If I then, your Lord and Teacher, have washed your feet, you also ought to wash one another's feet. -- John 13:14
Humility and meekness do not arise from weakness; both are
evidence of true strength and power. In
the third verse of this same chapter, John says that Jesus was motivated to
rise from the table and take the servant’s place because He knew that He had
been given all authority by the Father, that He had come from God and was about
to return to God.
If we truly know our place in the cosmos, humility is not
humiliating. Service cannot be demeaning
to a child of God. Meekness liberates us
from the confines and restrictions of the ego.
We are able to lay aside the mask and be as they were in the Garden,
unashamed. This is the delusion of the
world system, that self-exaltation and arrogance are marks of strength, that
hardness of heart is sensible, and that scorn, mockery, and unbelief are
enlightened.
The Lord is the straight edge that discloses how twisted and
deviant our commonsense thinking has become.
It is a hard thing to lay aside pride and abase ourselves, yet there is
no compulsion. We are not giving in,
just giving. We are not acting out of
fear but out of love.
I was helping clean the house of a family member several
years ago. The place had been allowed to
get absolutely filthy to the point that when I first walked in, I nearly gagged
on the smell. The person started insisting
on paying us for the work we were doing.
After a while, his attitude began to annoy me. I rather unkindly snapped out, “You don’t
have enough money to pay me to do this.”
I know he was just trying to thank us, and I apologized for saying it
the way I did, but it was true. I would
not have done it at gunpoint – only out of love and concern. A legion of Roman soldiers could not have
forced Jesus to bow before Caesar, but He was willing to get down on his knees
and wash the feet of those who followed Him.
“Why is the sea the king of a hundred streams?” asked
the Ancient Sage.
“Because it lies below them.
Therefore
it is the king of a hundred streams.”
(Christ the Eternal Tao, chapter 49)
2 comments:
That's a great analogy, Mushroom.
Thank you.
Post a Comment