Maundy Thursday
Queen
Elizabeth II spent a lifetime of service to her subjects. She was a servant yet
a queen. How can a queen be a servant? Kings and queens are at the top;
servants are down below. But what is the role of a king or queen? The role is
to lead, and to lead you need to serve those whom you lead. A husband is head
of his home. He leads his family, but unless he cares for them in loving
service, they have no part of him, and he has no part of them.
In the
story of Jesus washing his disciple’s feet, John gives us a word picture of an
extraordinary god. The traditional picture of God is of lord and master; God
rules and we serve; God decrees and we obey. And yes, God is lord and master. Yes,
we do need to obey because he is God. But Jesus’ example, on the night before
he died, towards those whom he has been leading, shows another side of what it
means for God to be our lord and master.
It shows us
the hospitality of God. In the Middle East, hosts would provide bowls of water
to wash the feet of weary travellers. But the actual washing would be done by a
lowly servant. The guest is welcomed, raised up and refreshed. What then was
the example Jesus demonstrated to his disciples that night? Was it not the
hospitality of God towards those whom he loves?
God the
Father’s purpose is to lead us home to him, into a right relationship with him
that we can enjoy forever, starting now. God the Son provided the way home for
us by atoning for our sins so that we can enter into that blessed and right
relationship with the Father. And that atonement was made at the cross. Without
it we would never be free from the dark night of the solitary human soul crying
out, I have no purpose, I have no value, I am alone for I have no share of God.
What
happens when a solitary human soul reaches the point at which it cries out, I
am alone for I have no share of God? It recognizes its need for God, and that
recognition comes by the power of the Holy Spirit bearing witness to who Christ
is and what he came into our world to do.
Now, what
did Jesus mean when he said to Peter, unless I wash you, you have no share of
me? Perhaps Jesus’ words could be put this way: unless I serve you, I cannot
provide you with the way home to the Father. Unless I die for you, Peter, my
greatest act of loving service towards you cannot be fulfilled, and therefore
you can have no share with me.
You see,
ladies and gentlemen, God is a god who serves. And he does so because he loves
us, just like a husband serves the wife he loves, even though he is the head of
his house. It’s extraordinary! Divine God serving us? You, Lord, washing my
feet? But if we don’t let him serve us, we have no part of him.
Now, Christians
will say, I’m serving God here or there or in such and such a role. And in one
sense, yes, we are. God calls, we hear and respond in obedience. But think of
it this way: wherever we go, what are we doing? Or more to the point, who’s
work are we doing? Ours or God’s? Is it not God’s work? The work of God serving
the people who need to be brought home to him.
It's mind
boggling how divine God stooped to serve us to the ultimate end – his death in
Christ on Good Friday so that we can come home to him. He really is the Servant
King; a king, yet with the hospitality of service. As it is written in psalm
113, who is like the Lord our God, who has risen on high to his throne, yet
stoops from the heights to look down upon heaven and earth? From the dust he
lifts up the lowly. From the dung heap he raises the poor to set them in the
company of princes. In other words, God is king on his throne, yet he
stoops to lift the lowly from the dust, as a servant would.
And from
the prophet Isaiah, see my servant shall act wisely; he shall be high and
lifted up, and shall be exalted. We all know these words to be the opening
of Isaiah’s foretelling of the servant king. He was pierced for our
transgressions. By his wounds we are healed. The suffering servant king is
Jesus Christ.
Now in a few moments there will be an opportunity for us to re-enact Jesus’ example of washing each other’s feet. And as we do it, I’d like us to remember that not only are we expressing service to each other, we are also demonstrating the hospitality of our servant king. It is God who serves because it is God who loves.
Philip Starks
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