Wednesday, February 10, 2016

Who's the greatest?

Luke 9:30-37

Today’s reading from Luke marks a slight improvement in the disciples’ attitude from last Sunday. This time, on hearing Jesus talk about his death and resurrection, they still don’t understand him but rather than rebuking him openly they switch to the silent treatment. Actually, come to think of it, I’m not sure if that’s an improvement or not. And, just to be sure that we get that the disciples aren’t very good at this whole disciple-ing thing, and to make matters much worse, they start to act like children arguing about who is the greatest as they walk toward Capernaum.
            I think this is a man thing. I can say this, I think, because I am one. I’ve known a lot of one-uppers, most of them men, and when I was younger I used to be one a lot more than I am now. There’s something about the transition to adulthood, finding our place in the world, that makes men (not only men, but mostly men) enter into these squabbles over and over again about truly stupid things.
            I knew a one-upper who was so bad in college that we used to make up outrageous, impossible things about ourselves or about people we knew or whatever and throw them out to see how he could possibly one-up that. It became a running gag that I’m not sure he was ever aware of. That was exceptional but not really that extraordinary. I’ve worked with enough high school youth to know that claiming superiority over one another is just the way they interact. 
            But I think we’d expect better of the disciples, which is probably unfair, because in spite of how they are portrayed in film and art these guys were actually 18, 19, 20, maybe 23, 24 years old. I’m not old enough to call people that age “kids” (ask me in twenty, thirty years) but they were young men. They were, in short, at precisely that age where competition forms the basis for their relationships. They didn’t bond over coffee at the corner store; they bonded over wrestling with each other or kicking each other’s butts at ping pong—that kind of thing.
*          *          *

            I’m a competitive person. Tomorrow we head off to the Twin Cities where I’m going to be playing in the Minnesota Open chess tournament this weekend (I know, how cool am I!?), and if I happen to lose a few games I’m probably not going to be very cheery for a little while. Chess is the worst, because you have nobody to blame but yourself. There’s no chance involved, no weather or referees to blame, there’s nothing but you and your inadequacy.
            Most of the competitions we face—whether it’s sports or whether it’s school or whether it’s applying for a job or even dating (and, yes, that is a competition of a sort)—have winners and losers. You get a “D” in science and you feel like a loser. You get into Yale and you feel like a winner. You can’t get a job and you feel like a loser. You get a boyfriend or girlfriend and you feel like a winner. The disciples are simply expressing themselves in that world of winners and losers.
            The problem is that Jesus is telling them not so subtly—more like he’s beating them over the head with it—that the kingdom of God is for losers.  It isn’t for winners. Winners have their reward. Losers: they’re the ones who have ownership in God’s kingdom. And Jesus’ demonstration for a loser in this case is a child.
            We love to romanticize children, so that when Jesus calls the child to him in today’s reading we think of how cute this is and how we, too, value children for their purity and goodness of heart… Let me tell you, that’s bull crap. Children are not pure and are most certainly not good at heart. They want things from you all the time, and when they don’t get them they throw a tantrum. If you pulled the kind of things my daughter pulled on a daily basis you’d be institutionalized. Children are needy and poor and, as cute as they undoubtedly are, they exist to use you for whatever resources they can wring out of you. And it is to such as these that the kingdom of God is given. Not because they’re pure but because they are completely dependent. They are losers. Without status, especially in the ancient world, children were literally property.
            Today is Ash Wednesday, which is the ultimate day for losers. It’s a day where we come forward for the words, “Remember you are dust and to dust you shall return.” These words tend to speak differently to different people. I used to think they were depressing. It used to feel like they were law. I used to think that it was awkward and embarrassing to be told that not only am I dust but that I will one day be reduced to dust again. I thought it was a big downer. But at some point my feelings changed, and, yes, I still feel some of that. I still feel the weight of those words, but nowadays this is one of my favorite days in the church year, because I experience the weight of those words as freeing. I am dust. Thank God. I am not God. I am not the greatest. I don’t need to worry about climbing the ladder, about being better than someone else. I don’t have to one-up anybody. All I have to do is to lose my life for the sake of the Gospel. All I have to do is return to dust.
            It’s a legacy thing. It’s natural to want to leave one—to be remembered for being great in something or another. I recently discovered I am a direct descendant of a man named Thaddeus Surber who was one of the preeminent ecologists of the early twentieth century. That’s neat. You can Google him and find his work, even for sale on Amazon. That’s a cool legacy, and it means something to his descendants. But it does not change anything in God’s eyes. For righteousness in God’s kingdom it took Thaddeus dying, which he accomplished in 1949. It took becoming a loser.
            We aren’t remembered for who we truly are anyway. Great men and women typically leave collateral damage all over the place. We know too well about the awful people politicians and celebrities can be, but even if they aren’t mean and ugly people themselves the pursuit of excellence tends to turn us on ourselves. Whether it’s Robin Williams or David Foster Wallace or, this week, it was Dave Mirra, depression can make people who look great to the rest of us into fragile creatures. Suicide is not sadness winning; it is greatness taken to an extreme, which is to say it is the self overcome by itself.
            We are dust. We are losers. We are children.
            And we’re all in this together. The dust that makes us up is the dust of those who have gone before—quite literally. It’s one of my favorite useless bits of info that you are made up of atoms that once were part of Abraham Lincoln and Genghis Khan and Caesar Augustus. You are atomically the same. Which is partly why it so stupid to play the game of asking who is the greatest. We are all one in Christ. We are made losers—something Donald Trump can get on board with only he, too, is right there with us (leading the charge, actually, I think). We are losers made into winners because of the very thing the disciples cannot understand. Of course they would argue about who is the greatest! That’s the thing people do when they don’t get resurrection.
            We are dust. We are losers. And in Christ it’s all turned upside down.
            Amen.

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