From Jim O'Brien
July 25, 2008

Hi Friend,

It's all about power. Some say it's all about money but Dale Carnegie said that power was the basic motivating factor for man and money was only a means to obtain power.

A psychological study of men working in the corporate structure revealed an interesting insight into human nature. The experiment offered subjects a choice between a pay raise or a promotion which included a new office with their name and title on the door. With few exceptions they took the promotion. Money was less important than power.

The study of the lives of great men is fascinating. One of the simple yet profound truths of life is that great men have rejected power in order to serve. Conversely base men choose power over service.

George Washington is called the "Father of Our Country" because he gave up power not once but at least three times - at the end of the revolutionary war when he resigned his military commission and returned to Mount Vernon, when he refused to be king so the country could have an elected president and again at the end of his second term, when he refused to seek a third term.

Maybe his greatest tribute came from his greatest adversary, King George III. The king asked his American painter, Benjamin West, what Washington would do after winning independence. West replied, "They say he will return to his farm."

"If he does that," the incredulous monarch said, "he will be the greatest man in the world."

Possibly the most revealing assessment was written by the historian Matthew Spaulding. His insightful comments reached into the soul of our first President when he wrote "his project was to found a self-governing nation, a constitutional republic. It is here that we see the brilliance of Washington's statesmanship..." Catch that: his project was to found a nation that was self-governed.

By contrast, a defeated and exiled, Napoleon lamented the significance of it all when he said: "They wanted me to be another Washington." How different the world would be if Napoleon had been the Father of America.

There was an 11-year period of time between Charles I and Charles II that England had no king. The hubris of Charles I caused him to lose his head and Parliament offered the crown to Oliver Cromwell who refused it saying the country could be ruled by Parliament. After six years Cromwell realized that a corrupt Parliament was even worse than a corrupt king so he became Lord Protector of England until his death 5 years later. The inscription on his tombstone reads, "Christ, not man, is King".

It is clear from watching the election process in America that our country is in a crisis over this very concept. But it's a spiritual problem. As a Christian I believe that corruption on the surface reflects a corruption in the heart.

If the Christian Church were healthy, there would be hope for this nation. But the Church is sick. And the sickness is a choice of human power to replace control by the Holy Spirit.

When the Prophet Isaiah wrote about the hubris of the King of Babylon many scholars believe he was actually writing about Satan. He called him the bright and morning star who was fallen from heaven. "You were determined to climb up to heaven and to place your throne above the highest stars. You thought you would sit like a king on that mountain in the north where the gods assemble. You said you would climb to the tops of the clouds and be like the Almighty." (Isaiah 14:13-14 GNB)

Lust for power is an alluring siren song that has even captured the hearts of men who lead the Church. When the disciples of Jesus began thinking like this he took them apart from the crowd and warned them, "You know that the princes of the Gentiles exercise dominion over them, and they that are great exercise authority upon them." Adam Clarke translates "They tyrannized and exercised arbitrary power over the people."

Jesus continues "But it shall not be so among you: but whosoever will be great among you, let him be your minister; Even as the Son of man came not to be ministered unto, but to minister, and to give his life a ransom for many." (Matt 20:25-28)

The 6,000 years of man's history on this earth have shown clear and consistent examples of man's desire to exercise power over other men. But there is one shining example that's different. Jesus Christ came to serve man, even to the point of giving his life. And the precious few who follow His example have made a significant difference in this world and will serve in the world to come.

Until next time,

Jim O'Brien