Rather what Christ tries to convey with those words is the
fact that insofar as those relationships of master-servant or
master-messenger remain as such, no servant can be greater than his
master, nor the messenger greater than the one who sent him. It’s only
when fate and fortune make changes in their respective statuses that
we can expect an inversion of their roles and positions in society.
What Christ tries to convey here is that in our relationship
with him and with God, we will always remain a servant and a messenger
to God through Christ, and we should just do what God through Christ
would want us to do. We cannot and should not reverse the roles, by
making God follow what we want.
In this particular instance, Christ is trying to tell us
that we should be like him who acted as a servant and messenger of his
Father for our own good, for our own salvation. He is highlighting the
fact that he is simply acting at the instance of his Father who is
also our Father God. That way, when we follow Christ, we follow God in
effect.
That is why Christ repeated so many times that he who sees
and listens to him sees and listens to God himself. And if we follow
Christ to the point of becoming like him, then anyone who sees and
listens to us sees and listens to Christ and to the Father.
We need to be more aware of this responsibility of ours to
be like Christ in being a servant and messenger of his Father God who
is also our Father. While we may enjoy some privileged positions in
the world, we should never forget that we are meant to be a servant
and a messenger insofar as our relationship with God through Christ is
concerned.
We have to be wary of our tendency to easily fall into
pride, vanity and conceit whenever we enjoy special status in our life
here on earth. We should strengthen and continue reinforcing our
conviction that we are actually nothing without God and that we need
to continually keep an intimate relationship with Christ in the Holy
Spirit.
We have to make some readjustments in our understanding of
being a servant and a messenger. It should not be pegged only on some
worldly and temporal standards. Rather, it should be understood in the
context of the role of Christ in our life, he who is the “way, truth
and life” for us.
To be sure, understanding being a servant and messenger that
way would never be regarded as some kind of downgrading our status.
Rather, it would lead us to realize that we are achieving the fullness
of our dignity as the “image and likeness” of God, children of his,
meant to share in God’s very own life that is supernatural.
If this truth of faith is clear in our mind, there is no
doubt that we would be most eager to become servants and messengers of
God through Christ in the Holy Spirit!
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