News for the Pews |

humility_2.jpg

Home
  lay_ministry_2.jpg     logo




  20th August 2025

WednesdayReflection


************************

'Jon Bloom'

   Cofounder, Desiring God.org


'The Path to Short-Lived
   Greatness'

         Matthew 23:11


What greatness do you really value?

If you're ruthlessly honest, who would you list as "Matthew 23 v 11"?

The greatness you value is not necessarily what you can articulate to others, or preach from your pulpit - or write in your article - but what you secretly wish you were or who you wish you were more like.

Throughout history, human greatness has almost always been measured within some framework of meritocracy.
By meritocracy, I mean any social system - great or small, formal or informal - where people earn rewards or status based on achievements that their social system values highly.

Every human culture and subculture has its meritocracies.
And that's not necessarily evil.
In many cases they are the most just and beneficial systems, all things considered in this age.
But since we tend to have an upside-down definition of greatness - the measure of our superiority to others rather than our love for them - our meritocracies have a powerful tendency to appeal to the sinful, selfish, self-exalting parts of us.

Which is why Jesus's definition of greatness can sound so foreign and disorienting to us:

"The greatest among you shall be your servant."

Matthew 23:11


It's very tempting to take Jesus's statement as a sort of poetic flourish, a metaphor for remembering to be kind and somewhat generous as we pursue achieving some level of relative greatness compared with others (like everybody else does).

The only problem is, Jesus wasn't speaking metaphorically.
He very literally meant we should aspire to be servants.

In every culture throughout history, servants have been those who, by virtue of birth or circumstances, have been forced to spend much of their lives pursuing the good of someone else above their own.

The vast majority of servants have occupied the lower tiers of social status.
And while a servant might aspire to a more socially recognized and rewarded level of servitude, it has been extremely rare that a free person would aspire to servanthood.

In almost every human culture, servanthood is not the path to greatness.
The best servants can hope for is to serve great people (Matthew 20:25).
But in the kingdom of God, as Jesus demonstrated, servanthood is the path to greatness

This is a strange greatness to fallen humans.

When Jesus said, "The greatest among you shall be your servant," the context was a scathing public rebuke of the Jewish religious leaders.

Here's some of what he said:

"The scribes and the Pharisees sit on Moses' seat, so do and observe whatever they tell you, but not the works they do.


A key - and convicting - phrase is, "they do all their deeds to be seen by others."

This revealed the heart's affections that were fuelling leaders' behaviours.

They were operating in a fallen human-defined meritocracy.
They were pursuing the rewards and commendation their culture valued.
In all their pious-appearing achievements, they were aiming for this-worldly greatness - and probably mistaking it for next-worldly greatness too.

So, what greatness do we really value?
We will always desire the treasure we believe most valuable.
We will always pursue what we believe is true.

It's not sinful to desire to be great; it's sinful to desire idolatrous, selfish greatness.

Kingdom greatness reveals the character and genius of God:
the greatest among us are those who love and serve others most - who love others most by serving others most.

The truly greatest among us are those who by their actions demonstrate they trust God to exalt them at the proper time and to the appropriate degrees (1 Peter 5:6) and, like Jesus, don't measure their greatness by the commendation and rewards they receive from their social systems (John 5:41).

This is an otherworldly greatness we only pursue when we truly understand the grace of God - that the triune God has so utterly and completely served us in every facet of our experience that we wish to freely give what we have freely received (Matthew 10:8), and in love present our bodies as living sacrifices of worshipful service (Romans 12:1).


Un-edited version avaiable, on request




Jon Bloom
is a cofounder of Desiring God, wrote more than 750 articles, and continues to serve as a board member.




  During the Interregnum
  March 2025 to ....
  Contact the Benefice Office
  E-mail:
  thebeneficeofbhkandr at gmail dot com

  Contact the Benefice Office
  Sunday School Rooms, Church Lane,
  BUGBROOKE, Northampton, NN7 3PB
  Land Line: 01604 830373
  E-mail:
  thebeneficeofbhkandr at gmail dot com
  Mon., Tues., Wed., Thur.
  9:00am to 11:30am
Picture of the Sunday School

  For Baptism bookings  (Christenings)
  to arrange an appointment please contact
  the Benefice Office.

  For Wedding bookings:
  please contact the Benefice Office to arrange
  an appointment.

  Who Made This?
  Seeing as you asked, if you can give helpful
  advice or report factual corrections and
  'deliberate mistakes',email:-
  regparker3 at gmail dot com

  Email addresses shown using words in an
  attempt to avoid 'spam',
  Type the email address replacing 'at' with '@',
  and 'dot' with '.'