No, I didn't misspell the first word in the above title, as you may have "wondered" at first glance. I do hope, though, that we will do some "wondering" as we "wander" about this word "servanthood." At least that's my plan, for better or worse. Interested?
"Service" is a key ingredient in the make-up of Brethren. One might say that our emphasis upon it, as a denomination, has been our contribution to the wider church. I don't mean to imply that other Christians are lesser servants; that they do not value service as much as we do. Servanthood spans denominational divisions. It has been easier to agree, as Christians, on how we "do the Word," as James put it, than upon how we "hear the Word." Disasters, natural or human, tend to unite Christians in our response.
That's true not only of the wider church of Jesus Christ, but also true of our own particular denomination, as well as every congregation within it. Our best, as Brethren, comes out when we do the Word. We have influence far beyond our small numbers. Let me forsake a litany of our accomplishments. Suffice it to say they are many, and there is always room for more. Unfortunately, we tread on slippery ground when moving beyond "doing." There's a great deal upon which we just plain don't agree. Because of this, we tend to fall back upon the doing of the Word to discover our unity. I think that is an appropriate and a natural step.
However, in doing service we cannot run away from what it means to be a servant. It's not just "service" that is a key ingredient in the make-up of Brethren. It is "servanthood." If you wish, you may insert "Christian," in the place of "Brethren," for this applies to all who would follow Jesus Christ. "Servanthood" is central. It is not just what we do, it is who we are. It is our identity. We are Servants of the Lord.
To be a servant is not, first of all, an action. Servanthood is an orientation. Back when I was a Boy Scout, I learned how to use a compass in finding my way from one place to another. The metallic rod within my compass would always point to magnetic north. Using a map, I could then orient myself to where I was, based on this magnetic north, and proceed accordingly. I have internalized this learning to the point where I can generally tell where north is, without a compass, and find my way. It's hard to get me lost.
Not long ago, our family left the Washington Zoo to go on to my mother's home in Virginia. Forsaking the major roads, I decided to make a B-line through our nation's capital to where I wanted to go. Anyone who has ever driven there knows that the District of Columbia was laid out to prevent such moves. Going half by an un-detailed map, and half by my sense of direction, I finally got there.
Servanthood is an orientation before it is an action. Much depends upon what we orient ourselves to. A compass can be thrown out of whack if exposed to a magnetic attraction stronger than magnetic north. In such a situation, one can get terribly lost. The map doesn't make sense. What we orient ourselves to is significant.
The argument within the church over the issue of homosexuality is a case in point. We have become lost in this "discussion-less" discussion because our internal compass is out of whack. We do not, as Christians, orient ourselves according to our sexuality, whether we are straight or gay. Sexuality cannot be ignored, but neither should we let this so-called sexual "orientation" be our magnetic north, so to speak. People on both sides of the issue have made that mistake.
First and foremost, we are servants of the Lord. That is, our identity is in orientation to Jesus Christ. "Everyone who calls on the name of the Lord shall be saved," wrote the apostle Paul. "If you confess with your lips that Jesus is Lord and believe in your heart that God raised him from the dead, you will be saved." (Romans 10:13,9) Those are words of orientation. That is what we mean when we say "Jesus is Lord," a key phrase in the New Testament. He is our magnetic north. When we orient ourselves to him the map begins to make sense. Discipleship is the process of internalizing this orientation, such that we have a sense of where we are, even when the terrain is unfamiliar.
Within our denomination, there has been a debate over our name, Church of the Brethren, a title that helps determine our identity. Some feel "Brethren" excludes women. They may be right. Then again, there is much to say positively about the word "Brethren." After all, we are named not for our founder (as Lutherans and Mennonites), or for our organizational style (as Presbyterians, Methodists, or Congregationalists), but for our inter-relationships -we are sisters and brothers of one another.
However, this is not a matter of genealogy (though the Brethren love to make such connections). The heritage we have received from our elders, passed down from one generation to the next, is very important, but the only blood that makes any real difference in the matter is the blood of the lamb of God. If anything, we are brothers and sisters in Christ, not just plain "brethren."
There's an interesting confession of faith found in the 26th chapter of Deuteronomy. It's couched in an offering setting. When a person brought their tithe to the altar, they were to make a confession of faith. This particular creed begins with the words: "A wandering Aramean was my ancestor." Now you know where I got the "wandering" part of this chapter's title. The confession is like a mini-history lesson, describing how the children of Israel managed to become slaves in Egypt, and how God then brought them out to the promised land. The key orientation phrase in this confession of faith, however, is not the "wandering Aramean ancestor."
In this scripture, the magnetic north, so to speak, is found where it says, "we cried to the Lord" ... and the Lord heard, saw, and delivered us (v.7-8)... "Everyone who calls on the name of the Lord shall be saved." Whether from Deuteronomy or Romans, these are words of orientation to be remembered by those of us who are reluctant to stop and ask for directions when we've lost our way, even those (like myself) who place great trust in their internal compass.
This is an appropriate text from which to dive into "Servanthood." At its center is the experience of slavery. In Egypt, the children of Israel were forced into bondage. They were coerced into servanthood, if you will. They had no choice in the matter. In response to their cry, God brought them out of Egypt. He set them free, but that's not where the story ends - for freedom is not an end by itself. God brought them to a place where they could freely choose servanthood, where their choice could answer God's in choosing them. As Bob Dylan once wrote, "you gotta serve somebody."
Within the Exodus story is the experience of Passover, remembered every year up to the present. The passover was not the journey through the parted sea, though that is an important element of the story. It was the blood of a sacrificial lamb painted on the doorpost of each home in which the children of Israel dwelt, that saved them from the death of their firstborn - their future. In Egyptian households, however, the firstborn were not spared - the angel of death did not "pass over." Because of this, Pharoah gave up his coercive hold on God's people, and they were set free. Passover is about freedom from death, from slavery. But it's also about freedom to choose servanthood.
Our celebration of Easter, we believe, is connected to Passover. Jesus takes on the role of the sacrificial lamb - his blood, so to speak, painted on the doorposts of our hearts. Because of this, we have a future. Through Jesus Christ, God sets us free from death, from slavery. "Everyone who calls on the name of the Lord shall be saved," wrote the apostle Paul, echoing the prophet Joel. Easter is about such freedom, freedom for everyone - and not some genealogically determined group, or other "holy huddle." Easter is also about freedom to choose servanthood. "You gotta serve somebody," Dylan wrote. "Why not serve the Lord?"
Yes, service is a key ingredient to our make-up as Brethren, as Christians. In the next chapter, we'll explore further what servanthood means, with the emphasis not so much upon the "doing," as on the "being." We are servants of the Lord. That's our identity, how we "compass" our path through life. We orient ourselves to Christ, even as we wander about servanthood.