Mark 3:13-19
Afterwards
Jesus went up into the hills and summoned certain ones he chose, inviting them
to come and join him there; and they did. Then he selected twelve of them to be
his regular companions and to go out to preach and to cast out demons. These
are the names of the twelve he chose: Simon (he renamed him “Peter”), James and
John (the sons of Zebedee, but Jesus called them “Sons of Thunder”), Andrew,
Philip, Bartholomew, Matthew, Thomas, James (the son of Alphaeus), Thaddaeus,
Simon (a member of a political party advocating violent overthrow of the Roman
government), Judas Iscariot (who later betrayed him).
Food for thought!
Jesus has come to a very
important moment in his life and work. He has made a very considerable impact
on the public mind. But also his critics are growing in their opposition.
Indeed, they have already decided to destroy him. If he dies, as he will, what
will happen to his message? He had to find some way for his message not to die
when he dies. As a solution to this practical problem, Jesus has to choose
certain people on whose hearts and lives he will write his message and who will
continue the message. The messengers die, the message does not die; messengers
come and go; the message is forever, is eternal. Jesus chose a very mixed group of his messengers. In it the two extremes met. Matthew was a tax-collector and, therefore, an outcast; he was a renegade and a traitor to his fellow countrymen. Simon the Cananaean was Zealot; and the Zealots were a band of fiery, violent nationalists who were pledged even to murder and assassinate to clear their country of the foreign rulers; today we call such as these terrorists. Between Matthew and Simon there were all kinds of backgrounds and opinions; there are the rest of us. Jesus continues to mix us.
Judging them by worldly standards the men Jesus chose had no special qualifications at all. They were not wealthy; they had no special social position; they had no special education, they were not trained theologians; they were not high-ranking churchmen and ecclesiastics; they were twelve ordinary men. But they had two special qualifications. First, they were loyal to Jesus. And second, they had the courage to show that they were loyal to Jesus.
Yes, to be with Jesus did require courage. We can all be loyal to celebrities, but not to someone labelled a sinner and a heretic; someone accused of violating all religious rules and regulations; someone heading for an inevitable death. These twelve men had all kinds of faults, but whatever else could be said about them, they loved Jesus and they were not afraid to show it. Do you have in your life loyal people like these disciples of Jesus, who can stand by you, come what may?
Jesus
called the disciples to him for two purposes. First, he called them to be with
him. He called them to be his steady and consistent companions. Others might
come and go; the crowd might be there one day and away the next; others might
be fluctuating and spasmodic in their attachment to him, but these twelve were
to live with him all the time, day after day; they never go away, never come,
because there're always there. They're Jesus' companions. Happy the man or
woman with a companion like these.
Second, he called them to
send them out. He wanted them to be his representatives. He wanted them to tell
others about him. They themselves had been won in order to win others.
For their
task Jesus equipped them with a message. Jesus does not call the equipped; he
equips the called people, with the Gospel message, the good news. This is our
weapon, it is our stronghold, it is our strength and power.
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