https://youtu.be/j2GAxXtKhr4?feature=shared
Psalm 124:6-7 Blessed be Abba God! ⊠We have escaped like a bird from the snare of the fowler; the snare is broken, and we have escaped. Our help is in the Name of Abba GodâŠ
Introduction
Over the course of the past few weeks, weâve seen Jesus defend his disciples from the offense of unclean hands; itâs not what goes into a person that makes them clean or unclean, but what comes out (itâs a heart issue). Weâve seen Jesus break socio-religio-political boundaries by including an unclean, gentile woman in Godâs mission and reign in the world. And last week, we saw Jesus reorient the disciples toward the mission of God and away from the ideologies and dogmas of humanity thriving off notions of human power and might: to be great in the reign of God is to identify with those who have no status or power in your society; in other words it means: to be human. Throughout all these stories, thereâs a common thread: discipleship.
According to Mark, to follow Jesus out of the Jordan and to the cross demands a rather radical overhaul of both the believerâs inner and outer life. Itâs not about obeying traditionalisms and arcane laws long expired only rendering the outside âcleanâ; itâs not about boundaries and political lines keeping some in and some out; and itâs not about greatness defined by humanityâs preferential option for status. (These things perpetuate the mythologies of the kingdom of humanity serving only those who are powerful while enslaving those who are not.) Discipleship is about having/receiving a new heart, new mind, new eyes, new ears, new language, and new actions. The disciple of Christ, like Christ, must endure being the epicenter of the conflict of the reign of God being born into the world fracturing the kingdom of humanity and putting things that are upside down, right-side up.
Markâs Jesus hammers home that discipleship is not/never about dividing lines, in-group and out-group, us v. them; none of that divisionary thinking can exist among the disciples or within each disciple. The mission and reign of God is much bigger (and better) than anyoneâyesterday, today, and tomorrowâcan or will imagine. The thinking that belongs to the kingdom of humanity is small and divisive; for the disciples, they must think in line with the reign of God: bigâŠcosmically and inclusively big.
Mark 9:38-50
And then John said to [Jesus], âTeacher, we saw someone casting out demons in your name and were [unsuccessfully[1]] preventing him because he was not following us.â But Jesus said, âDo not prevent him, for no oneâwho will do a powerful work in my nameâis also able to revile me quickly. For whoever is not against us, [is] for us. For whoever might give you a winecup of water because the name that you are of Christ, truly I say to you, by no means will they lose their reward.â (Mk 9:38-41)
Structurally, thereâs no indication in the text that this moment is separated from where we left off last week. Thus, we can assume the same posture: Jesus is down low, the disciples are gathered around him, and a little child is in their midst. And then John speaks, âTeacher, we saw someone casting out demons in your name and we were preventing him because he was not following us.â With this statement, itâs clear that the disciples still[2] donât understand what it means to be disciples in the reign of God and of Christ.[3] The in-group/out-group way of thinking runs deep in the inner (and outer) lives of the disciples. When it comes to Christ, all traditional conceptions of human groupings are called into question.[4] So, the way Jesus replies to the group continues his teaching the disciples what the reign and mission of God (really) is about: It is completely inclusive and it promotes equity. The disciples need a more âwelcoming [and open]â mindset[5] toward people who were not following themâwhich is the real offense for John;[6] anyone who is participating in the reign and mission of God in Christâs name should not be hindered.[7] In other words, the ability to cast out demons in Jesusâs name[8] (which the Twelve failed at recently[9]) isnât restricted to some special authority and status[10] the Twelve think they have because of their proximity to Jesus.[11]
Interestingly, when Jesus says, âDo not prevent him, for no oneâwho will do a powerful work in my nameâis also able to revile me quickly. For whoever is not against us, [is] for us. For whoever might give you a winecup of water because the name that you are of Christ, truly I say to you, that by no means they might lose their reward.â, heâs not only broadening the mindset of the disciples, heâs (also) giving three reasons[12] why the disciples need not to be exclusive.
The man is not an enemy; heâs performing exorcism in Jesusâs name thus associating himself with Jesus. Because of this association he will not be able to speak ill quickly of Jesus (et al);[13]Because of the in-group/out-group mentality expressed in Johnâs comments to Jesus, Jesus immediately stops cliquishness; it doesnât belong to the reign of God;[14] and,The disciples should be kind; simple, kind acts done for those who bear Jesusâsname(i.e. giving a winecup of water) are significant and will be noticed[15] because it is service to Jesus, thus to God. Thus, they are actually with us (áœÏáœČÏ áŒĄÎŒáż¶Îœ) (pace John).[16]In this way, anything done in the name of Christ and for those who bear Christâs name is enough;[17] no further demonstration of belonging is needed.[18] In light of this deduction, Jesus exhorts the disciples not to be so prideful[19] that they quickly draw lines in the sand organizing whoâs in and whoâs out, âThey are to be a church, not a sect.â[20]
Jesus then discusses causing one of these little ones (potentially drawing upon the image of the child in their midst and broadening it to those who believe in [Jesus] and can be taken advantage of[21]) to stumble; Jesus emphasizes, from a different angle, the dangers of the aforementioned âcliquishnessâ and elitism.[22] Each of the four sayings does not really offering anything more novel than the one before it except that the focus moves from causing someone else to stumble to causing oneâs own self to stumble. All four sayings work together emphasizing how bad it is to get in the way of Godâs Spirit at work in the world to bolster oneâs human ideas of exclusion and inequality. Unlike the person who gives a cup of water to the followers, the person who causes someone to stumble deserves the opposite of reward. According to Markâs Jesus, the one who causes another to stumble will be thrown into Gehenna known for âpunishment of the ungodly,â[23] into the flames of the unquenchable fires (in Gehenna the fires burned continually because it was Jerusalemâs garbage dump[24],[25]) and where their worm does not die (ref. to Isaiah[26]). Through these intense images, Jesus exhorts his disciples to be alert and awake because threats lurk outside and within themselves.[27] Therefore, the disciples are exhorted to deal shrewdly with themselves rather than others becauseâmost likelyâthe problem isnât the hand, eye, foot, or someone else; itâs the heart[28] and its ability to be held captive to the kingdom of humanity because of pride, a desire for greatness, and status. Rather, the disciples are to be utterly committed to God[29] and Godâs reign and mission in the world; this, so they can participate in Godâs mission of justice and equity (which is peace[30]) as the beautiful, fragrant, salted sacrifices they are for the well-being of the neighbor and to the glory of God.[31]
Conclusion
Jesus is going to great lengths to make sure his disciples understand that the reign of God is nothing like the kingdom of humanity. God isnât against humanity, in fact, according to Jesus and Paul Lehmann (quoted last week), God is about humanity, so much so that God transcended Godâs self and became human. This was done to elevate humanity above what humanity was/is willing to settle for. And, frankly, thatâs the problem with the kingdom of humanity: it regularly settles for less than. Jesus doesnât want his disciples consumed with notions of greatness, privilege, power, and authority; these things make human beings less human. Jesus wants his disciples to see that their humanity is anchored to their dependence on God by faith in Jesus. The world, for Jesus, needs more simple, vulnerable human beings, not more dictators and despots.
The disciples are to always choose humanity over inhumanity; this is what it means to be dedicated to and participate in Godâs mission and revolution of love, life, and liberation. Thus, what keeps the disciples human is taking seriously their role as representatives of God in the world and among their neighbors. Here, our faith in Christ and our dependence on God works itself out in Spirit-filled, loving action toward the neighbor to the glory of God. Remembering whom we follow and whose we are, keeps us dependent and responsible on and to God as well as on and to our neighbor. In this divine economy, there is no elitism and division, but only equity and unity, thus peace and justice. Dorothee Sölle writes,
âThe love of which the Gospel speaks is simply the radical intervention of one irreplaceable being for another; an identification which is provisional and which makes its agent dependent. Christ identified himself with God and thereby made himself dependent on Godâs attaining identity himself. Anyone who identifies himself with Christ likewise represents God in the world, in suffering and in transitoriness.â[32]
The disciples mistakenly divided by who has authority and who doesnât, who was following the right dogma and who wasnât; Jesus set them straight: whoever is representing me in the world through deeds of love, life, and liberation, is representing God and is participating in Godâs mission. They who have ears to hear, let them hear.
[1] R. T. France, The Gospel of Mark: A Commentary on the Greek Text, NIGTC, eds. I. Howard Marshall and Donald A. Hagner (Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 2002), 376. âif the imperfect tense of áŒÎșÏλÏÎżÎŒÎ”Îœ is correct âŠit probably indicates an unsuccessful attempt rather than the repeated prohibition of a persistent âoffenderâ.â
[2] William C. Placher, Mark, Belief: A Theological Commentary on the Bible, eds Amy Plantinga Pauw and William C. Placher. (Louisville: WJK, 2010), 135. âThe Twelve make one mistake after another.â
[3] France, Mark, 375. âThis little didactic story follows very appropriately form the lesson of vv. 33-37, the call to disciples to be ready to receive those whom they might naturally reject, and the connections is reinforced by the repetition three times in these verse of the phrase áŒÏ᜶/áŒÎœ Ïáż· áœÎœÏΌαÏÎŻ ÎŒÎżÏ
/ÏÎżÏ
⊠which was the reason given for receiving the child in v. 37.â
[4] France, Mark, 375. âWhere the name of Jesus (i.e., a relationship with him) is concerned, natural human considerations of who is in and who is out will be subverted.â
[5] France, Mark, 376. âThe effect of the pericope is to encourage a welcoming openness on the part of Jesusâ disciples which is in stark contrast to the protective exclusiveness more often associated with religious groups, not least within the Christian tradition.â
[6] France, Mark, 377. âThe ground of Johnâs objection was not lack of success, but the use of Jesusâ name outside the group of disciples. The manâs offence is that ÎżáœÎș áŒÎșολοÏ
ÎžÎ”áż áŒĄÎŒáżÎœ.â
[7] France, Mark, 376. âThe man concerned is not a recognized member of the group of disciples, but he does profess to operate in the name of Jesus, and the results of his activity are beneficent. It is this criterion rather than a narrower group identity which the pericope accepts.â
[8] France, Mark, 376-377. âThere is some other evidence in the gospels for exorcists outside the immediate circle of Jesus and his disciplesâŠand there are a number of mentioned of exorcism, Jewish and pagan, in roughly contemporary sourcesâŠSome of them invoked the name of Jesus (after his death and resurrection), and not always with satisfactory results âŠThis is the only mention of a similar practice during Jesusâ lifetime.â
[9] France, Mark, 376. âTo make matters worse, this pericope follows hard on the story of the disciplesâ failure in exorcism in 9:14-29. To see an outsider apparently succeeding where they, the chosen agents of Jesus, have failed is doubly distressing.â
[10] France, Mark, 377. What John is looking for is not so much personal allegiance and obedience to Jesus, but membership in the âauthorisedâ circle of his followers. We should perhaps understand áŒĄÎŒÎ”áżÏ here as specifically the Twelve, regarded as having an exclusive link with and commission from Jesus, so that other peopleâs association with him must be through their mediations. Even if such a possessive doctrine is not explicit, it fits Johnâs restrictive action and explains the terms of Jesusâ response.â
[11] France, Mark, 376. Exorcism as special feature of disciple/the twelveâs calling/authority (given by Jesus), âTo find the practice carried out in the name of Jesus by someone unknown to them is therefore a severe blow to the disciplesâ sense of identity, and undermines their special status. This issue of status, which underlay the teaching of vv. 33-37, is therefore still in focus.â
[12] France, Mark, 377.
[13] France, Mark, 377. âhas associated himself with [Jesus] by using his name, and his choice of that authority, together with the fact of his success, marks him as being on the right side. Such a person cannot in consistency go on to speak as his enemy, and so there is no justification of Jesusâ disciples to oppose him.â
[14] France, Mark, 378. , âThe Cliquishness which too easily affects a defined group of people with a sense of mission is among the âworldlyâ values which must be challenged in the name of the kingdom of God.â
[15] France, Mark, 378. In re ârewardâ for giving water, âBut even so small an act betokens a personâs response to Jesus in the person of his disciplesâŠ, and as such will not be unnoticed.â
[16] France, Mark, 378.
[17] Placher, Mark, 135. âThe basic direction of Jesusâ response is clear enoughâif people are doing good in Jesusâ name, leave them alone.â
[18] France, Mark, 378. âFor Markâs readers it is the title ΧÏÎčÏÏÏÏ which is the touchstone of a personsâ allegiance.â
[19] Placher, Mark, 135. âThey are, it turns out, not making a new mistake but the same prideful, competitive ones. If someone is not part of their group, their gang, their tribe, then how dare he claim to do anything in the name of Jesus.â
[20] France, Mark, 378-379. âThe three sayings collected in vv. 39-41 thus illustrate in different ways the open boundaries of the kingdom of God, where both committed disciple and sympathetic fellow traveler find their place. The unknown exorcist represents this outer circle, and is to be welcomed as such. There are indeed opponents and âoutsidersâ, as we see repeatedly in the rest of the gospel, but disciples are called on to be cautious in drawing lines of demarcation.
[21] France, Mark, 381. âAs Markâs text stands the question cannot be answered with confidence, but the context as a whole makes it unlikely that the ÎŒÎčÎșÏοί should be understood only, or even mainly, of children. Disciples of any age are potentially vulnerable to such âtrippingâ.â
[22] France, Mark, 380. âThe [following] whole little complex of sayings, like the preceding pericopes, focuses on the demands of discipleship both negatively and positively. The saying thus fit into the overall thrust of this part of the gospel, however artificially they may be linked with one another.â
[23] France, Mark, 381-382. áŒĄ ÎłÎΔΜΜα ââŠa term used in apocalyptic literature for the ultimate place of punishment of the ungodlyâŠit had a clear and well known meaning (because of Matthewâs use}, so that its use alone would communicate adequately.â
[24] France, Mark, 382. Fire âas the agent of judgment and destruction, perhaps exploiting the origin of the word ÎłÎΔΜΜα in the valley of HinnomâŠwhere the fires of Jerusalemâs refuse dumps burned continuously.â
[25] Placher, Mark, 137. âGehenna was a valley south of Jerusalem where in ancient times babies were sacrificed to the Canaanite god Moloch. In the reforms under King Josiah (7th century BCE) such practices were brought to an end, and the area became a garbage dump, where refuse was continually smoldering. Gehenna was a horrible place, full of fire, smells, maggots, rats, and things in decay. Its history as a locus of child sacrifice further evokes the context here, where Jesus is singling out for condemnation hose who âput a stumbling block beforeâ or âtrip upâ any of the ;âlittle ones who believe in me.ââ
[26] France, Mark, 382. Worm statement, âIn Isaiah the clause describes the state in which the dead bodies of Godâs enemies will be seen, presumably envisaged as decomposing and burning on the battlefield.â
[27] France, Mark, 382-383. âDanger comes to the disciple not only from outside but from withinâŠit is for the reader individuallyâŠto determine what aspect of oneâs own behavior, tastes, or interests is a potential cause of spiritual downfall, and to take action accordingly.â
[28] Placher, Mark, 138. âBut the hypotheticals, while true in themselves, rest on faulty premises. Our hands and feet and eyes do not cause us to sin. We ourselves, our minds, our souls, our willsâwhatever language one wants to use, the source of our sin is not a part of us that can be removed with a sharp enough knife. The point of the passage, then, is to say, âthis is how serous sin is: it would be worth cutting off part of your body to cure it. If only it were that easy. So we have to think even more deeply about sin.â
[29] France, Mark, 384. v. 49 and salt âIn this context it speaks of one who follows Jesus as totally dedicated to godâs service, and warns that such dedication will inevitably be costly in terms of personal suffering.â
[30] France, Mark, 385. âThe good salt which should characterize disciples consists in âŠor results in âŠ.peaceful relationships. While salt as a metaphor for peacefulness is in itself an unusual use, in the OT salt symbolises a covenantâŠâ
[31] France, Mark, 384. v. 50 symbolism of âsaltâ ââŠin symbolises the beneficial (ÎșαλÏΜ) influence of the disciple on societyâŠâ
[32] Dorothee Sölle, Christ the Representative: An Essay in Theology after the âDeath of God,â translated by David Lewis (London: SCM, 1967), 142. Originally published as, StellvertretungâEin Kapitel Theologie nach dem âTode Gottes,â Kreuz Verlag, 1965. Emphasis, mine.
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