St Bartholomew is usually
identified with the apostle Nathaniel, best known from his appearance in the
first chapter of John’s Gospel when he asks, ‘Can anything good come out of
Nazareth?’ and to whom Our Lord says, ‘Behold an Israelite in whom there is no
guile.’ After Pentecost tradition holds that he went East; taking the Good News
to Armenia or even India, and was martyred by being flayed alive. He told people about Jesus and suffered a
painful death for the sake of the Kingdom. He bore witness to the truth of Jesus’
life and resurrection, and lit a flame which burns to this day. We would not be
here, doing what we do, believing what we do, and encouraging others so to do
if it were not for the example and witness of people like St Bartholomew who
preferred nothing to Christ, who was the very centre of their lives, who gave
them meaning and purpose, and who told others so that they might believe and encourage
others so to do.
In
this morning’s Gospel we are presented with a challenging scene: it’s during
the Last Supper, where Jesus takes bread and wine to feed his disciples with his
Body and Blood, to explain what is about to happen, that he who was without sin
might become sin so that we might have life, and life in all its fullness. In the
midst of this we see the disciples arguing about who is the greatest. During
the most momentous events of human history Our Lord’s closest friends are
engaged in a squabble which seems childish and stupid, ‘I’m better than you’ ‘No
I’m better than you’. Rather than being close to their Lord they’re involved in
petty one-upmanship, thinking about themselves, about honour and position. It’s
remarkably human, we can well imagine ourselves saying and doing exactly the
same – we know it’s wrong, and we need to turn away from it.
Rather than explode with anger, Our Lord makes a simple point ‘The
kings of the Gentiles lord it over them; and those in authority over them are
called benefactors. But not so with you; rather the greatest among you must
become like the youngest, and the leader like one who serves. For who is
greater, the one who is at the table or the one who serves? Is it not the one
at the table? But I am among you as one who serves.’ In Christianity we
have a different paradigm of leadership, that of the servant – here worldly
values are turned on their head – the Kingdom offers an entirely different way
of life, diametrically opposed to the ways of the world, something radical,
something transformative, something which offers the world an entirely new way
of living, where the service of others is seen as the most important thing.
This is not power in worldly terms, the Creator and Redeemer of all humanity
takes on a servile role – the greatest becomes the least, and encourages others
to do likewise.
Thus, rather than worrying about worldly power the disciples
become servants, looking and acting like Jesus, they become transparent so that
the light of Christ may shine through them in the world, so that their acts of
loving service proclaim the truth, the beauty, and the goodness of the Kingdom.
They go from worrying about power and position, the things of this world, to
being concerned wholly with the Kingdom of God.
We
need to do the same, nothing more, nothing less. In our baptism we put on
Christ, we were clothed with Him, we shared in His Death and Resurrection, and
were filled with grace and the Holy Spirit, so that we might follow Him, and encourage
others so to do. We have everything we need to follow in the footsteps of the Apostles.
We too are fed with the Body and Blood of Christ so that we might have life in Him,
so that we can give our lives to proclaim Him to the world.
As Christians
we need to live lives of service, the service of others and of the God who loves
us and who saves us. We need to live out a radical alternative in the world, and
for the world, to embody an alternative to the ways of selfishness and sin, proclaiming
the Good News of Jesus Christ, and helping others to enter into the joy of the Lord.
We need to do this together, serving and loving each other, forgiving each other,
bearing witness in the world, not conformed to it, so that it may believe and
give glory to God the Father, God the son, and God the Holy Spirit, to who whom
be ascribed as is most right and just, all might, majesty, glory, dominion and
power, now and forever.
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