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The Christian Hierarchy
“At that time the disciples came to
Jesus and said, ‘Who then is greatest in the kingdom of
heaven?’”
Matthew
18:1
What an amazing question. Most of us
have never verbalized such a question, but most of us are pretty
sure we fall pretty low in the Christian hierarchy.
We are certain that others can do more
than we can, so they have a greater rank than we do. We are sure
that some are elders, deacons or preachers, so they are more
important than we are. We are positive that others have lived more
faithfully then we have, so God must love them more.
What kind of response do we expect from
Jesus at this point? “Whoever has given up the most in order to
serve Me is the greatest among you.” Or, “Whoever has traveled
the farthest to teach my gospel is the greatest among you.”
Maybe you expected, “Whoever is the richest and gives the most
to the church is the greatest among you.” Or perhaps, “Whoever
is an elder or a preacher is the greatest among you.”
But that is not what Jesus said. Instead, “He called a
child to Himself and set him before them, and said, ‘Truly I say
to you, unless you are converted and become like children, you
will not enter the kingdom of heaven. Whoever then humbles himself
as this child, he is the greatest in the kingdom of
heaven.”
What? A little child? Little children
can’t do anything! They can listen. They can obey. They can
submit wholly to another, just as this little child did when Jesus
called him to come.
Thus, the greatest in the kingdom is
the one who submits wholly to Jesus like this little child. But
wait. Jesus said that only those who submit like little children
can even enter the kingdom of heaven.
What a phenomenal thought. Everyone who
enters the kingdom as a submissive little child is greatest in the
kingdom. We are all on the same footing. There is no hierarchy
among Christians.
Certainly there are gifts and roles.
Clearly we do not all do the same things, but none of us is more
important than the other. In fact, we are all needed to make this
body work. I
Corinthians 12 drives this point home.
Really, about the only rank in God’s
kingdom is that Jesus Christ is our head (Ephesians
1:22-23). The highest rank that any of the rest of us will
ever achieve is the rank of Christian. Of course, that is not even
really a rank. Rank implies something earned. Being a Christian is
not a rank. It is a gift.
Let’s not worry so much about rank and just be the best
Christians we can be.
Edwin L. Crozier
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