This is as much a shot at the scribes as it is an affirmation of Jesus.
What is authority and how is it different from power?
In
my first pastorate I quickly learned the difference. Apart from the content of my sermons and
Bible studies, how I counseled people, and the shape of wedding and funerals, I
had little official power in that Baptist church. I worked from accumulated influence, which was
the product of earned authority.
The
word used for authority (ἐξουσία)
in this Markan passage often indicates the ability to do something to the
extent there are no hindrances. Power (δύναμις), on the other hand, is typically
used where one has the intrinsic ability to proceed regardless of any hindrances
(TDNT, v. 2, pp. 562ff).
In
the New Testament, authority can be used to denote the prerogative to make
decisions, connoting the freedom to choose.
It is based upon privilege delegated by God; it is given and not grasped.
Jesus
at times demonstrated raw power, the intrinsic ability to proceed with or
without cooperation. In the present
passage, however, something else is at work.
The
listeners in this Markan passage see something in Jesus that is different from
what they see in the scribes. The
scribes could only exegete and interpret what had already been given through
the prophets. Jesus, on the other hand,
brings to the table something new and creative and not just a rehashing of what the people had always known.
The
fresh and unprecedented way Jesus moved among the people and the choices he
made lent to his words authority, which resulted in a level of influence the
scribes could not attain through formal power and position.
Authority
in the early church followed this pattern set by Jesus. The person in authority led not by force but
by a recognition that the leader’s directives were just and honorable. Authority distinguishes itself from naked
power by its ability to produce acceptable answers to questions (Meeks, The First Urban Christians, pp. 122
&137).
The
crowd saw authority in Jesus because his answers were simply better than those
of the scribes. Authoritarian
religious leaders turn to power as the last refuge of those who have run out of
compelling, timely answers.Church leaders, both ordained and lay, are tempted to resort to raw power when they feel they are not going to get their way. Leaders can feel that they are going to lose something they value, such as position, control, or what is comfortable and familiar.
In this move to power, we violate the example of Jesus and his teachings about leadership:
A dispute
also arose among them as to which one of them was to be regarded as the
greatest. But he said to them, “The kings of the
Gentiles lord it over them; and those in authority over them are called
benefactors. But not so with you; rather the greatest
among you must become like the youngest, and the leader like one who serves. For
who is greater, the one who is at the table or the one who serves? Is it not
the one at the table? But I am among you as one who serves (Luke 22:24-27).
Much of the apparent power I had as a pastor was
really influence disguised as power.
Christ’s
church is to be led by people who have earned influence through the way they
move among people, demonstrating humility and a commitment to serving
Jesus. Church leaders are to be as “one
who serves.”
Jim
KelseyExecutive Minister of the American Baptist Churches of New York State