Hello and welcome to Tuesday’s podcast. My name’s Bryony and I’m with you this week as we continue through Matthew’s gospel. Yesterday we kicked off the week taking about faith and what it looks like to activate our faith. The result of this activation is that God can give us his power. Over the rest of the week I want to consider what it looks like to use this power well, what’s the responsibility it carries nad how does God’s power at work in us and the world look different to the world’s definition of power.
REFLECTION:
Today I want us to consider ‘the power of position’.
Our youngest child is definitely a power kid, he wants to feel powerful, he pushes back if he feels he’s not in control and he seeks opportunities to wield power daily! In the past this has often led to many power struggles between us. I’ve been learning over the past few years through some parenting coaching that I need to teach him how to feel powerful in an appropriate way, i.e a way that doesn’t involve snatching things from his sister! One of the ways I do this is to give him power, so I might anticipate that he’s going to battle us about getting in the car, so I’ll say ‘would you be in charge of making sure everyone has their seat belts on’. Or he’ll complain about getting a bath and I’ll ask him to be the one who starts the taps running. His desire for power isn’t wrong but the way I teach him to use that power will make all the difference.
We meet Jesus in a moment where he is surrounded by power kids, disciples who want to feel powerful, they want to know they are significant.
In Matthew 18, verse 1-5 we read
At that time the disciples came to Jesus and asked, “Who, then, is the greatest in the kingdom of heaven?” He called a little child to him, and placed the child among them. And he said: “Truly I tell you, unless you change and become like little children, you will never enter the kingdom of heaven. Therefore, whoever takes the lowly position of this child is the greatest in the kingdom of heaven. And whoever welcomes one such child in my name welcomes me.
Jesus has been painting a vivid picture for them of what it looks like to be part of the Kingdom of Heaven, they’ve heard the sermon on the mount when Jesus described the values of the Kingdom, they’ve seen him start to usher in this Kingdom, this new way of living as they’ve witnessed healings and miracles. They are all in, they want a part of this Kingdom, they want to BE a part of the kingdom. This is not in any way I bad thing, of course this is the response Jesus wants from them however in an over-zealous moment someone blurts out the question ‘Who, then, is the greatest in the kingdom of heaven?’. They’ve just been talking to Jesus about paying the temple tax so some of that question could be rooting in wanting to know if the religious leaders will have power in the Jesus Kingdom. I also think that this question bears a striking resemblance to a question we will hear in chapter 20 when James and John’s Mum asks if her sons can have a special place next to Jesus in his Kingdom. It’s not hard to see that these questions were rumbling around the disciples as they walked along the road. These questions reveal their hearts, they are focusing on who will have power and how much power will they have in Jesus’ Kingdom. They are power kids looking to have their power bucket filled.
Jesus gives them a lesson in what it means to use power wisely. He tells them they are to change, they are to become like children. Now our modern ears can hear that and think Jesus means that we are to become ‘child-like’ in that we are the outlook of a child, to be humble, to maybe be childish. But Jesus isn’t speaking to the attitude of children here, he’s speaking to their position. The position of a child in Jesus time was LOW, children cost you something and until they were able to work were a burden. In our modern world children are worshipped,