In his novel Gates of Fire, author Steven Pressfield
has Xiones, a squire and archer in
the Spartan heavy infantry, speaking to the Persian king Xerxes after the Battle of Thermopylae
in 480 BC {the ‘Hot Gates’} and saying:
Of what does the nature of kingship
consist? What are its qualities, in
itself? What, the qualities it inspires
in those who attend it?
…I will tell his majesty
what a king is. {Pause} A king does not abide within his tent while
his men bleed and die upon the field. A
king does not dine while his men go hungry, nor sleep when they stand at watch
upon the wall. A king does not command his
men’s loyalty through fear, nor purchase it with gold. He earns their love by the sweat of his own
back and the pains he endures for their sake.
That which comprises the harshest burden a king lifts first and
sets down last. A king does not
require service of those he leads, but provides it to them.
In the final moments, before
the actual commencement of battle, when the lines of the Persians lay so close
across from the defenders that their individual faces could be seen, Leonidas
moved along the Spartan and Thespian fore-ranks, speaking with each platoon
commander individually. When he stopped
beside Dionekes I was close enough to hear his words.
‘Do you hate them,
Dionekes?,’ the king asked, in the tone of a comrade— unhurried,
conversational— gesturing to those captains and officers of the Persians
proximately visible across the no-man’s land.
Dionekes answered at once that he did not. ‘I see faces of gentle and noble
bearing. More than a few I think whom
one would welcome with a clap and a laugh to any table of friends.’
Leonidas clearly approved of
my master’s answer. His eyes seemed,
however, darkened with sorrow. ‘I am
sorry for them,’ he avowed, indicating the valiant foemen who stood …across. ‘What wouldn’t they give, the noblest among
them, to stand here with us now.’
That is a king, your majesty. A king
does not expend his substance to enslave men, but by his conduct and example
makes them free. {Emphases mine}
Prophet, Priest, Warrior, King:
at a single point in human history {which is His-Story} all of those roles are melded into one Man— the Lord
Jesus Christ, the Master and Messiah in whose image we are being formed. God is waiting right now, gentlemen, to bring
these things to life and fruition within you and within me. God
has brought you to this place at this time in the History of the
Ages for a purpose. Your life is a masterpiece in progress {Eph. 2:10}, a
masterpiece of strength and honor, conviction and courage, regardless of how you
feel about that progress in the
present.
There are no secrets to success
in the Life of the Kingdom: All it takes
is all you’ve got... surrendered and submitted to the sovereign will of
your King. Those who give all find
it; those who don’t, don’t. In the end,
the Eternal End, it comes down to this.
Are you willing to humble yourself before your Lord, live as if ‘there is a God ...and I’m not Him!,’ and hang
in there for the Long Haul? Because that’s what it takes to be a Hero of
Faith.
HJC
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Ric Webb | Shepherd
Heart’s Journey Community
9621 Tall Timber Blvd. | Little Rock, AR 72204
t +1.501.455.0296 | hjcommunity.org
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Heart’s Journey – where the Word and the
Spirit are one.
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