Once, in a time long past but
remembered in stories and recalled by bits of pottery dug up from mounds of
earth that experts say were once towns, there lived a servant. This servant, or
so he proclaimed himself, had no visible master. This peculiarity disturbed
many people who met him. His job, if you could call it a job, was to do the
will of his master, who had sent him to serve those whom he met. Exactly when
he had become a servant is not agreed upon in the memory of his friends (who
were few), though many people flocked to see him at work, doing his master's
will.
People came from far and wide
to witness the great things that the servant was doing. He himself took no
credit for his work, he was, he always said, only serving his master. His
master must have been very poor himself, for the servant lived on the land and
from gifts that were given to him by the people to whom he was sent to serve.
He had no fine clothes, his accent was coarse, and he was not particularly
attractive physically. There was no deceit in his words. He spoke only truth.
In his presence the sick were healed, the lame walked, the deaf could hear, the
dumb could speak. Before him, all evil fled.
Eventually, the servant drew
such crowds that the governor of the region and the police were threatened with
his presence. The local ministers and boards of the local church found fault
with the way he talked about God. Therefore, the two groups, politicians and
religious leaders, conspired to have him arrested on false charges and put to
death-for the good of the people, of course. The servant was obviously a
dangerous man. A wandering servant with no visible means of support and no
verifiable master was dangerous to the wealth and wisdom of the world.
The authorities oppressed him
at every turn, forcing him to flee for his life, but the servant did not
complain. In fact, eventually he let himself be captured, walked into an ambush
when he could have fled. Court convened in the middle of the night. The state's
witnesses were brought to speak against him. A mob denounced him. He was
despised and rejected. Given over to the guards, he was beaten and bruised, yet
he did not open his mouth. Like a lamb led to the slaughter, the humble servant
was taken away to his death. In the end he was alone, his master did not come
to defend him from death. He died.
The servant died a death
reserved for the unrighteous. A rich man donated a grave site for him, a cave
dug from the cliff. Some women and the rich man took the servant's body and
placed it in the tomb. Then soldiers rolled a large rock into the entrance of the
tomb and stood watch to make sure, there was no disturbance or unrest. His few
friends deserted the servant and hid behind closed doors in fear of their
lives. This is not a very pleasant story, but it is very plausible. The world
is cruel to the goodness and selflessness of servant hood.
Everyone wants to be a
master. Powerful oppressors fear truth and power that is not theirs to control.
Not much, hope for servants, at least not much hope for servants of the
invisible master (if there are any still walking the earth, or ever were).
However, this story does not
end there, and this is the suspicious part, the part that only certain people
accept. However, servants of the invisible master, whoever they are, accept it.
The story told among the servants is that on the first day of the week some
women friends of the servant went to the cave tomb and found it empty. That's
not the end of the story either. His friends, hiding out behind locked doors,
say that the servant came and stood in their midst and gave them a gift of new
life. Others of his friends say that he appeared to them, but they did not
recognise him until they sat down and ate together.
His friends say the servant
still lives in the hearts of those who will let him into their hearts. They
know this because they see the servant at work in women and men who are also
willing to let themselves be servants of the invisible master. The living
servants find that, still, truth is not always welcome and that power respects
power and not servant hood. But in service of the master they find joyful life
everlasting and that is worth all that servant hood brings.
Once, the servant said to his
friends some great words of truth that came quietly, intimately, as secrets are
told among friends. The servant also stated that whoever would be great among
you must be your servant, and whoever would be first among you must be servant
of all.
Jesus is the servant. God was
his invisible master. We, if we choose to be, are the friends through whom the
servant still serves all people: the rich, the poor, the outcast, the popular,
the illiterate, and the educated--all people. The invitation is always open to
let Jesus be a servant to us and through us for the salvation of the world.
Even today, the invitation is always open to receive the servant into our
hearts so that he may lead us to eternal life.
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