The disciples had an argument, there at the Last Supper. They were debating which of them would be the
most important ruler beside Jesus when His kingdom comes. Jesus calmly said to them, “It is presidents
and kings of the world that are concerned about authority and power. These wield great authority over all men and
everyone must call them ‘gracious’, as in ‘gracious lord,’ or “Wow, you are the
greatest thing since Oprah”. But if you
want rule in my kingdom, you can’t act like that. The ones who will have the greatest authority
in my kingdom must prepare themselves for it by acting like the least
important. If you want to be important,
then be like a waiter. In a restaurant,
who is in charge, the waiter or the customer?
Isn’t the customer who orders the waiter around, telling him what to get
and how much and sending something back because it isn’t quite right? And doesn’t the waiter have to run around,
doing the bidding of the customer? Now
look at me—I am the waiter. I am here to
serve others, not to tell others how to serve me.
“Look, guys, you are great already.
You have stayed with me during my most difficult days, though all the
struggles and trials. Because of this,
you will rule with me because the Father has given me His kingdom to rule. So you will be feasting at my side—even as we
are feasting here!—in my kingdom. And
then I will give you authority to rule all of God’s people. Each of you will sit on a throne, and you
will rule the twelve nations of Israel .
Everybody Wants To Rule The World…Sometimes
Well, this is kinda
embarrassing. After all, Jesus is the
one who is always talking about lowliness, about humility. Yet, here He is, encouraging arrogance. You see, even though he is correcting the
disciples about some things, he is in agreement with them about the thing most
of us are uncomfortable with: It is a
good thing to want to be in charge of the world.
Most of us feel that this is inappropriate. After all, its just too lofty of a goal, and
it is straight hubris—blatant pride to think that we should rule the
world. That’s God’s job, isn’t it?
Well, in fact, its not.
God gave the job over of ruling the world to human beings way back in
Genesis 1. It is our job and we should
want to do the job that God has given us.
So when Jesus answers their question, He doesn’t deny that we should
want to rule the world. Frankly, we
should.
And even if ruling the world seems distasteful to you, we
all have a hint of it in ourselves. We
all want to be respected by the people who know us. And we all want a certain measure of control
to make things “right” over our lives.
And we get angry when we see that something isn’t right, either in our
lives or in the lives of those around us.
These are God-given characteristics to everyone in humanity so that we
can do the job that God gave us, namely, to rule the world.
The Wile E. Principle of Leadership
The problem is that we take
the characteristics that God has given us and go too far with it. Waaaaay too far. God gave us anger at injustice and we have
turned it into anger against anyone who irritates us for any little reason,
without regard to what is really right.
God gave us the desire to make things right and we have turned this into
control-freakishness or harshly punishing those who are different than us. God gave us the desire to be respected and we
turn this into a hunger for fame or a fear of negative responses. This is not the kind of world-leadership
Jesus is looking for.
So when Jesus responded to his disciples, he didn’t
correct their desire for world leadership.
In fact, He affirmed it. He said
that they would be world leaders in the kingdom. And desiring it is a good thing. What he needed to correct was their methods
in achieving it.
Most
of us think of obtaining leadership like Wile E. Coyote. Wile E. is on one cliff and he is running as
fast as he can to the other side, but he doesn’t realize that there is a canyon
between him and the other cliff-top. So
he runs out.. and there he is, standing on thin air. And then he falls…. Bam!... at the bottom of
the canyon and we next see him wrapped in hospital gauze.
Even
so, we often think that leadership—as well as wealth and popularity— is a
straight line. If we want it, we just go
get it. And although we must work hard
to achieve success, we will get it if we just take it by the throat. But what we don’t realize is that there is a
huge canyon between us and our goal. And
if we just try to achieve success in a straight line, then we will be the one
in hospital gauze.
The Power Broker
Jesus helps us realize that
the only one who can give us success, or power or popularity or wealth— in any
positive, permanent way—is God. He is
the one ultimately in charge of all things and He gives these things to whom He
wills. And while the power-hungry may be
in charge now, it will not be that way forever.
God will come down to kick out the power hungry and instead welcome a
different kind of person.
But to obtain that kind of position, we have to be that
different kind of person. God is looking
for the lowly, the Anawim, to be in charge of the world. God can’t have the control freaks, the
judgmental, the quick to anger or the anxious be in charge of the world. So for world leadership, God is looking for a
the lowly and righteous. For the
Anawim. God is looking for the people
who will act as Jesus said they should—People who are repentant of their sins;
people who will sacrifice their life, family and possessions to love Jesus;
people who will endure in Jesus through persecution. People who will set aside their comfort in
order to serve others. God is looking
for faithful disciples.
Jesus Leadership
But not just disciples. Different disciples will obtain different
levels of leadership in the final kingdom.
And those in charge won’t just be the good disciple—the whole world will
be filled with those. But the world
leaders will be those who have certain characteristics of leadership
To be an anawimic leader, we have to follow certain
principles of leadership now:
· Hang out
with the down and out—To be a leader
in Jesus’ methodology, we cannot be shy of having the outcast be our friends
and companions.
· Live like
the down and out—To be in charge, we
have to remain lowly, not seeking wealth or power, but constantly giving to
those in need. A godly leader doesn’t
think how he can benefit from a resource, but how the whole community can
benefit from it.
· Get used to
taking orders—To be in charge, we
have to listen to other’s needs and act on them, rather than our own
ambitions. When we see someone’s need,
we take that as an order from them to act.
If we act in accordance with the other’s need, then we are living out
Jesus’ leadership.
· Lead by
example—It isn’t enough to tell
others to do good, to repent, to live purely—we have to do it ourselves. We must show the life of Jesus and not just
teach it to others.
· Encourage,
don’t demand—To be Jesus leader is to
be gentle and to recognize other’s freedom to do as they please. If we give others freedom and opportunity to
live for God, then they can have a relationship with God. But if we end up controlling others, they
have no relationship with God, only us, which defeats the purpose of trying to
get people to live for Jesus.
So to be a leader in Christ
is to be the Anawim. It is to live as a
waiter, a servant of others, only living to act for others and not for our own
ambition. If we attempt to get our own
ambition, then we end up like Wile E.—
Falling to our doom.



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