Mark
10:13-16
People
were bringing little children to Jesus, for him to touch them. The disciples
turned them away, but when Jesus saw this he was indignant and said to them,
‘Let the little children come to me; do not stop them; for it is to such as
these that the kingdom of God belongs. I tell you solemnly, anyone who does not
welcome the kingdom of God like a little child will never enter it.’ Then he
put his arms round them, laid his hands on them and gave them his
blessing.
Food
for thought!
The
characters in this gospel all stand out clear and plain, although it only takes
two verses to tell it. Let us look at each one of them. They tell us about us;
we are all depicted in them.
(i)
There are those who brought the children. No doubt these would be their
mothers. No wonder they wished Jesus to lay his hands on their children and
make a prayer. These mothers had seen what the hands of Jesus could do; they
had seen these hands touch away disease and pain; they had seen them bring
sight to the blind eyes, and peace to the distracted mind; and they wanted
hands like that to touch their children. They knew that there is loveliness in
Jesus because Jesus is lovely.
(ii)
There are the disciples. The disciples sound as if they were rough and stern;
but, if they were, it was love that made them so. Their one desire was to
protect Jesus. They saw how tired he was; they saw what healing cost him. He
was talking to them so often about a cross, and they must have seen on his face
the tension of his heart and soul. All that they wanted was to see that Jesus
was not bothered. They could only think that at such a time as this the
children were a nuisance to the Master.
Yes,
our culture has come to consider children as a nuisance, as a burden to be
avoided and sometimes eliminated. Yes, sometimes we too stop little children
from getting any closer to us. The disciples turned them away, but when Jesus
saw this he was indignant and said to them, "Let the little children
come."
(iii)
There is Jesus himself. This story tells us much about him. He was the kind of
person children loved. Jesus was certainly no grim ascetic, otherwise children
would have run away from him. The best test of loveliness in you and me is the
children. Do children come to you easily and spontaneously? Do you come to
children easily and spontaneously? Do children from your neighbourhood come and
play in your yard? Or are afraid of you? Are you lovely to children? Even your
own children, when you come back from work, do your children come running to
embrace you, or they go running to hide from you?
To
Jesus no one is unimportant. Some might say, "It's only a child; don't let
him bother you." Jesus would never say that. No one was ever a nuisance to
Jesus. He was never too tired, never too busy to give all of himself to anyone
who needed him. There is a strange difference between Jesus and many political
and religious leaders. It is often impossible to get into the presence of one
of these famous ones. They have a kind of retinue and bodyguards which keep the
public away lest the great man be wearied and bothered. Jesus was the opposite
of that. The way to his presence was open to the humblest person and to the
youngest child.
(iv)
There are the children. Jesus said of them that they were nearer God than
anyone else. The child's simplicity is, indeed, closer to God than anything
else. It is life's tragedy that, as we grow older, we so often grow further
from God rather than nearer to him.
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