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6.8.18

Alexander Magnus – A Call to Obedience


The Great General Series – Part 3


  The messenger fell to his knee before the group of men in whose midst the Raja stood. His arms were stretched out on the floor before him and he spoke without lifting his head.

"Please excuse this interruption, O Refuge of our people, but our enemy requests your presence on the wall."

"Does he indeed!"

"Yes, my wise and powerful leader, he says that he will speak to no one except yourself." The Raja smiled,

"Apparently he too is wise. I shall come and hear him." With a wave of his hand the Raja bid the messenger to rise. As he walked towards the open archway at the far end of the room several of the royal advisers followed him. A young boy, who wore a cord of gold around his head and who had been standing at the Raja's side, started to go with him also but the Raja caught him by the arm. "Our enemy needn't be flattered by any great attendance upon the wall, my son, you stay here. Continue to entertain our friends and I will be back but shortly. " So saying, the Raja left the party in the hall and made his way to the edge of the city. 

  The view that greeted him had changed but little from the day before. Forrest covered hills rose to the left, the ground fell away in a steep cliff to the right, and before the stronghold stretched mile upon mile of gardens and fields intermingled. Amidst the green foliage that covered the footstool of the city an army had encamped. A detachment of a hundred soldiers, drawn up in a strong, military formation, had left the larger body and marched nearer. They now stood just beyond the range of the archers on the wall. Only one among this party was mounted and when the Raja, in his brightly coloured robes, was seen upon the battlement it was he who drew near. He made an impressive picture - his golden armour glinting in the sun beneath the blue cape that hung round his shoulders. The horse he rode, a tall stallion with an ebony coat, was decked in a similar attire. The Raja watched the pair with interest as they approached. 


"My name is Alexander the Great," the horseman called, "and I command you to surrender to me at once!" The Raja's eyebrows rose at the instruction. The name he knew well, for the General's reputation proceeded him, but the command was a presumptuous one from a man whose army was well outnumbered. The Raja began to laugh.


"You must pardon my ignorance, General, but why would my people, who surpass your troops in number and can claim the protection of a walled city, surrender to you?" Alexander answered him not. Instead he turned and rode back to the company from which he had come. The Raja watched in amusement. What could he intend to do now? Surely his actions won’t be so audacious as his words! Directly the General reached his men he gave them an order but the Raja could not hear what he said. Soon the entire regiment was lined up in a single file; their faces turned towards the precipice. 


"March!" His voice was clear and strong and the General had purposely shouted the command so that the audience upon the wall might hear it. The Raja leaned against the ornate parapet, watching the march in bewilderment. Nearer and nearer did the soldiers draw to the edge of the cliff, still they walked steadily on. Their leader remained in motionless silence. Then the first man stepped right of the cliff! He did so without slowing his pace. Without a single glance back at his commander. The Raja's astonishment only grew as the second soldier followed suit and then the third and the fourth, falling to their deaths without a word of complaint. Never before had he seen such complete compliance to an order! A fifth man disappeared over the cliff and then a sixth in unquestioning obedience. The Raja diverted his eyes to the person of Alexander. The General was watching the terrible scene along with all of the observers on the wall. He sat straight and tall in the saddle. His brow was furrowed but there was a smile on his lips. Finally, after eleven men had willingly obeyed the command a second order followed it,


"Halt!" The soldier who was now at the front of the line had to grab the hand of the man behind him, so close had he come to stepping off himself.  General Alexander turned his horse, Bucephalus, towards the city again and rode up to it. 


"Will you now give yourself up to my command?" 


The eyes of all who were upon the battlements turned to the Raja. He stared at the General, who stood almost directly below him, with an expression that his men could not read. After a long silence the Raja gave his answer.

“I will.”


Alexander the Great had conquered the entire Persian empire and was beginning a campaign in India. All this he had accomplished without suffering a single defeat in battle. Thus, he had gained for himself a reputation that had spread throughout the known world. The rumour was that he would not cease until he had conquered all. Nevertheless, as he stood before the strong defences of this city, accompanied by just a fraction of his army, it was not his reputation that he depended on. When the Raja explained that Alexander was outnumbered he did not argue. When the Raja laughed at the authority he claimed he neither threatened or cursed. Instead he turned to his soldiers and asked them to prove his authority. The demonstration was meant to show the Raja that the General's men would obey him without question, without hesitation, and even unto death. It successfully did so. Such obedience, so contrary to the nature of a man, showed that his men completely respected and trusted their leader. This in turn affirmed all that had been said about Alexander’s intelligence, power, and skill in battle. A leader who could thus command his army was not one to be withstood, no matter how few were the number of his troops nor how great the disadvantage of his position.

At first glance, it appears to be a hard and cruel way to demonstrate one's power. Eleven soldiers died at Alexander's command and to what purpose? Was it simply to prove a point? Solely to build the growing reputation of their leader? Both of these ends were accomplished in the sacrifice of the foot soldiers but their death also achieved a great deal more. The maneuver convinced the Raja that he should surrender peacefully. An act that saved not only the lives of the city's inhabitants but many in Alexander's ranks as well. The General could not have hoped to take the stronghold with less sacrifice than that which he called for at the cliff. Thus, he spent the lives of his men willingly but not uselessly. 


Every time he led them into battle the General asked his men to lay down their lives. Thus, they were men who had previously resigned to die in the pursuit of conquest. Their lives were surrendered to the use of their leader. When Alexander gave the command the soldiers to march right off the cliff he was not asking them for a greater resignation than they had already agreed to, he was simply sending them to employ a new military strategy. The maneuver cost soldier's lives, but so did nearly every military endeavour. An early church Christian named Tertullian once said, "The blood of the martyrs is the seed of the church." Meaning that the church, the earthly representation of the kingdom of God, was built upon the sacrifice of men's lives. Jesus Christ, our General and Commander, is also willing to spend the lives of His men and women! He, like Alexander the Great, does not argue the measure of His power, nor does He become angry when His authority is not recognised. Instead He turns to His men and says, "Will you prove My reputation? Will you demonstrate to this rebellious man how it is that I aught to be obeyed?" He knows that the path of obedience will lead some of His saints to their deaths yet He doesn't hesitate to tell us to march! Why? Because He knows what needs to be accomplished and desires that lives might be saved. 


The very purpose of a soldier is to fight for victory. For the Christian that is to fight for His kingdom to come and His will to be done. We are to be people who have surrendered our lives just like the men in Alexander's ranks had done. We should have pre-determined to forfeit our lives in this war and just be waiting on the time when He will call us to do so. In Matthew xvi. 24 Jesus said, “If anyone would come after me, let him deny himself and take up his cross and follow me. For whoever would save his life will lose it, but whoever loses his life for My sake will find it. ” What is a cross? It is an executioner's device. Two pieces of wood fashioned together for the purpose of killing a man. 


“When a man walked by carrying a cross there was one thing the people knew, they knew he wasn’t coming back.” - Leonard Ravenhill


Our General has imparted to us a job - to obey Him in such a way that the onlooking world might see that He is Lord and be saved by such knowledge. We accept this commission even unto death. There is no reason why we should assume that we will be coming back. This method of conquest may be a surprising one but it is no great cruelty that a General should ask his men to give their lives in order to take a stronghold. That is the very job description of a soldier and of a Christian and we do not question the prudence of our General's plan. We simply obey. Our General promises us this in return: our obedience and our lives will not be in vain. In this situation also He will live up to the reputation that He has earned and victory will be gained. In faith, we can step willingly over the edge of that cliff believing that our Commander knows exactly what He is doing. 


Christians have been given something that Alexander's men never had. An example. You see, our General was not just the man sitting on the black horse who gave out the orders, He was also the first soldier who stepped off that cliff and plummeted to His death. 


 “…He humbled Himself and became obedient to the point of death, even the death of the cross.” (Philippians ii. 8)


He did it before He ever asked it of us. In His example we can see that the prize is worthy of the cost it requires. That even in death victory can be gained. A great and eternal victory; one that is far better than the capture of an earthly city. He knows what it is that He asks yet He calls to us saying, "Trust Me. Follow Me. Don't hesitate." The command is a good one with a good purpose and the One who has given it must be proven worthy of obedience.


 Alexander watched the march with a furrowed brow and a smile on his lips. Our Lord feels deeply the loss of His men but at the same time He delights in seeing the obedience by which they bring Him glory. It is God who suffers most in watching those who would gladly obey Him sacrificed yet He has not spent them in vain. 


"For our light affliction, which is but for a moment, is working for us a far more exceeding and eternal weight of glory," (2 Corinthians iv. 17)




In Christ 
quiana 










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