- Jesus, followers, disciples, the 12; James and John; the other ten disciples
- When: Jesus’ last couple of weeks on earth;
- Where: On the way to Jerusalem
- What: Jesus’ final prophecy of his arrival in Jerusalem, his betrayal/deliverance to the priests and lawyers; his death; and resurrection; James and John’s request for status; Jesus’ questions of James and John, confirmation to them that they will participate in Jesus’ suffering, and refusal to grant James’ and John’s desire; the indignation of the ten; Jesus’ explanation of servanthood, and how he himself models servanthood by giving his life a ransom for many.
- Connections: Third prophecy; concern for greatness; indignation; teaching about servanthood, upside kingdom values.
- Contrasts: Jesus’ purposeful journey/fear and amazement; Jewish religious leadership/condemnation; agreement between Jews/Roman rulers; James and John’s request/Jesus reply What do you want?; ruling over/serving; James and John’s power play/Jesus giving his life;
- Responses to Jesus: amazement; fear; request for status; statement of willingness to suffer Jesus’ fate.
Interpretation
- Betray, or deliver up (paradidomi, Strong #3860) is used twenty times in Mark: of John delivered to prison, of Jesus delivered in each of his three prophecies, of Jesus followers delivered in 13.9.11.12, and of Judas delivery of betrayal, and of the Jewish leaders delivering Jesus to the Gentiles. In Romans Paul speaks of God himself delivering up Jesus; and this is in some way true in Mark as well as Jesus knows full well what awaits him in Jerusalem, and still chooses to lead his followers to this fate.
- This final prophecy gives a bit more detail of the collaboration between the Jewish religious leaders and the Roman political rules cooperating in Jesus’ death. If anything, this unlikely agreement between Jewish religious leadership and Roman political power serves to highlight the uniqueness of Jesus kingdom, and the universal rejection of Jesus’ values of a servant kingdom.
- And as if that is not enough, Jesus’ own followers are still unclear about how Jesus’ kingdom will unfold. It is unclear just what James and John are thinking here. Perhaps they have come to believe in Jesus’ death and resurrection; perhaps they still harbor second temple dreams of Israel’s restoration as God’s religious/political focal point of history. In any case they use this opportunity to make a power play, a bid to gain top spots in Jesus’ ‘glory’ to come. (Glory is used only three times in Mark: 8.38 referring to coming in the glory of the Father; here; and in 13.26 where the Son of man comes in power and glory).
- Interesting that again, as in 10.35ff, Jesus does not vilify the desire for greatness; rather he describes that greatness involves suffering and servanthood. In this section Jesus gives himself as the penultimate example of servanthood: giving his very life to ransom others.
- There is some irony in this section: Jesus models servanthood: James and John ask Jesus to serve them, and Jesus replies ‘what do you want me to do for you?’ He serves them. He makes it clear that status in his kingdom involves participating with him in his cup, his baptism. And even then, though Jesus can promise shared suffering, he will not promise kingdom preference. He does not deny kingdom position; but will not be manipulated in to granting these positions.
- It is worth noting that James does in fact share Jesus cup, and baptism: Acts 12.2 records James’ martyrdom at the hands of Herod. James was the first apostle to share Jesus’ murder at the hands of Jewish/Roman authority.
- The ten are indignant; not it seems because James and John have completely misunderstood Jesus’ kingdom; but because they have attempted elbow their way into preeminence.
- Jesus’ teaching here on the nature of his kingdom makes it clear that he has no intention of replacing the corrupt Jewish religious system or the power-mad Roman political system with yet another system of dog eat dog. “It shall not be so among you!” You shall live by my model, my lifestyle, my example of giving my life to serve others.
- This teaching of Jesus summarizes all he has been trying to teach the disciples since the first announcement in 8.31: The Son of man came to serve, not to be served; and it will be the same for all who follow me!
- This is the miracle of the kingdom of God: that in Jesus God’s victory over sin and death comes not in the anticipated glory of religious/political supremacy, but in the ultimate servanthood of the Son of Man who give his very life to bless others. The Jewish religious establishment reject God’s intention, as does the Roman economic/military machine that callously condemns the King of the Jews to a meaningless criminal’s death. Yet this servanthood is the very mystery of God for the ransom of many.
Application
- How can we practice Jesus’ command that authority among us shall not be like Gentile authority exercised on a lordly fashion, but an authority of servanthood?
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