Foot Washing

By Sylvia Bambola Tuesday, 01 April 2014 16:13:00

Jesus never ceased to amaze the disciples. He was always doing something unexpected. And even at the end, when He was getting ready to go to the cross, He does something astonishing during the Last Supper. John 13:4-17 tells us that He began to wash the disciples’ feet. To say it must have blown their minds is an understatement. People in that day wore sandals, and they walked along dirty, dusty roads. No matter how fastidious someone was, there was no way he could keep his feet clean. In truth, feet were generally always filthy. And so it was customary to wash your feet when entering someone’s house. And if that house was a prosperous one, then the washing of feet was a kindness the owner had one of his lowliest servants perform.

Jesus knew that even those who follow Him in this life will get dirty feet; sullied by the muck and mire of a sinful world. And He was showing how He desires to cleanse us from these things. And He showed it in a most humble and touching way. Here is God, the very Creator of the Universe, stooping down and handling their grimy feet. What love! What excellent character! Even after reading it dozens of times it leaves me in awe, for it shows me we have a God who is not afraid to touch our dirt, to do what it takes to make us clean and whole and beautiful.

John goes on to tell us that Jesus then commissions His disciples to wash the feet of their fellowman. That’s us. We are both disciples and ones needing a foot washing. We are to minister to each other in love, and allow others to do the same for us. It’s not a concept well received in this modern day. We don’t want to be “foot washers.” We want to be stars. We want to go on American Idol. We want to drive big cars and live in big houses. In short, we want the finer things in life and that doesn’t include washing someone’s feet. Because that’s a messy job. It means stooping and handling dirt. It means being a humble servant. It means not caring if we are admired or appreciated.

But Jesus isn’t about to let us off the hook. He told His disciples, “A servant is not greater than his master, and no one who is sent is superior to the one who sent him.” (John 13:16 Amplified). And that even applies to His 21st Century disciples.

Oh, that God would make us all foot washers.

Until next time,

Sylvia

Category
Spirituality

Gathering the Disciples

By Sylvia Bambola Monday, 15 October 2012 15:39:00

As we continue following Jesus’ footsteps, we next see Him gathering His disciples. According to Matthew 4:18-22 He first encounters two brothers, Simon Peter and Andrew. Both are fishermen. At once, Jesus tells them to “follow Me and I will make you fishers of men.” A little further on, He sees two other brothers, James and John, also fishermen, repairing nets with their father Zebedee. And after He calls them to come, they immediately leave their boat and do so. John 1:43-49 tells us the next disciples who joined themselves to Jesus were Philip and Nathanael. John doesn’t say much about them in these passages. We only learn that “Philip was from Bethsaida, the same city as Andrew and Peter.” And Nathanael?  He was hardly a stellar candidate, for when Philip tells him he has discovered the Messiah, the One Moses and the Prophets wrote about, Nathanael responds with, “Can anything good come out of Nazareth?”

Not a very promising beginning to the greatest ministry the world has ever seen—four fishermen and two others the Bible tells us little about except that one of them has great doubts whether the Messiah or any relevant person could ever come from Nazareth. But it highlights the obvious. Jesus didn’t search among the educated, the rulers, the religious elite of His day for His disciples. No. These six were men of little distinction. Six more would join the ranks down the road, but it was with these six Jesus began His ministry.

When we consider who the scriptures have already told us Jesus is—the Son of God, a King, the Savior, the living Word, the Lamb of God, God Himself, the Creator of everything, the light of men—the choice of these six defies logic. Where were the CEOs? The dignitaries? The chief priests? Where were the “movers and shakers” to jump start Jesus’ ministry or help organize a massive PR campaign getting out the word that a mighty ministry of deliverance, healing and salvation was about to unfold? Yet . . . if we remember how Scripture reveals Jesus’ humility and meekness, His willingness to lay aside the majesty, the glory, the honor due Him, choosing these six makes perfect sense.

And it says something else, too. While Jesus is still looking for disciples today, He isn’t just looking for them among the exceptional or the great of this world. Oh, He wants them too. But He’s looking for the ordinary, the simple to follow Him and to be used by Him to further the Kingdom. 1 Corinthians 1:27 tells us “God hath chosen the foolish things of the world to confound the wise; and God hath chosen the weak things of the world to confound the things which are mighty.” That means I qualify. And that means you do, too.

Until next time,

Sylvia

Category
Spirituality