| No,
not Jesus. Alexander the Great. But there, the similarities end. Still, contrasting
the life of the high and mighty with the meek and lowly tells us much about Jesus
and ourselves. Alexander
the Great was king of Macedonia in ancient Greece and perhaps the greatest commander
in history. On the day he was born, the famous temple of Diana burned down, prompting
predictions that someone destined to rule Europe had entered the world. Alexanders
mother,Olympias, taught him that such greatness was his, and that his father,
Philip, was descended from Hercules. Alexander learned by heart the Iliad, the
story of the Greek warrior, Achilles. He carried a copy of the book everywhere.
When Alexander was 13, he studied under the philosopher Aristotle who instilled
a great love of learning. The young man amazed the many ambassadors and other
wise men in his father's court. But even the boys intelligence was dwarfed
by his ambition. He wept bitterly when he heard of Philip's success, saying, "
My father will get ahead of me in everything and leave nothing great for me to
do." He
neednt have worried. At 20, Alexander became king of Macedonia and systematically
conquered every nation within his grasp, including Persia, Egypt, Babylon and
India. To establish his power, he made everyone worship him and called himself
the Son of God.
To give his troops a thirst to conquer, he gave each soldier a large share
of plunder. But they soon grew lazy. So one day, when all the wagons were loaded,
Alexander set fire to his own then commanded his soldiers to burn theirs. Though
many soldiers were resentful, most were glad to burn the baggage and become warriors
again. Later,
when a soldier tried to rob the grave of Cyrus, the Iranian leader, Alexander
executed him after reading the tomb inscription: "Whoever you are, and wherever
you come from (for I know you will come), I am Cyrus, founder of the Persian Empire.
Please let me keep this dirt that covers my corpse." It disturbed Alexander
to see how fragile fame could be.
Ironically, a mosquito did what no army could. It felled Alexander with a single
bite that gave him malaria. When he died on June 13, 323 B.C., his body was placed
in a gold coffin and taken to an ornate tomb in Alexandria, the Egyptian city
he built in his own honor. Soon after, his generals fought among themselves for
control of the Empire and Alexanders dream of a unified kingdom fell apart.
Some look at
Christianity and see the same thing happening. But cynics fail to see the continuing
presence of Jesus among his followers. Thankfully, the seat of control and authority
is in heaven, not here. We can t prosper the kingdom on our own, or make
it perish. But
we do have a choice. Like Alexander, we can model our life on those whove
perfected the pursuit of personal power pride is both the source and Achilles
heel of our control-obsessed culture or we can embrace the Book that bids
us empty ourselves to find fullness of life. True faith is about completion with
God, not competition.
For although our Father does go before us, that doesnt mean He leaves us
nothing great to do. Instead, He gives us the training and resources necessary
to master this world. We use Gods mighty weapons... to knock down
the devils strongholds. With these weapons, we break down every proud argument
that keeps people from knowing God... and teach them to obey Christ. (2
Cor. 10:4) But
like Alexanders army, we must sacrifice the worldly things that weigh us
down and hold us back in the campaign of the Cross. We must remember that human
praise and approval are fleeting, and that even the great are brought low by the
bite of seemingly insignificant sin. Better a gold crown than a gold coffin.
Like this article? Please link to it from your website or blog.
-Rick
Gamble
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