Notes of Faith March 10, 2026

Notes of Faith March 10, 2026

Pastor’s Pen Pulpit

Father’s Day 2001

Today is a special day for me. It was two years ago today that I preached my last sermon to this beloved flock. I thought it would be appropriate to print a maxi-version of today’s pen pulpit. This is the sermon I preached on Father’s Day, 1999.

“The Truly Great Man”

Mark 10:35-45

What is greatness? How do we recognize greatness? Who do we set up as great people in our estimation?

A person who is eminent, important? One who has notability? One who has superiority or is famous? Usually we tag someone as great who has prominence, lineage, who has achieved much or has ability to make significant contributions in philanthropy, sports, medicine, military prowess, the literary field, etc.

These men are all great because society has a way of measuring men by standards we have created or endorsed.

But when we come to Scripture we discover that there is a standard for greatness by which men are measured that the world does not recognize. In fact they repudiate it. That standard is seen in, reflected by, and lived out in Jesus Christ. In Mark 10:35-45 He gives to His disciples His perspective of greatness.

1. He established the principle of true greatness based in God’s standard [vs.42-44]

In vs. 32-34 He reveals that this trip to Jerusalem will fulfill Old Testament prophecy.

In verses 35-37 His apostles see something different awaiting them - they are looking at the pathway to glory. They ask three things of Him in v. 37: to grant preeminence, proximity, and power.

In verses 38-40 Jesus responds. He does not rebuke them for what they ask - but in the manner by which they are going about it. They have no idea what is involved - of the price that must be paid. He is on the same path they are on - but He will pay the price!

Then in verses 42-44 He outlines for them a two-fold mindset that is essential to obtaining true greatness:

• The truly great man must avoid following the standards for greatness set by the world (vs. 42,43 cf. vs. 35-37).

This is the spirit of the age. The spirit of intense rivalry. There is not to be striving and struggling for position and honor - jockeying for position, the world of aggressive competition, the insatiable desire to have authority over others. To constantly strive to be first among equals, campaigning for promotion (cf. mud-slinging of political campaigns) - cf. 3 John 9,10.

Compare the difference between legitimately, honorably contending in the Christian race that the Bible endorses - 2 Timothy ch 2; 1 Cor. 9:27; Hebrews 12:1,2 with the narrow minded, selfish, clawing ones way over others to reach the top at any cost. The hunger and thrill for authority over others - cf. 3 John 9,10. The greatest erosion to true greatness is the harsh competitive spirit of the age.

• The truly great man must learn to acquire the heart of a servant - (vs. 43, 44).

There is nothing wrong in desiring greatness as long as you understand the meaning of the term in God’s dictionary and the path that must be followed to acquire it. To become great is to be willing to be nothing

“A true servant is one who does the will of another to the best of his ability without calling attention to himself - also in his serving, he seeks the greatest benefit for others.”

The Christian is a paradox [A.W. Tozer]

• We save our life by losing it - we are in danger of losing it by trying to save it (Matthew 16:2).

• We are the strongest when we are the weakest - and we are the weakest when we are the strongest. Our strength lies in our weakness - our weakness lies in our strength (cf. 2 Corinthians 12:9-10).

• The first shall be last and the last shall be first (Matthew 20:16).

2. He sets the supreme example of true greatness [v.45] Only twice is He said to be an example: John 13:15 (serving); 1 Peter 2:2 (suffering). His entire life was a life of servanthood (vs. 45a).

Compare servant prophecy Isa. 42:1-4 with Matt. 12:18-21 (Note characteristics of His servanthood in Isa. 42:1-4)

• Toward God - v.1 - Submission. John’s baptism - Spirit of God descended upon Him.

• Toward self - v.2 - Selflessness. Would not seek notoriety nor prominence.

• Toward others - vs. 3,4 - Sensitivity. Would deal gently with others.

He performed His greatest act of service in His cross work - vs. 45b. In analyzing the heavenly logic of the cross, we see that He descended to the greatest depths and dimensions of humiliation, suffering, love, obedience, sensitivity. (Compare Phil 2:5-8. Please study this passage carefully.)

Questions to ask yourself............

1. What kind of man am I?

• A self-made man - We’ve all heard of men climbing out of obscurity by sheer determination - climbing their way to the top.

• A Christ-made man - Takes the place of insignificant servant - lets God exalt him.

2. Am I fulfilling my role as God intended?

• As a leader among men (if you are called to this level) cf. 1 Peter 5:1-4.

• As the leader in your family (if this is applicable) cf. Eph. 5:25-28.

Something for all of us............

Compare Phil 1:1 - saints in exalted position with Gal 5:13 - saints in lowly service.

Men, ask yourselves this morning, “Am I a man described by the characteristics in this passage?” A good question for us all. Let’s work on it together! God bless. Have a Happy 2001 Father’s Day!

Love to you all,

Pastor Charles Covington

All people should be concerned about what kind of follower of Jesus that they are. Are they a false follower like Judas or the many other disciples that stopped following Jesus when difficult things came their way. We are not unlike the people of God thousands of years ago, wanting our way, our hopes and dreams to be fulfilled our way, focused on earthly things. May we pray fervently to grow in the grace and knowledge of the Lord Jesus Christ and live spiritually minded that we might live as servants of Christ, pleasing to the Father through the power of the Holy Spirit! May we live godly lives!

Pastor Dale