Jesus is utterly consumed by love for God the Father.
So consumed that titles no longer attract him.
So consumed that possession no longer interests him.
So consumed that recognition becomes irrelevant.
His single concern is this:
that the Father be loved freely and honored willingly.
And because of this, Jesus refuses to compete—not with humans, not with disciples, not even with history.
This is why his generosity feels disproportionate.
Why the Rewards Are So Shockingly Large
Jesus tells his followers:
“If you leave homes, family, or work for my sake, you will sit on thrones. You will rule. You will inherit the kingdom.”
From a human perspective, this makes no sense.
The sacrifice is small.
The reward is enormous.
But this is not injustice.
It is urgency born of love.
Jesus is eager—almost desperate—for partners in the work of honoring the Father. And when someone steps in, even a little, Jesus responds with overwhelming generosity.
He is not guarding his throne.
He is trying to give it away.
If others rule, who will Jesus rule?
No one—and it does not trouble him in the slightest.
Why Peter Is Called the Rock
When Jesus tells Peter, “On this rock I will build my church,” we often argue about what that means.
But one thing is clear: it is lavish encouragement.
The church is not built on Peter in essence.
It is built on Christ—his life, his body, his teaching.
Yet Jesus is willing to say even this—willing to elevate, empower, and over-affirm—because he longs for companions in the mission of the Father.
Jesus is not careful with credit.
He is not anxious about attribution.
He is not protecting theological territory.
He is recruiting co-workers.
Why Jesus Is Never Threatened
This is also why Jesus is never offended when honor is given elsewhere, when others are elevated, when others are called great.
Anyone who does the will of the Father—Jesus calls them brother, sister, mother.
Kinship is free for the taking.
Authority is free for the taking.
The kingdom is left unguarded.
Not because Jesus is weak—
but because love has reordered his priorities.
The Pattern of Heaven
This way of being did not begin with Jesus.
The Father himself gave everything to the Son.
And the Son now gives everything away in return.
What the Father does, the Son repeats.
What the Son does, his followers are invited to imitate.
In the end, everything returns to the Father—not by force, not by command, but by attraction.
Not because God demands it,
but because love draws it home.
The Invitation
So the question for us is not:
“How strong is Jesus?”
The question is:
Will we step into the space he leaves open?
Will we take hold of the kingdom he does not clutch?
Will we share in the work he cares about more than his own status?
Will we love the Father enough that winning stops being the point?
Because the weak spot of Jesus Christ is this:
He gives away everything to anyone who will help him love the Father.
And the kingdom still stands wide open.
Amen.