Jonathots Daily Blog
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Sitting my eleven-year-old self down right in the middle of the Junior High Sunday School class, my attention was riveted on the astounding, emerging breasts of Terry and Linda.
All at once I was startled by some words that came out of the mouth of our schoolmarm-deacon’s-wife teacher. She was reading the names of the twelves disciples when she stated, without flinching, “James, the Less.”
It just piqued my curiosity–so much so that I raised my hand to ask a question. She was so flabbergasted at seeing a student express interest that she paused for a second, and then finally acknowledged me.
I asked, “James the Less? Who made him ‘Less?’ And who has the right to call him that?”
She was stymied. My particular question was not covered in lesson book under “potential points of discussion.”
I waited for her response. At length, she replied, “Well, I don’t know for sure, but maybe it’s because he wasn’t as important as the other James.”
This infuriated me. A God in Heaven who thinks some people are more important than others? How can He be “no respecter of persons” when He’s keeping a private list of “Faves?”
I objected, and all at once some of the other students (who had been deep in Sunday-morning comas) began to listen, and agreed with my concerns. What right did we have to call this James “the Less” and give the other James more value?
Even though this was many years ago, I had been trained in a spiritual communism. Amazingly, we still tout these concept even today.
Everyone is the same, as far as their worth.
Everything that everyone does is just as precious as what another person does.
Of course, this is total foolishness.
I do expect my airline pilot to have more expertise than the city bus driver. I’m not taking anything away from the bus driver, but I am asking the airline pilot to take his job very seriously, and to show up with integrity and deeper knowledge.
We must understand that James the Less was given that name on Jesus’ watch. Jesus had three disciples he favored over the other nine. Favored in what way? Whenever he went into critical situations or needed men of great faith, Peter, James and John were ushered to the front.
Yet we never feel as if the others are slighted–until one day they decided to get fussy. They sat around and discussed who would be the greatest. To stimulate the conversation, they had to begin with the premise that each one of them was just as essential as the other.
Jesus rebuked them. He said, “These are concerns that the world has. It won’t be that way with you. For you, he that would be master must be a servant.”
Jesus offered a Jesonian philosophy. It still works today. When Jesus found people, he did three things:
1. This is who you are.
When a man with many demons cast out of him wanted to join Jesus’ troup, he sent the man back to his own town, to spread the word.
“This is who you are.”
Much of our life span is wasted denying who we are. Maybe we find it insufficient. Maybe we think we should be given more focus. But in the process of arguing over who we are, we fail to reach the second point.
2. This is why it is good.
The greatest gift we can give anyone is to help them understand why who they are is so good. James the Less was not offended because James the Less knew who he was and why that was a great contribution to the cause.
James, who was considered greater, was balanced out by realizing that in order to maintain his place in the front lines, he needed to be “servant of all,” even to James the Less.
3. The Gospel will show you how you can peak.
Yes, once you find out who you are and realize that it’s good, Jesus has a style to grant you relevance.
I always have to giggle when I hear someone advertise “The Great Smoky Mountains.” Actually, when you place a Smoky Mountain next to Mount Everest, it might look like flat land. But because the Smoky Mountains are strategically placed–where there are no other mountains around to compete–they are not only beautiful and entertaining, but considering their location, can be called “great.”
Find your location and peak. Don’t situate yourself next to people who have a different mission and try to pull them down, criticizing them to make yourself look better.
The Gospel of Jesus teaches you how to peak in your own arena.
Unfortunately, my schoolmarm at the church that day could not give me an answer to my question. She was just like me. She was taught that calling someone “less” was an insult.
Actually, when you’re James the Less, you just use wisdom to make sure you don’t hang around the other James too much–but instead, find out who you are and why that’s good.
And then let the Gospel show you how to peak.
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another GREAT blog…I can recall quite a number of occasions in my youth that such questions came to me, but I was trained to believe that God clobbers anyone who questions any of His WORD, as contained in the Bible, so I rarely let the question surface where anyone could hear…as though if I did not say it aloud, God would not hold it against me…mercy
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