. And I, when I am
lifted up from the earth, will draw all people to myself…” When Jesus utters these words, he is calling
us to be his servants; he is calling us to follow him to the cross and beyond;
he is calling us to take up his cross. He is calling us to put down our cell
phones, and to seek and serve the Christ in others.
Dietrich
Bonheoffer in the Cost of Discipleship
wrote, “When Christ calls a man, He bids
him come and die. It may be a death like that of the first disciples who had to
leave home and work to follow him, or it may be a death like Luther’s, who had
to leave the monastery and go out into the world. But it is the same death
every time – death in Jesus Christ…”
The Apostle
Paul wrote, “Your attitude should be the
same as that of Christ Jesus: Who being in very nature God, did not consider
equality with God something to be grasped, but made himself nothing, taking the
very nature of a servant, being made in human likeness. And being found in
appearance as a man, he humbled himself and became obedient to death--even
death on a cross!”
Now, as we
are just days away from Palm Sunday and Holy Week, now is the time to think
hard about the ways in which we, each one of us, must die in order to become
our Lord’s servant; in order to take up Christ’s cross and to lift it high so
that those who are lonely and lost can enter into God’s heavenly Kingdom here
on earth and beyond.
Now is the
time to ask ourselves: Whose servant am I?