All Power Is Mine. May I Wash Your Feet, Please?
Not
what you’d expect from the richest, most famous, most powerful being that
exists.
“All
power is mine. May I wash your feet,
please?”
That’s
servant work. We expect the wealthy and
influential to hire “little” people to wash cars, mow lawns, scrub bathrooms.
Yet
the most powerful, Jesus, offers to wash feet.
We
shake our heads in confusion. What a
waste!
Unless,
of course, serving others is the ultimate honor.
Our
human nature would disagree. We aim
high, grasp for power, seek influence so that others can serve us. How can I get ahead? How can you help me? Our eyes so naturally see others as
opportunities to exploit.
Our
human nature is selfish. It thinks
first about me. Though God says, “Love
the Lord your God with all your heart and soul and mind.” Though God says, “Love your neighbor as
yourself.”
We
don’t. We’ll love our neighbor just enough
so people don’t call us jerks. But we
won’t love our neighbor too much, wanting to get away with as little as
possible.
Selfish. God punishes selfish people. Forever.
We
rightly are afraid.
To
the disobedient who recognize the justice of divine punishment, the Lord
invites, “Watch Jesus washing the feet of his friends.”
Why
did Jesus, most powerful, so humble himself?
He did this in your place. You do
not perfectly love our neighbor. You
deserve eternal pain. God loved you and
sent his son Jesus to love perfectly in your place.
To
see Jesus washing the feet of his friends is to know that he did this as our
substitute. Jesus, the Creator of
heaven and earth, washes dirty toes and then tells us that as many as are
baptized in the name of Jesus have clothed themselves in the perfect life of
Jesus. You get credit for his perfect
love.
Jesus
didn’t stop with foot washing. Later in
the week, he gave up his very life for his friends, you and me. He suffered the eternal hell we
deserved. God put our sin on Jesus and
treated him like he should have treated us, so that in Jesus we are washed
clean of all disobedience.
What
love!
Why
should a great God love sinners like us?
I don’t know, but he did. The
greatest served the least.
This
is now your privilege. Serving others is
the greatest honor that exists.
Let
us love, as he loved us.
May
I wash your feet, please?