Stop for a moment and consider the purpose of your life. Are you living to pursue your own interests or success? Is your energy spent only on those things that bring you comfort or security? Perhaps your ambition is to change the world for the better.
All these aims, even the last one, which sounds so selfless, are futile and without lasting value unless the underlying goal is to serve Christ. As Jesus’ followers, we should model our lives after His. And Matthew 20:28 tells us that even the Lord “did not come to be served, but to serve.”
Yet sometimes we can feel overwhelmed when we hear about the great things other believers achieved in response to their calling. With God on his side, David led great armies into war. How could anything we do compare with that?
But God’s call for each person is unique. He’ll provide the situation, words, and ability so we can achieve what He wants done. Remember, He makes the difference, and we’re blessed to be used by Him, even if our part looks small (John 6:9-12).
Are you demonstrating your love for the heavenly Father by serving others? As Christians, we should all live in such a way that every evening we can say to Him, “Lord, in the best way I knew how, I attempted to serve Your purpose today.”
This invitation to reflect cuts to the core of Christian discipleship. It is not abstract philosophy but a direct summons rooted in the life and words of Jesus Himself. In the Gospel of Matthew, chapter 20, verses 24-28, we encounter one of the most profound teachings on leadership, greatness, and mission in all of Scripture. The English Standard Version renders it this way:
“And when the ten heard it, they were greatly displeased with the two brothers. But Jesus called them to Himself and said, ‘You know that the rulers of the Gentiles lord it over them, and those who are great exercise authority over them. Yet it shall not be so among you; but whoever desires to become great among you, let him be your servant. And whoever desires to be first among you, let him be your slave; just as the Son of Man did not come to be served, but to serve, and to give His life a ransom for many.’”
This passage does not stand in isolation. It emerges from a tense moment among Jesus’ disciples, immediately following the request of James and John (through their mother) for positions of honor in Jesus’ coming kingdom. Their ambition reveals a misunderstanding of the kingdom’s nature, one that Jesus corrects by pointing to His own example. To fully grasp the depth of this call, we must exegete the text carefully, paying close attention to the original Greek language. We will explore keywords and phrases in their native form, ὥσπερ ὁ υἱὸς τοῦ ἀνθρώπου οὐκ ἦλθεν διακονηθῆναι ἀλλὰ διακονῆσαι καὶ δοῦναι τὴν ψυχὴν αὐτοῦ λύτρον ἀντὶ πολλῶν, unpacking their meanings, cultural context, theological weight, and practical implications for our lives today. This is no mere historical anecdote; it is a blueprint for radical, countercultural living that inverts worldly power structures and echoes the suffering servant of Isaiah 53.
Ambition Exposed and Rebuked (Matthew 20:24-25)
The narrative begins with the reaction of the other ten disciples: “And when the ten heard it, they were greatly displeased with the two brothers.” The Greek verb here for “greatly displeased” (ἠγανάκτησαν) conveys intense indignation, a boiling resentment born not from pure humility but from jealousy and fear of being outmaneuvered, as commentator D.A. Carson notes: “The indignation of the ten doubtless sprang less from humility than jealousy plus fear that they might lose out.” This mirrors the human heart’s default setting, competition for status rather than collaboration in service.
Jesus responds by calling them to Himself, a deliberate act of gathering and reorienting. He contrasts kingdom values with Gentile norms: “You know that the rulers of the Gentiles lord it over them, and those who are great exercise authority over them.” The phrase “lord it over them” translates κατακυριεύουσιν αὐτῶν, implying tyrannical domination, a common first-century reality under Roman imperial rule where power was exercised through coercion and hierarchy. Jesus does not condemn authority itself but its abusive form. In the kingdom of God, power is not wielded for self-exaltation but redirected toward others’ flourishing.
He declares, “Yet it shall not be so among you.” This is a stinging rebuke, as Carson observes, to any Church that imports worldly models of leadership, whether corporate ladders, celebrity culture, or political maneuvering. The modern Church must heed this: substance and style cannot mimic the world’s. True greatness arises from inverted priorities.
Servant and Slave in the Kingdom (Matthew 20:26-27)
Jesus continues: “But whoever desires to become great among you, let him be your servant. And whoever desires to be first among you, let him be your slave.” Here, the language is deliberate and shocking. “Servant” is διάκονος (diakonos), often denoting a table waiter or one who attends to practical needs, a role without prestige in Greco-Roman society. “Slave” escalates to δοῦλος (doulos), evoking total ownership and lowliness. In pagan culture, as Carson highlights, “humility was regarded, not so much as a virtue, but as a vice. Imagine a slave being given leadership!” Yet Jesus elevates these as prerequisites for kingdom greatness. Status, money, or popularity hold no sway; humble service does.
This teaching subverts expectations on multiple levels. Historically, it counters the disciples’ messianic hopes for a political liberator who would overthrow Rome. Theologically, it foreshadows the cross. Practically, it challenges every believer: Do we crave recognition, or are we content to serve unnoticed? Consider edge cases, serving a difficult family member without resentment, or volunteering in obscurity when others receive applause. Nuances abound: service is not self-destructive martyrdom but joyful alignment with God’s purposes, guarded by wisdom to avoid enabling sin or burnout.
The Pinnacle of the Teaching: Exegeting Matthew 20:28
The climax arrives in verse 28: “just as the Son of Man did not come to be served, but to serve, and to give His life a ransom for many.” The ESV faithfully renders the Greek ὥσπερ ὁ υἱὸς τοῦ ἀνθρώπου οὐκ ἦλθεν διακονηθῆναι ἀλλὰ διακονῆσαι καὶ δοῦναι τὴν ψυχὴν αὐτοῦ λύτρον ἀντὶ πολλῶν. Each phrase demands careful unpacking, revealing layers of meaning that transform our understanding of Jesus and our calling.
First, “the Son of Man” (ὁ υἱὸς τοῦ ἀνθρώπου) is a title Jesus frequently uses for Himself, drawing from Daniel 7:13-14. There, the figure is a divine-human representative granted eternal dominion. In context, it underscores Jesus’ authority while emphasizing His identification with humanity. He is no distant deity but the one who enters our frailty. This title appears 81 times in the Gospels, often linked to suffering and vindication, setting the stage for the ransom that follows.
The contrast “did not come to be served but to serve” employs two forms of the verb διακονέω (diakoneō). “To be served” is διακονηθῆναι (diakonēthēnai), the aorist passive infinitive, implying reception of service as a right or expectation. Jesus rejects this entirely. “To serve” is διακονῆσαι (diakonēsai), the aorist active infinitive, highlighting voluntary, proactive ministry. Lexically, διακονέω denotes practical aid, waiting tables, attending to needs, rendering humble assistance (see Thayer’s lexicon: “to wait upon, attend to, minister to”). It is not abstract but embodied: Jesus fed multitudes, healed the sick, and washed feet (John 13:1-17, though chronologically later, illustrates the same ethos). Real ministry benefits those served, not the minister, as Spurgeon observes: “He received nothing from others; his was a life of giving, and the giving of a life… No service is greater than to redeem sinners by his own death, no ministry is lowlier than to die in the stead of sinners.”
This active service culminates in “and to give His life a ransom for many.” “Give His life” translates δοῦναι τὴν ψυχὴν αὐτοῦ (dounai tēn psychēn autou), where ψυχή (psychē) encompasses the whole self, life, soul, vital principle. The verb δίδωμι (didōmi) here implies deliberate, voluntary offering, not passive loss. Jesus lays down what is His own.
The heart of the phrase is “a ransom for many”, λύτρον ἀντὶ πολλῶν (lytron anti pollōn). Λύτρον (lytron) is the price paid for release, commonly for slaves or captives (Strong’s G3083: “a redemption price paid to free a captive”). It evokes the Old Testament concept of redemption (e.g., Exodus 21:30, where a ransom frees one from the death penalty) and the Passover lamb’s blood, which secured Israel’s exodus. The preposition ἀντί (anti) intensifies substitution: “instead of” or “in place of,” underscoring vicarious atonement. “For many” (πολλῶν) echoes Isaiah 53:11-12: “By His knowledge My righteous Servant shall justify many… He bore the sin of many.” Carson affirms this clear reference to the suffering servant. “Many” does not exclude “all” but emphasizes the inclusive scope of redemption for the elect across nations, contrasting the “few” in other Matthean contexts (Matthew 20:16).
Theologically, this sparks debate on ransom theory: who receives it? Origen suggested the devil; Gregory of Nyssa and others refined it as a divine trap. Yet, as Barclay wisely cautions, Jesus’ simple picture should not be over-allegorized: “A ransom is something paid or given to liberate a man from a situation from which it is impossible to free himself.” Spurgeon captures the profundity: “Had all the sinners that ever lived in the world been consigned to hell, they could not have discharged the claims of justice… But the Son of God, blending the infinite majesty of his Deity with the perfect capacity to suffer as a man, offered an atonement of such inestimable value that he has absolutely paid the entire debt for his people.”
Jesus’ Modeled Service Embodied from Cradle to Cross
Jesus did not merely teach; He lived διακονῆσαι. From His birth in a manger to His death on a cross, humility marked Him. He healed lepers, dined with sinners, calmed storms for fearful disciples, and multiplied a boy’s loaves and fishes (John 6:9-12), a “small” act that yielded abundance, reminding us that God multiplies our faithful service. The cross is the ultimate expression: not conquest by sword but victory through sacrifice. Philippians 2:5-8 expands on this mindset: though equal with God, He emptied Himself, taking the form of a servant (δοῦλος).
Examples abound across Scripture. The foot-washing in John 13 previews the cross, commanding, “If I then, your Lord and Teacher, have washed your feet, you also ought to wash one another’s feet.” The apostles echoed this: Paul calls believers to “serve one another through love” (Galatians 5:13), and Peter urges the use of gifts “to serve one another” (1 Peter 4:10).
Our Call to Live as Servants in a Self-Centered World
Jesus’ words are prescriptive: “just as” (ὥσπερ) models our pattern. We are called to διακονέω in daily spheres, family, workplace, Church, and community. This means prioritizing others’ needs: listening to the lonely, mentoring the young, aiding the poor without fanfare. Implications ripple outward: Church leadership must prioritize shepherding over platform-building; marriages thrive on mutual service, not score-keeping; workplaces transform when Christians serve with excellence “as to the Lord” (Colossians 3:23).
Nuances matter. Service is not codependency; boundaries protect sustainability (Jesus withdrew to pray). It is not a joyless duty but is empowered by the Spirit, yielding fruit (Galatians 5:22-23). Edge cases include cultural pressures, Western individualism versus collectivist societies, or serving across divides like race or politics, where humility bridges gaps.
Consider modern parallels: a teacher staying late to tutor underprivileged students; an executive forgoing promotion to mentor juniors; missionaries in hidden places. Or historical: Mother Teresa’s ministry to the dying, or William Wilberforce’s tireless abolition work, both rooted in Christ’s example.
Challenges arise: self-interest whispers louder than service. Overwhelm tempts comparison (“My part is too small”). Resentment creeps when unappreciated. Yet Jesus equips us. Prayer aligns our hearts; community encourages; the cross reminds us our ransom is paid, freeing us from performance.
The Ransom’s Power is Freedom That Fuels Service
The λύτρον liberates us from sin’s bondage, Satan’s claim, law’s curse, and death’s sting. Substitutionary, “in our place”, means we owe nothing; grace compels grateful service. Isaiah 53’s servant “bore their iniquities” finds fulfillment here. This is not cheap grace but costly love, demanding response: “Freely you have received; freely give” (Matthew 10:8).
Theologically, it undergirds atonement: penal substitution, where Christ absorbs wrath and satisfies justice. Practically, it fuels endurance, when serving feels futile, recall the ransom’s eternal value.
A Daily Affirmation of Purpose
As evening falls, can we whisper, “Lord, today I served Your purpose”? This is the measure of a life well-lived. Jesus, the υἱὸς τοῦ ἀνθρώπου, came not for acclaim but for the cross’s ransom. He calls us to the same: greatness through servanthood, influence through sacrifice.
In a world chasing platforms and power, may we embody διακονῆσαι, humbly attending, actively giving. Whether in grand arenas or quiet corners, God uses the surrendered. Let the boy’s lunch remind us: small offerings, surrendered, multiply. Let the cross compel us: love so amazing demands our souls, our lives, our all.
May we rise each morning with Matthew 20:28 etched on our hearts, living as servants because the Servant King first served us. To Him be glory, now and forever.