Readings: 2Cor 4: 7-15, Ps 126:1-6, Matt: 20:20-28
Rev. Fr. Emmanuel Emenike Onyia.
EVERYONE WANTS TO BE GREAT BUT TRUE GREATNESS IS FOUND IN SACRIFICIAL SERVICE TO HUMANITY
As
human beings it is always our desire to be great. This desire is what makes us
to utilize the unique gift God has given us, from which we serve Him and our neighbours
responsibly. However, human greediness
and selfishness have made us to see greatness as domination and subjection of
others in a competitive and comparative manner. Today as we celebrate the feast
of St. James, we heard in our Gospel
passage how the disciples of Jesus were struggling with this competitive and
comparative attitude.
This
is because the mother of James and John sons of Zebedee came with her sons to
make a request from Jesus saying, ‘Promise that these two sons of mine may sit
one at your right hand and the other at your left in your kingdom.’ And Jesus
answered, ‘You do not know what you are asking’. ‘Can you drink the cup that I
am going to drink?’ They replied, ‘We can.’ ‘Very well,’ he said ‘you shall
drink my cup, but as for seats at my right hand and my left, these are not mine
to grant; they belong to those to whom they have been allotted by my Father.”
So,
other disciples became angry because James and his brother John through the
intercession of their mother desired to have key leadership positions in the
kingdom of our Lord Jesus. But Jesus let them know that the transcendent power
and authority to lead belong to God and whoever He wishes to share it with.
Here,
Jesus prophesied that James and his brother John would "drink of the same
chalice" of suffering as himself, since the two brothers had asked to be
seated at his right and his left in his kingdom, and he told them that they
would be with him in a far different way than they expected.
Tradition
has it that, James suffering martyrdom for the sake of the kingdom, for he was
beheaded in Jerusalem at the orders of Herod Agrippa. His death is the only
biblical record we have of the death of one of the Apostles, and he was the
first to give his life for his Master. He embrace true greatness not by
domination and subjection, but, in service, sacrifice and dedication to the
faith he has found in Jesus which he wishes to share with others.
So,
today we celebrate the feast of a great man, who along with his brother John
and Peter was part of the inner circle of Jesus. So like St. James, we are
encouraged to seek true greatness in humility of service and sacrifice even at
the point of losing everything.
And St. Paul also encouraged us in our first
reading to be steadfast for we are affiliated in every way, but not crushed;
perplexed, but not driven to despair; persecuted, but not forsaken; struck
down, but not destroyed. Knowing that true greatness is found in humble service
and not in domination or subjection of others. For good leaders serve the
community, they subdue arguments and divisions, they maintain unity in times of
distress and act as role models for the young just like St. James.
Dear
friends, today, we all are called to seek true greatness in humble service of
other and not in subjection and domination of others. We are called to utilize
the unique gift God has given us and use it to serve Him and our neighbours
responsibly in any capacity we find ourselves, bearing in mind that one should
not strive to be a leader but a servant because leadership is a gift from God.
Remember, true greatness is found in our sacrificial service to others, not in
competitive and comparative subjection and domination of others.
LET US
PRAY: Lord God, you have taught us that true greatness is found in the
sacrificial service to humanity, give us the grace to live a life of sacrifice
and humility. And through the intercession of St. James my our lives be a good
example of true greatness. We ask this through Christ our Lord. Amen. Wishing
you a fruitful day.
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