Saturday, May 30, 2026

Demosthenes: Second Olynthiac — The Blossoming Flower and the Stone That Stands

When Philip of Macedon offered a city, he was buying time. When he swore an oath, he was making a tool. When he handed Potidaea to the Olynthians and smiled, both he and they knew that one day his patience would end and the smile would not return. Demosthenes knew it too. Standing before the Athenian assembly in 349 BC, as Philip’s siege lines closed around Olynthus to the north, this greatest of Greek orators did not argue from military statistics alone. He argued from the structure of reality. “It is impossible,” he declared in the Second Olynthiac, “to gain permanent power by injustice, perjury, and falsehood. Once in a way and for a brief season such things endure, and being furnished with hope they bloom brightly, but at the last they are detected and fall to pieces.” A house, a ship, any structure that must bear weight, Demosthenes insisted, requires truth and justice as its foundations or it will not stand. Twenty-three centuries later, that argument still arrests the reader, not because Demosthenes was right about politics, though he was, but because the foundations he describes point toward something far sturdier than any Athenian assembly could supply.

 

A Pagan Prophet and His Four-Hundred-Year Tradition

The Second Olynthiac belongs to the genre of deliberative oratory, the kind of speech designed to move a democratic assembly toward or away from a specific course of action. Demosthenes deploys the full arsenal of classical rhetoric: a carefully constructed exordium that thanks heaven for raising Olynthus as a providential check on Macedonian ambition; a central argument that dismantles Philip’s reputation for invincibility by cataloguing his betrayals of Athens, Olynthus, and Thessaly; and a peroration that calls Athens to act before Philip’s consolidation makes resistance impossible. The speech’s great literary achievement is its central metaphor, drawn from architecture and from nature simultaneously: Philip’s empire blooms like a flower and rests like a badly built house, and both images announce the same verdict. What blossoms without sound roots withers; what rises without true foundations falls. This was not merely Demosthenic invention. It drew on a tradition running through Herodotus’s meditation on the divine punishment of Persian hubris, through Thucydides’ analysis of the instability of alliances built on fear rather than justice, through the Greek poetic tradition in which temporary prosperity, olbos granted without virtue, invites the nemesis that undoes it. Demosthenes gathered and sharpened a centuries-old moral perception of the ancient world and aimed it at the most dangerous man of his century.

 

The Canon Speaks First

You may recognize that perception from somewhere closer to home. When Demosthenes declares that the foundations of lasting power must be truth and justice, the book of Proverbs has already said it more simply: “By justice a king gives stability to the land, but one who exacts gifts tears it down” (Proverbs 29:4). The Hebrew verb translated “gives stability” is a form of kun, the same word used of the Lord establishing the heavens and of the righteous whose steps he makes firm. Stability, in Proverbs, is not the result of skillful management but of alignment with the character of God who upholds it. Psalm 11 makes the political application sharper still, asking, “If the foundations are destroyed, what can the righteous do?” — and answering not with a call to assembly or a military appropriation but with the declaration that “the Lord is in his holy temple; the Lord’s throne is in heaven.” When the structural underpinnings of human civilization give way, the righteous are not, in the end, dependent on their quality. They are dependent on the enthroned God whose own rule rests on no borrowed foundation. Demosthenes diagnoses the same disease as these texts. He does not know the physician.

 

The Fragility of Empires and the Woe of the Prophet

The prophetic literature of Israel had been anatomizing exactly what Demosthenes describes for more than two centuries before he gave his speech. Habakkuk’s second chapter pronounces a woe against the empire that “builds a town with blood and founds a city on iniquity” (Habakkuk 2:12), and the structural irony is the same as the Second Olynthiac’s: the very reach of the unjust power is the measure of the wreckage of its fall. But where Demosthenes trusts that time and historical process will eventually expose the fraud, Habakkuk does not wait on processes. He announces that the collapse of unjust empire is divinely appointed, that it clears the ground for something no Greek orator imagined: “the earth will be filled with the knowledge of the glory of the Lord as the waters cover the sea” (2:14). Daniel goes still further. Nebuchadnezzar, a king who built a civilization at least as impressive as Philip’s and with methods at least as ruthless, was not undone by the quality of historical inevitability or by the frank speech of a patriotic orator. He was driven from human society until he knew “that the Most High rules the kingdom of men and gives it to whom he will” (Daniel 4:32). When Nebuchadnezzar’s reason returned, so did his throne — and the doxology he then spoke is the theological destination that Demosthenes could not reach: “for his dominion is an everlasting dominion, and his kingdom endures from generation to generation.” Philip of Macedon and Nebuchadnezzar of Babylon stand in the same dock, and the judge is not time or political mechanics but the living God whose purposes run through every empire and outlast every one.

 

The House on the Rock and the King Who Is the Foundation

When Jesus stood on the hillside and closed the Sermon on the Mount, he used Demosthenes’ own metaphor and transformed it from the inside. “Everyone who hears these words of mine and does them will be like a wise man who built his house on the rock,” he said, “and the rain fell, and the floods came, and the winds blew and beat on that house, but it did not fall, because it had been founded on the rock” (Matthew 7:24-25). The Greek aorist participles — rain fell, floods came, winds blew — carry perfective aspect in Constantine Campbell’s framework: decisive, completed impacts that test the building’s integrity without qualification or qualification. The house on rock does not bend; the house on sand falls, and “great was the fall of it” (v. 27). Demosthenes named truth and justice as the only foundations capable of bearing weight. Jesus names himself. Not an ethical program to be voted into law by an assembly, not a civic virtue to be cultivated by the educated, but the words of the Son of God, whose authority the storm he would still in the very next chapter demonstrated was not rhetorical. Paul’s architectural image in Ephesians 2:20 completes the picture: the church is “built on the foundation of the apostles and prophets, Christ Jesus himself being the cornerstone,” the stone that determines the angle of every wall and the stability of the whole. Isaiah had announced this cornerstone six centuries before Jesus was born: “Behold, I am the one who has laid as a foundation in Zion a stone, a tested stone, a precious cornerstone, of a sure foundation” (Isaiah 28:16). Philip’s empire was the blossoming flower. Christ is the stone.

 

What the Best of Athens Could Not See

Demosthenes was right that Philip’s power would not last, and history vindicated him. But the solution the orator offered Athens, and to which Athens gave a fatally delayed and insufficient response, was the solution of human resolve, democratic deliberation, civic courage, and military action. These are not worthless. You need not be a Christian to recognize that institutions built on systematic lying tend toward collapse, that leaders who betray their allies are sowing the conditions of their own undoing, that the quality of a civilization’s moral commitments has practical consequences. What Demosthenes could not see, because no natural perception and no Greek tradition equipped him to see it, is what John names in his Gospel when he calls the devil “a liar and the father of lies” (John 8:44). The deception embedded in Philip’s empire was not a local Macedonian malfunction to be corrected by better Athenian policy. It was an expression of a falsehood-structure woven into every human political enterprise conducted apart from the truth of God, because the world has been organized around a primordial lie since Eden. Paul understood this when he wrote in 2 Corinthians 4:2 that he had “renounced disgraceful, underhanded ways” and refused “to tamper with God’s word,” but grounded his parrhesia not in civic virtue but in the apostolic call and the presence of the Holy Spirit, “who will guide you into all the truth” (John 16:13). Demosthenes’ frank speech before the assembly was courageous. Paul’s frank speech before the world was something more: it was the voice of the risen Christ pressing through a clay jar, and it carried an authority that no Philip could buy or break.

 

The Courage to Build on What Will Last

Reading the Second Olynthiac is a gift to you if you are willing to receive it on its own terms and then ask what it cannot answer. Begin where Demosthenes begins, with the diagnostic: what am I building, and on what is it resting? The Athenian orator’s method, tracing the track record of specific promises against specific outcomes, applied to Philip and found him wanting, is available to you as you evaluate the political, institutional, and personal structures that claim your trust and your investment. Every leader who builds a following through flattery rather than truth is Philip. Every institution that papers its cracks with managed appearances rather than structural integrity is Philip’s empire. And every personal life constructed around the performance of a self that will not survive honest scrutiny is, in Demosthenes’ own phrase, a house whose substructure is not there. But do not stop with the diagnosis, because the orator’s diagnosis, however acute, was not enough to save Athens, and it will not be enough to save you. The Spirit of God, who was poured out on all flesh at Pentecost, is not sent to make you a better civic observer. He is sent to lead you to Jesus Christ, in whom “all the promises of God find their Yes” (2 Corinthians 1:20), and whose resurrection from the dead is the only event in human history that proves a foundation has been laid that neither storm nor sword nor death itself can move. Philip of Macedon’s power bloomed and fell. The kingdom of the crucified and risen Christ is filling the earth as the waters cover the sea. Build there, and build boldly, because the one who calls you to it has already borne the full weight himself.

 

 

 

 


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Friday, May 29, 2026

Demosthenes: On the Embassy — The Faithful Ambassador and the Comfortable Lie

When Demosthenes rose before fifteen hundred Athenian jurors in the summer of 343 BC, the city whose freedom he was trying to save was already busy choosing its own ruin. The speech he delivered that day — Peri tes Parapresbeias, “On the Misconduct of an Embassy” — accused his fellow ambassador Aeschines of betraying Athens to Philip II of Macedon during the negotiations that produced the Peace of Philocrates three years earlier. The charges were specific and devastating: Aeschines had given the assembly false reports of Philip’s intentions, had deliberately delayed the ratification of the treaty while Philip seized Athenian-controlled territories in Thrace, and had almost certainly done all of this because he had accepted Macedonian gold. The speech runs to nearly four hundred sections, and it crackles with what the Greeks called deinotes — the terrible, piercing force of a man who has seen the truth about a catastrophe his city prefers not to examine. Reading it today, you are not merely reading ancient forensic oratory. You are watching a civilization decide, in real time, whether it loves the truth enough to act on it. The answer, as Aeschines’ narrow acquittal confirms, was no.


The World the Speech Inhabits

Demosthenes composed On the Embassy at the intersection of several Greek literary traditions, and understanding those traditions changes how you hear the argument. As forensic oratory delivered before the Logistai — the board of auditors charged with examining ambassadors’ conduct — the speech follows the formal divisions of Attic rhetoric: proem, narration, proofs, refutation, and peroration. But Demosthenes pushes far beyond the courtroom. His narration of the embassy’s movements reads with the strategic urgency of Thucydides, building a case from sequence and timing rather than from direct evidence of payment. His character portraits of Aeschines are drawn in the register of Athenian comedy and invective, sharp-edged and memorable. His appeals to the jurors invoke the ancestral values of Homeric epic — the good man speaks plainly, places the city above himself, and does not enrich himself at public expense. The speech also draws heavily on historical exempla, the rhetorical practice of grounding present argument in past precedent, in the manner of Herodotus. Philip of Macedon is never quite a speaker in this drama, but he is its governing presence — the calculating power against which every character defines himself. Aeschines, in Demosthenes’ telling, has not merely failed a legal standard. He has violated the entire inherited moral vocabulary of Greek civilization.


The Anatomy of the Betrayal

The charges Demosthenes pressed were fourfold. Aeschines had reported to the assembly things Philip never promised. He had disobeyed his diplomatic instructions. He had introduced ruinous delays while Philip consolidated his advantage. And — the most inflammatory accusation, never supported by direct evidence — he had been paid to do it. Modern historians note that Demosthenes could not produce a witness who had seen money change hands. His strategy, instead, was to repeat the bribery accusation across the speech with such cumulative insistence — one scholar counts ninety repetitions — that suspicion would solidify into certainty before the jury’s eyes. What makes this more than a rhetorical trick is Demosthenes’ deeper and more accurate insight: a man whose judgment has been purchased does not suddenly become obviously incompetent. He becomes subtly, reliably wrong at the moments that matter most. He still speaks fluently. He still wears the face of a trusted official. He still sounds like a man serving the city’s interest. But his reports are shaped, grain by grain, by the interests of the man who has paid him. The corruption Demosthenes describes is not the gross, visible sort that destroys itself through excess. It is the quiet, professional sort that holds office for years while the damage accumulates below the surface of official language.


What the Old Testament Sees in This Man

You cannot spend time with Demosthenes’ portrait of Aeschines without beginning to hear another voice underneath it. When Jeremiah faced the prophet Hananiah in the temple courts around 594 BC, he confronted exactly the same structural problem Demosthenes faced in the Athenian courtroom. Hananiah spoke with all the forms of prophetic authority — the solemn declaration, the correct vocabulary, the bearing of an official spokesman — and he told the people precisely what they wanted to hear: the yoke of Babylon would be broken within two years, the exiles would return, and peace was coming (Jeremiah 28:2-4). He was not obviously a charlatan. He performed the right symbolic acts. He used the right divine formulas. He was wrong in the most catastrophic way imaginable, because the Babylonian army was already moving and Jerusalem had two decades of destruction ahead of it. The Bible’s diagnostic criterion is identical to Demosthenes’: measure the spokesman’s words against what actually happened. Did Philip do what Aeschines promised? Ezekiel sharpens the image further. The watchman who sees the sword approaching and does not blow the trumpet has the blood of the city on his hands, whether or not he was formally bribed (Ezekiel 33:6). Demosthenes is prosecuting that silence — the ambassador whose reports suppressed what was coming, who filled the space where urgent warning should have stood with comfortable reassurance, and who left Athens unprepared for the crisis it could have faced. The Old Testament does not merely parallel this concern. It grounds it in a covenant framework that gives the watchman a reason, beyond civic loyalty, to speak the truth even when the city does not want to hear it. He stands before a God who holds him accountable for the silence as surely as for the lie.


What the New Testament Completes

The New Testament is fully alert to the pattern both Demosthenes and the Hebrew prophets identified. Jesus warned that false prophets come in sheep’s clothing, recognizable not by their rhetoric but by their fruits — by what the city looks like after they have finished speaking (Matthew 7:15-16). Paul, writing to Timothy, described people who accumulate teachers to suit their own passions, turning from the truth to myths, because they cannot endure sound teaching (2 Timothy 4:3-4). The Athenian assembly as Demosthenes describes it is this community in miniature: a body that preferred Aeschines’ reassurances to Demosthenes’ warnings because Aeschines’ message asked nothing of them. But the New Testament also gives the problem a name that neither Demosthenes nor the Hebrew prophets could quite reach. The reason human beings are so reliably drawn to comfortable falsehood is not primarily a failure of intelligence or civic education. It is the corruption of the heart — the deep, structural preference for a version of reality that costs nothing, demands nothing, and confirms us in whatever we were already planning to do. Paul uses the language of ambassadorship deliberately when he writes that God makes his appeal through those who speak for Christ: we are ambassadors for Christ, God making his appeal through us (2 Corinthians 5:20). The Greek verb Paul uses for this appeal, deomai, carries the sense of urgent, personal pleading — the kind of speech that requires the speaker to have the city’s actual condition clearly in view, not a comfortable misreading of it shaped by what the audience wants to hear. The faithful ambassador speaks the message he was sent to deliver, at whatever cost to himself, because he answers to a principal whose assessment of the situation he cannot revise.


The Deeper Failure Demosthenes Could Not Name

Athens acquitted Aeschines by a margin thin enough to demonstrate the jury’s ambivalence. Philip continued to expand. Chaeronea fell in 338 BC, and with it the independence of the Greek city-states that had defined classical civilization. Demosthenes’ warnings were vindicated in the worst possible way. But the deepest failure in this story is one that Demosthenes’ own framework could not illuminate. He appealed to civic loyalty, to the memory of Marathon and Salamis, to the heliastic oath, to ancestral virtue. These are not nothing. But they are insufficient answers to the question his own speech raises: Why should the watchman blow the trumpet when blowing it costs him his career, his reputation, and his political future? Why should anyone choose truth over comfort when the gods of the city are stories told by poets, when there is no ultimate witness who holds the record straight, when the verdict of history may simply be that the lying spokesman lived well and died comfortably while the honest one suffered? Demosthenes cannot answer this. His moral vocabulary is borrowed from a tradition that does not finally ground it. The Scripture does. The watchman serves because he stands before the God who sees in secret, whose knowledge of events is not subject to the manipulation of official reports, and whose justice is not acquittable by a jury that has been actively canvassed by the defendant’s supporters. It is this God who sent Jeremiah to speak when speaking was dangerous and who sent his Son as the faithful and true witness — the one who stood before Pilate and, to the question “What is truth?” did not offer an argument but offered himself, the Word through whom all true speech is possible (John 14:6; Revelation 3:14).


Living as Faithful Ambassadors

Reading On the Embassy is an education in what it costs a community to prefer smooth words to hard truth, and in what it looks like when someone refuses to make that substitution. Demosthenes shows you how to build a cumulative case from particular evidence rather than from emotional assertion, how to sustain urgent speech before an audience that is being actively lobbied to dismiss it, and how to name what is at stake in civic life with enough precision that the stakes become real rather than abstract. For Christians who read and teach Scripture, these are not peripheral skills. Preaching that merely states the truth without demonstrating it, without grounding it in the particular texture of real events and real consequences, has borrowed the watchman’s post without accepting the watchman’s discipline. Demosthenes also models the posture of the man who was right before the city caught up to him — who brought the same warnings before the same assembly for years while his countrymen chose otherwise, and who did not revise the message to suit the audience. There is something in that posture that every Christian communicator needs to recognize, not because Demosthenes was a prophet in any biblical sense, but because he inhabited, by natural conscience and civic courage, the shape of a calling that Scripture fills with incomparably richer content. The true and faithful witness is not, finally, the orator who speaks most powerfully in the courtroom. He is the one who carried the full weight of what his Father sent him to say all the way to the cross, whose testimony was not suppressed or adjusted or sold, and whose words — unlike the Peace of Philocrates, unlike every treaty hammered out between mortal ambition and mortal fear — will never pass away.


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Sunday, May 24, 2026

Demosthenes: The Third Philippic — Tyranny and the Gospel’s Greater Warning

The grain ships that fed Athens sailed through a narrow strip of water called the Chersonese, and in 341 BC Philip II of Macedon was positioning himself to cut them off. Every Athenian citizen knew this. The threat was not obscure. What was obscure was the will to respond, and it was into that gap, between a crisis everyone could see and an action no one would take, that Demosthenes stepped with the Third Philippic. He offered no comfort. He named the silence, exposed its causes, and demanded a reckoning. You may have never read a word of Greek oratory, but the situation Demosthenes faced, a community that sees the danger and chooses inaction, is one Scripture describes with equal urgency. And the question the Third Philippic forces on its reader, what can actually change a people who know better and choose worse, is one the gospel alone can finally answer.


A Speech That Refuses to Console

The speech belongs to the tradition of deliberative oratory, what the Greeks called symbouleutikon, the genre designed to counsel a community on what it must do now. Its structure is unsparing. Demosthenes opens with a complaint: Athens is listening to the wrong speakers, men who tell the Assembly what it wishes to hear rather than what it needs to know. He builds his case through antithesis, placing the relentless, methodical Philip against a hesitant, flattery-seeking Athens, and summons historical exempla, including the inscription commemorating the punishment of Arthmius of Zelea for carrying Persian gold into Greece, to remind his audience that their ancestors treated certain forms of compromise as unforgivable. His rhetorical force operates through present-tense constructions that, following Campbell’s system of verbal aspect, carry imperfective proximity, drawing listeners into the crisis as it unfolds around them, set against aorist constructions marking Philip’s completed conquests as remote, done, irreversible. The speech does not argue that Athens might fall. It insists that Athens is already falling, and that the only thing more dangerous than Philip’s armies is the Assembly’s willingness to be consoled.


The Prophets Recognized This Voice

You have almost certainly been in that Assembly. You have sat with knowledge you did not act on, with a warning you let pass unreceived, with a truth that was inconvenient and so was set aside. The prophets of Israel knew this human pattern intimately. Isaiah standing before Jerusalem in the shadow of Assyria, Jeremiah warning a city that had substituted liturgy for repentance, Ezekiel addressing a people with ears that hear and hearts that refuse: all of them shared with Demosthenes the practice of parrhesia, the frank speech that risks the speaker’s standing in order to save the community from itself. This parallel is thematic rather than genealogical, but both the prophets and the orator inhabited a world where self-deceived communities face catastrophic consequences and both responded with the same refusal to flatter. The Old Testament, however, presses deeper. Where Demosthenes names civic weakness, the prophets name sin. Where he appeals to ancestral virtue, Scripture appeals to covenant faithfulness and the character of a holy God. And where Demosthenes diagnoses Athenian complacency as a failure of will that better resolve could cure, Jeremiah delivers the harder verdict: the heart is deceitful above all things, and desperately sick (Jer 17:9).


The Enemy Behind the Enemy

The New Testament transforms that diagnosis into good news, but not before the stakes get higher. Jesus himself practiced parrhesia before audiences far more hostile than any Athenian assembly, and he named the ultimate danger not as a Macedonian king but as the one who could destroy both soul and body in hell (Matt 10:28). Paul, writing to the Ephesians, casts the struggle Demosthenes described in political terms as something far larger: we do not wrestle against flesh and blood but against the rulers, against the authorities, against the cosmic powers over this present darkness (Eph 6:12). Philip of Macedon was a formidable human enemy, but Paul insists that behind every earthly power opposing the good stands a spiritual reality no military alliance can address. The armor of God, truth, righteousness, the gospel of peace, faith, salvation, the Word of God, is the New Testament’s answer to the question the Third Philippic cannot resolve, and the extraordinary difference is that this armor is not something you forge under pressure but a gift from the one who has already won the war.


When the Church Inherited the Orator’s Voice

The patristic tradition grasped this with both hands. John Chrysostom, whose very name honors the golden-mouthed tradition Demosthenes helped create, drew consciously on Attic rhetorical form to deliver homilies that matched Demosthenes in urgency while surpassing him in theological substance. When Chrysostom refused to let his congregation be comfortable in their sins, he was continuing what Demosthenes began, but now with the full resources of the gospel and in the power of the Holy Spirit. Augustine, reflecting in De Doctrina Christiana on how Christians should appropriate classical learning, argued that the rhetorical skills cultivated in the pagan tradition belonged legitimately to those who served the truth, the way Israel carried Egyptian gold into the wilderness. The Fathers recognized in a speech like the Third Philippic an instrument the church could sanctify and fill with better content. Demosthenes taught the Western world what courageous public address looks like. Christ gives his people something worth being courageous about.


The Assembly You Are Sitting In Right Now

Reading the Third Philippic trains you in an experience that more explicitly theological texts cannot always supply: being addressed with urgent moral seriousness by someone who refuses to release you from responsibility. Demosthenes names the Assembly’s preferences, anticipates their excuses, and stands firm against their desire to be consoled. This is precisely the posture the Holy Spirit takes when applying Scripture to a church grown comfortable, pressing the Word into places where familiarity has dulled the nerve. This speech can recalibrate your tolerance for prophetic severity, making you more receptive to preaching that tells you what you need to hear, and more alert to the moment when you have become the self-deceived audience the prophet was warning. It speaks directly to your calling in the world as well. You are commanded to seek the welfare of the city (Jer 29:7), to be salt and light in your community (Matt 5:13-16), and the church together is called to stand as a community of truth in a culture that would rather be consoled. The courage and civic engagement Demosthenes modeled are not merely Greek virtues. Sanctified by the Spirit and directed by Scripture, they become expressions of love for your neighbor and faithfulness to the Kingdom.


The Word That Speaks Where Every Human Voice Runs Out

But the gospel speaks where Demosthenes ran out of words. He could diagnose the disease. What he could not do was offer a cure, reach inside his audience and change their hearts, or undo Philip’s completed conquests when his eloquence proved insufficient to prevent them. His voice fell silent, Philip’s power prevailed, and Athenian self-government reached its end within a generation. Every human voice eventually arrives at that same limit. Jesus Christ did not simply offer a better diagnosis or a more inspiring appeal. He met the ultimate tyranny, sin and death and every principality that stands against human flourishing, in his own flesh, absorbed its full force on the cross, and walked out of the tomb on the third day with every debt cancelled and every power defeated (Col 2:15). If you have not trusted Christ, his invitation to you is not a philosophical argument but a command with mercy wrapped around it: repent and believe the good news (Mark 1:15). If you have trusted him, then stand firm, because the Spirit who raised Christ from the dead lives in you. Demosthenes had only his voice. You have more than that.


 


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Demosthenes: Second Philippic —Speaking Truth to Tyranny

Imagine standing before a divided assembly, knowing that the man you are warning them about has sent his own ambassadors into your city to discredit you — and speaking anyway. In 344 BC, that is precisely what Demosthenes did. Philip II of Macedon had dispatched envoys to Athens to rebut the accusations that Demosthenes had leveled on an embassy through the Peloponnese, and Demosthenes responded with what would become his Second Philippic, a masterpiece of deliberative oratory that refused to dress political danger in the language of diplomatic courtesy. Philip was presenting himself as a benefactor of the Greeks, a unifier rather than a conqueror, a friend to Messene and Argos and Thessaly. Demosthenes stripped that presentation bare. He marshaled the historical record — Olynthus annihilated, Thessaly subjugated, the Sacred War exploited — and asked the Athenians to see the pattern behind the gestures. For the Christian reader who picks up this speech twenty-four centuries later, something ancient and urgent is already beginning to resonate. The question of what we do when power clothes itself in the language of peace is not a question that died with the Athenian Assembly.


The Art of Seeing Through

Demosthenes was working in the tradition of Athenian deliberative oratory, which had been refined by the social need to persuade a large, often restless citizen body to take action on matters of grave consequence. His Second Philippic falls into the genre the Greeks called symbouleutikon, counsel-giving oratory, and he shapes it with structural precision. An exordium acknowledges that those who warn against Philip have justice on their side but laments that justice without action accomplishes nothing. He then moves through a sustained analysis of Philip's behavior, each historical example adding weight to the same conclusion: professed friendship is cover for expanding domination. His closing peroratio calls for vigilance and unity. Thematically, the speech stands in a long line of Greek engagement with the tension between eleutheria, freedom, and tyranny, a tension Thucydides had examined in the great debates of the Peloponnesian War. What Demosthenes adds to that tradition is a particular attention to what scholars call parrhesia — frank speech, the willingness to say the dangerous true thing in public, regardless of personal cost. He employs antithesis throughout, setting Philip's stated intentions against his documented actions, and he uses repetition not for rhetorical decoration but as a structural argument: here is the pattern, he says again and again, and a pattern repeated is not coincidence. If you have ever sat through a sermon that opened with a clinical description of a problem you lived with every day, you understand the rhetorical strategy that Demosthenes is employing. He is not describing Philip as an abstraction. He is making Philip felt.


When Prophets and Orators Stand in the Same Room

The Second Philippic makes no reference to the Old Testament, and the Old Testament makes no reference to it. Yet when you hold this speech alongside the prophetic literature, something remarkable happens that is worth examining honestly. Isaiah addressed a Jerusalem that was weighing its strategic options between the great powers of Assyria and Egypt, being offered the same temptations that faced Athens — the security of a powerful patron, the comfort of an alliance that would require only a modest surrender of independence. Isaiah called that option an alliance with death (28:15) and pointed his hearers back to the God who had no need of foreign cavalry. Jeremiah watched the court prophets of Judah reassure a doomed city that peace was secure when it was not (6:14), and he wept for what their false comfort would cost. These are not literary borrowings and no genealogical connection should be inferred between Demosthenes and the Hebrew prophets. They are, rather, two traditions grappling with the same irreducible human problem: power deceives, flattery corrupts, and the people who should sound the alarm are forever tempted to keep quiet. The difference between them is the foundation. Demosthenes grounds his warning in historical evidence and Athenian honor. Isaiah and Jeremiah ground theirs in the character and covenant of Yahweh. Both demand that their audiences open their eyes. Only one tells them what they will find when the enemy is finally at the gate and their own resources have failed.


The Diagnosis Scripture Supplies

The Old Testament does not simply parallel Demosthenes' argument; it corrects it at the root. Demosthenes' analysis of Philip is sharp and accurate, but his analysis of Athens rests on a premise that Scripture will not allow: that the Athenians, if only roused from complacency, possess within themselves the moral and political resources to resist. He appeals to their heritage, their honor, their love of freedom. He treats their failure to act as a practical failure of courage and information rather than as evidence of something more fundamentally broken. But the prophets read human passivity differently. Jeremiah names it as a disease of the heart: the heart is deceitful above all things and desperately sick (17:9). Isaiah diagnoses the preference for false comfort as a spiritual condition, not merely a tactical miscalculation. The Psalter warns against trusting in princes, in any son of man who cannot save (146:3). What Demosthenes sees as a failure of civic virtue, Scripture identifies as the consequence of a deeper disorder — the human tendency to trust anything and anyone before turning to God. The orator's prescription is better information and stronger resolve. The prophets know that better information delivered to a disordered heart produces only more sophisticated rationalization. Something has to change below the level of argument, and Demosthenes, for all his rhetorical genius, has no instrument for that work.


The Voice Philip Could Not Silence

When the New Testament takes up the theme of parrhesia, it does something astonishing. The frank speech that Demosthenes practiced as a political necessity, at personal cost and with uncertain results, becomes in Acts the defining mark of the apostles after Pentecost. Peter and John speak the name of Jesus before the Sanhedrin with parrhesia (Acts 4:13), the same term the Greek text employs for courageous public declaration. Paul uses it repeatedly to describe the manner of his proclamation. But the NT grounds this boldness in something Demosthenes never had: the Spirit of God as the source and sustainer of the speaker's courage. Jesus warns his disciples in Matthew 24 against false prophets and false messiahs who will come with compelling presentations of peace and security — and he uses language that directly echoes the prophetic tradition. Paul's letter to the Ephesians calls believers to stand firm against principalities and powers, using armor that belongs to God rather than resources assembled from human tradition (6:10–18). The liberty that Demosthenes was fighting to preserve, the Greek eleutheria, finds its truest meaning in Galatians 5:1, where Paul announces that Christ has set us free — not from Macedonian imperialism but from the law, from sin, and from death itself. The freedom worth dying for, it turns out, is not political self-determination. It is the freedom from every power that could ultimately separate a human soul from God.


What the Cross Settles That the Assembly Never Could

Demosthenes could not know what Paul knew: that the problem of deceptive power does not finally yield to eloquence, coalition-building, or civic courage. Athens did not heed the warning. Philip won. His son Alexander swept across the known world, and the Greek polis as a political form never fully recovered. The defeat of Demosthenes' vision was not accidental; it was overdetermined. The principalities and powers of this age — the spiritual forces of darkness that stand behind every human tyranny — are not defeated by better arguments or more heroic resistance. They are defeated by the cross. Paul announces this in Colossians 2:15 with the bluntness of a military dispatch: Christ disarmed the rulers and authorities and put them to open shame, triumphing over them in the cross. The resurrection is the speech Philip could not rebut. When Christ walked out of the tomb, he did not merely survive — he overturned the verdict that every earthly power relies on for its ultimate coercive authority. The threat of death, which is the final sanction behind every tyranny, was neutralized. Demosthenes told the Athenians to stand up and fight before it was too late. The gospel tells you that the decisive battle has already been won, that the one who fights for your freedom has already absorbed the worst that power could do and emerged victorious, and that his Spirit — the same Spirit who emboldened the apostles before councils that could execute them — is at work in you right now to produce the same courageous speech.


Read This Speech, Then Read Your King

Reading the Second Philippic as a Christian is an act of intellectual stewardship of a kind the early church fathers would have recognized. John Chrysostom, who is likely the greatest preacher in the Greek-speaking church, was shaped by the tradition of Athenian oratory before his conversion redirected its energy toward the exposition of Scripture. Augustine reflected in his treatise on Christian teaching that eloquence belongs to no tradition by right; it can be taken up and baptized for the service of truth. What the ancient church understood is that a text like the Second Philippic does not compete with Scripture — it prepares the reader for Scripture, by cultivating the capacity to recognize dangerous self-deception, to value courageous speech, and to take seriously the cost of remaining silent while the moment for action passes. You will read Demosthenes and become a sharper reader of Isaiah. You will follow his analysis of Philip and understand more viscerally what Paul meant when he warned the Ephesian elders that grievous wolves would enter the flock, not sparing it (Acts 20:29). The orator sharpens your eye. Scripture alone can transform your heart.


The One Speech That Has Not Ended

Demosthenes delivered his Second Philippic once, in 344 BC, and its immediate effect was modest. Philip continued to consolidate his power. Athens continued to delay. The speech survives because its rhetorical power and moral seriousness were recognized by generations who copied and studied it, even after the political situation it addressed had long been settled. But there is another speech that began before the foundation of the world and has never ended — the speech of God's self-disclosure, which the writer of Hebrews says reached its final, fullest, and unsurpassable expression when the Son spoke, not in words only but in a life, a death, and a resurrection (1:1–2). That speech does not lament Athenian inaction. It does not offer analysis and then wait to see whether its audience will respond wisely. It accomplishes what it sets out to accomplish. It creates the freedom it proclaims. If the Holy Spirit is prompting something in you as you sit with this, it is not a call to more clever political analysis or more eloquent civic rhetoric. It is the call of the one who disarmed every power that holds you and now holds out to you the freedom for which you were made. Do not be the Athenian Assembly. Answer him.



 


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Demosthenes: The First Philippic — The Peril of Comfortable Silence

There is a moment in political life, and in the spiritual life as well, when the greatest danger is not the enemy at the gates but the comfort that has made the citizens forget the gates exist. In 351 BC, Demosthenes stood before the Athenian assembly and forced his fellow citizens to confront exactly that moment. Philip II of Macedon had already seized Amphipolis, meddled in Thessaly, and extended his reach toward the Aegean coast. Athens, meanwhile, sat paralyzed by what Demosthenes called a sickness worse than ignorance: the willingness to know the truth and do nothing about it. His speech, the First Philippic, is one of the most urgent pieces of deliberative oratory to survive from the ancient world, and it speaks with startling force to readers who follow a greater King than Philip or Pericles. What does a pagan orator's warning to a complacent democracy have to say to the church? More than you might expect.


The Orator Who Refused to Flatter

Demosthenes opens the First Philippic by doing something almost unheard of in Athenian public life: he apologizes for speaking first, acknowledges Athens has squandered its advantages, and refuses to soften the indictment. Classical rhetoric expected an exordium that flattered the audience, but Demosthenes deploys parrhesia, the ancient virtue of fearless, honest speech, from his very first breath. He draws on the full arsenal of deliberative oratory: vivid antithesis between Philip's restless activity and Athenian inertia, relentless second-person address that places responsibility directly on each citizen, and a practical proposal of a modest standing force combining citizens and mercenaries, funded by existing revenues. He is not trading in abstract ideals. He is counting soldiers, calculating costs, and naming the specific coastlines Philip will strike next. The speech is shaped by a single moral conviction: a free people who will not defend their freedom have already begun to lose it.


Philip as a Mirror of Human Tyranny

The portrait of Philip that emerges from the First Philippic is less a biography than a theological archetype, though Demosthenes himself would never have used that word. Philip does not sleep, does not wait for the right season, does not observe the laws of the Greek festival calendar that Athens habitually cites as a reason to postpone its campaigns. He moves, and he moves while Athens deliberates. This characterization participates in a much older literary tradition. Thucydides' Pericles had warned the Athenians that empire does not rest, and the Homeric world had lionized the warrior who acts before he thinks. But Philip in the First Philippic is something more disturbing: an opportunist who needs only the absence of resistance to succeed. The Old Testament wisdom literature recognized the same figure. The sluggard of Proverbs 6 does not lose his fields to an invincible enemy; he loses them because the ant works while he sleeps. Philip is the ant. Athens is the sluggard. And beneath the surface of Demosthenes' speech lies a warning that Scripture would put in explicitly theological terms: neglect always has consequences, and the consequences arrive on a schedule that the neglectful man cannot control.


What the Prophets Saw

There is no direct literary connection between Demosthenes and the Hebrew prophets. He was writing in Greek for a Greek audience, and there is no evidence he was familiar with the texts that formed the prophetic canon. But the convergence of concern is striking enough to examine honestly, because both the First Philippic and the prophetic literature are doing the same diagnostic work: naming complacency as a moral failure before it becomes a military one. Isaiah's address to Ahaz in chapters 7 and 8 confronts a king who faces an imperial threat and reaches for a political solution while ignoring the covenant relationship with Yahweh that alone could secure Judah's future. Demosthenes, standing before the Athenian assembly, is working entirely within the horizon of human prudence. He has no access to Isaiah's theocentric answer. But he has identified the same pathology: a people who know what the situation requires and who choose comfort over obedience to what they know. The prophets called this faithlessness. Demosthenes calls it shame. The difference between those two diagnoses is the whole distance between Athens and Jerusalem.


The Freedom Christ Purchased

When the New Testament takes up the language of freedom, it does something that would have astonished Demosthenes. In Galatians 5:1, Paul writes with the urgency of a political orator warning against a different kind of tyranny: "It is for freedom that Christ has set us free. Stand firm, then, and do not let yourselves be burdened again by a yoke of slavery." The freedom Paul has in mind is not the Athenian freedom of democratic deliberation, though that freedom is not nothing. It is the freedom of the one who has been purchased out of sin's dominion by the blood of Christ Jesus. The great enemy is not Philip of Macedon, not any earthly power, however formidable, but the principalities and powers that Christ has publicly disarmed at the cross (Colossians 2:15). Demosthenes urges his citizens to rise before their city falls. Paul urges his readers to stand because their King has already won. The difference is not merely rhetorical. It is the difference between a freedom that depends on Athenian resolve and a freedom that rests on the finished work of the Son of God, who bore the full weight of human failure, rose bodily from the dead, and now reigns over every Philip and every empire that history can produce.


Chrysostom's Rhetorical Inheritance

The early church did not ignore voices like Demosthenes. John Chrysostom, whose surname means golden-mouthed and who preached to congregations in Antioch and Constantinople with an urgency that would have been recognizable to the Athenian assembly, had been trained in classical rhetoric at the feet of Libanius, one of the great pagan scholars of the fourth century. Augustine, in De Doctrina Christiana, argued explicitly that the orator's craft, as Cicero had preserved it and Demosthenes had practiced it, was a legitimate tool in the service of scriptural truth. Neither of these Fathers elevated pagan rhetoric to the status of Scripture. What they recognized was that God's common grace had deposited in the classical tradition genuine wisdom about how human beings are persuaded, moved, and called to action, and that this wisdom could be baptized into the service of the gospel. When Chrysostom warned his congregation about spiritual lethargy, he was using instruments that Demosthenes had first forged. The speech that woke Athens was still, fifteen centuries later, teaching the church how to wake.


The Vigilance the Spirit Produces

Paul's exhortation to watch and stand firm runs throughout his letters, but it reaches its sharpest expression in Ephesians 6, where the armor of God is described not as equipment for citizens defending a polis but as the provision of a Father equipping his children for a battle already decided in Christ. The same Spirit who raised Jesus from the dead is at work in every believer who reads the First Philippic and recognizes, perhaps with a jolt of uncomfortable self-recognition, the profile of Athenian complacency in their own prayer life, their own engagement with Scripture, their own witness to the neighbors for whom Christ died. Demosthenes could diagnose the disease. He could not prescribe the cure. The cure is not a standing army of citizens and mercenaries. It is the daily renewal of a people who have been indwelt by the Holy Spirit, who have heard the parrhesia of a Savior who refused to flatter them into comfortable perdition, and who have been freed not to defend a freedom they might yet lose but to proclaim a freedom that no Philip can touch.


Waking Up Before the Gates Fall

Read the First Philippic with an open Bible nearby. Read it to sharpen your eye for the rhetoric of truth-telling, to feel the moral weight that Demosthenes placed on each Athenian citizen's shoulders, and to ask yourself whether you have been a citizen of Athens or an heir of the kingdom. Then set the speech down and return to the King whose throne is not in jeopardy, whose campaign was not a desperate appeal to resolve but a finished act of substitutionary love, and whose parrhesia addressed to you from the cross is not a warning that you might yet be free if only you act in time. It is an announcement that you already are.




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Friday, May 22, 2026

Xenophon: Anabasis — What Xenophon's Leadership Crises Teach Christians About Integrity, Suffering, and the Servant King

Somewhere in the frozen mountains of Armenia, a general stood before the men he had led through one of history's most harrowing retreats and answered for the wounds he had inflicted on them. Xenophon, the Athenian soldier-philosopher who commanded the Ten Thousand Greek mercenaries marooned deep in Persian territory after their employer was killed in battle, had struck soldiers who collapsed in the snow. He had refused to let his starving army plunder a Greek city. He had been accused of pocketing Persian gold while his men went unpaid. These were not minor complaints; they were charges that could have ended in his execution. What he said in his own defense, and how he lived in a way that made the defense credible, has been preserved in the Anabasis for twenty-four centuries. For Christians reading him today, that defense turns out to be one of the most illuminating mirrors the ancient world holds up to the gospel.

 

The General Who Led Through Fire

The Anabasis is Xenophon's account of the retreat of the Ten Thousand, Greek soldiers who had marched into the Persian heartland in 401 BC to support the Persian prince Cyrus in his bid for the throne. When Cyrus was killed at the Battle of Cunaxa and the Greek generals were treacherously murdered, the army found itself leaderless, thousands of miles from home, surrounded by enemies, and marching through terrain that was trying to kill them as efficiently as any army. Xenophon emerged as the expedition's moral and strategic center. He wrote about himself in the third person, which later critics would take as a sign of self-promotion, and the Anabasis is at least partly a work of apologia, a formal defense of his conduct. But what makes it endure is not the self-justification; it is the picture of a leader who understood that authority is earned by what you are willing to suffer alongside the people you lead. When the soldiers froze and fell in the Armenian passes, Xenophon did not ride past them. He dismounted, stripped off his cloak, and swung an axe in a blizzard to split firewood. The men who watched him do that could hardly accuse him of comfort-seeking.

 

The Three Charges and How He Answered Them

The Blow That Saved a Life: The first charge against Xenophon was hubris, a word that in the Greek moral vocabulary carried far more weight than mere rudeness or arrogance. Hubris was the contemptuous use of power to humiliate and dominate, the act of a man who struck another not from necessity but from the pleasure of asserting superiority. To be charged with hubris was to be accused of a fundamental corruption of character, and for a leader whose entire authority rested on his claim to Socratic virtue, the accusation was existential. The specific incidents arose during the murderous winter crossing of the Armenian highlands, where cold, snow-blindness, and frostbite were killing men as surely as any Persian arrow. Soldiers collapsed. Some begged Xenophon to put them out of their misery rather than force them to walk. Others simply lay down, willing to die where they fell or be taken as slaves by pursuing enemies. Xenophon struck them and drove them forward. In the formal assembly where the charges were heard, he did not deny the blows. Instead he reframed each one as what he called a saving blow, a soteria plege, an act not of domination but of rescue. He recounted the specific case of a soldier abandoning a wounded comrade in the snow simply to save himself, a man whose dereliction would have cost another man his life. The strike was the intervention that prevented it. By demonstrating that every instance of physical compulsion served the survival of the collective rather than the ego of the commander, Xenophon transformed the charge on its face. The assembly accepted his defense. The army survived the pass. What the episode reveals is that the same outward act, a blow, can proceed from two entirely different hearts, one seeking to dominate and one seeking to save, and that the difference between them is precisely what a leader is accountable to demonstrate.

The City He Refused to Burn: The second charge was less a formal accusation than a sustained crisis of confidence, and in some ways it was more dangerous than the first because it put Xenophon at odds not with a faction of complainers but with the hunger and anger of the entire army. When the Ten Thousand finally staggered into the vicinity of Byzantium, they were unpaid, exhausted, and convinced they had earned something. Byzantium was a prosperous Greek city, and to men who had walked fifteen hundred miles through enemy territory on promises that had not been kept, its warehouses and homes represented the compensation that no one had given them. The soldiers wanted to plunder it, and they looked to Xenophon to lead them. He refused. The refusal was not cautious or hedged; it was a principled rejection of what he regarded as an ethical catastrophe dressed up as a practical solution. Plundering a Greek city would have destroyed every relationship with Sparta that the army's future depended on, but Xenophon's argument was not primarily strategic. He believed that an authority grounded in character could not survive the act of sacking an allied city for pay, that the moment a leader allows a worthy goal to justify a corrupt means, he has already lost the thing that made his leadership worth following. The friction this created was real and lasting. Soldiers who had trusted him through the Persian highlands now questioned whether his piety was genuine or merely the convenient posture of a man who wanted Spartan favor more than he wanted to pay his troops. Xenophon navigated it by negotiating provisions and a peaceful departure, giving the army something without giving it everything it demanded. The long-term result was the preservation of the expedition's honor and its relationship with Greek power structures, but the immediate result was a leader more isolated than he had been at any point in the retreat. He paid a personal cost to hold a moral line, and the willingness to pay it was itself the argument.

The Gold He Did Not Keep: The third charge was the one most likely to destroy him, because it did not allege a single violent act or an unpopular decision but attacked the integrity of his entire narrative. Toward the end of the expedition, soldiers accused Xenophon of having accepted personal payment, specifically gifts or funds from the Thracian prince Seuthes, while the army itself remained unpaid and desperate. The charge was not merely that he had taken money; it was that his visible self-denial, the shared toil, the cloak stripped off in the blizzard, the axe swung alongside common soldiers, had all been theater, a performance of virtue designed to mask the private accumulation of influence and wealth. If that charge held, then everything he had said about Socratic leadership and divine alignment was simply the most sophisticated form of manipulation, piety as a tool of personal advancement. Xenophon answered it in formal accountability sessions before the army assembly, the ancient Greek equivalent of a public audit. He gave a detailed account of his expenditures and his lack of private gain. He returned to the visible record of his conduct, not as a rhetorical flourish but as evidence that could be tested against the memory of every man present. Who had seen him exempt himself from labor? Who had seen him eat better than the soldiers or sleep warmer or march less? The accusers could not produce the witnesses because the witnesses did not exist. Several of those who had spread the slanders faced repercussions when the assembly turned against them. Xenophon's standing was restored, and he completed the leadership of the army home. Modern scholars have noted, with some justice, that the Anabasis itself, written in the third person and carefully managing the portraits of rivals like Menon and Clearchus, may be the final and most polished layer of that same defense. The text is his closing argument. Whether or not you find that entirely comfortable, the argument it makes is a serious one: that a leader whose daily conduct has been publicly visible, costly, and consistent has a form of evidence that no accusation can easily overturn.

 

The Old Testament Already Knew This Leader

You may be surprised to find that the Hebrew scriptures had already drawn this portrait centuries before Xenophon was born. When Moses stood between a furious God and an idolatrous Israel at Sinai, he offered his own name to be blotted from the book of life rather than see his people destroyed (Exodus 32:32). That is not the act of a man seeking personal advancement. When Nehemiah governed a rebuilding Jerusalem under constant threat, he refused the governor's allowance that was his legal right and instead fed a hundred and fifty people at his own table, because the burden on the people was already heavy enough (Nehemiah 5:14-18). Like Xenophon splitting wood in a blizzard, Nehemiah made his integrity visible through what he would not take. Both men understood that leadership among people who have every reason to distrust you can only be sustained by the kind of self-denial that cannot be faked. The accusations they faced were the same in substance: you are using us for your own ends. The answer in both cases was a life that said otherwise.

 

What the New Testament Does with the Same Question

The New Testament does not merely repeat this pattern; it breaks it open and fills it with something the ancient world could not have anticipated. Jesus, whom the disciples address as Teacher and Lord, wraps a towel around himself and washes their feet the night before his death (John 13:13-14). When James and John ask for the seats of honor in the coming kingdom, Jesus tells them that whoever wants to be great must become a servant, and then adds the sentence that shatters every merely philosophical account of leadership: the Son of Man came not to be served but to serve, and to give his life as a ransom for many (Mark 10:43-45). Xenophon struck men to save their lives. Jesus gave his life to save his enemies. Paul mirrors this in his defense of apostolic integrity in Second Corinthians, where he catalogs imprisonments, beatings, sleepless nights, and hunger not as credentials of power but as evidence that his authority is not of the kind that exploits (2 Corinthians 11:23-28). Yet Paul goes further than Xenophon at every point, because what undergirds Paul's integrity is not Socratic virtue but the death and resurrection of Jesus Christ. He bears in his body the marks of the Lord Jesus (Galatians 6:17). His suffering is not merely proof of good character; it is participation in a story of redemption that changes everything.

 

The Difference That Changes Everything

Here is where Xenophon's mirror becomes most useful, because it shows you exactly where the ancient world ran out of resources. Xenophon's leadership philosophy was coherent, admirable, and finally insufficient. It could produce a man willing to die alongside his soldiers, but it could not produce a man willing to die for his enemies. It could teach self-discipline and transparency and principled restraint, but it could not address the corruption that runs below the level of visible conduct, the self-interest that survives even the most rigorous philosophical training and shows up precisely in moments of accusation, when the temptation is not to plunder a city but to protect your reputation by sacrificing the truth. Xenophon's Anabasis may itself be such a moment: scholars have long noted that his third-person narration and his portrait of rivals like Menon and Clearchus serve his own case rather too conveniently. Even the best ancient leader was finally still managing his image. What the gospel offers is not a better strategy for image management but the death of the image-manager and the resurrection of someone whose standing before God rests entirely on Christ. When Paul says that he has been crucified with Christ and no longer lives but Christ lives in him (Galatians 2:20), he is not speaking metaphorically about improved character. He is describing a transfer of identity that frees him from the exhausting project of self-justification, because his justification has already been accomplished by another.

 

The Leader You Are Meant to Become

If you lead anything, a church, a family, a team, a classroom, the Anabasis deserves your careful attention. Xenophon shows you what integrity under accusation looks like when the charges are false. He shows you that authority built on shared suffering survives where authority built on position or rhetoric collapses. He shows you that the refusal to exploit, made visible and costly and habitual, is the most effective argument a leader can make against the charge of self-seeking. Take his example seriously. But do not stop there. The Holy Spirit offers you something Xenophon never had: not merely the model of a servant leader to imitate but the indwelling presence of the Servant King himself, remaking your desires at the level where image-management still whispers. You are not being trained to manage your accusations more skillfully. You are being transformed, from one degree of glory to another (2 Corinthians 3:18), into the likeness of the one who answered every accusation against you by bearing it on a cross and leaving it in an empty tomb. That is the leader the world is waiting for. That is the leader Christ died to make you.


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Xenophon: Anabasis — The Mirror of Command: the Heart Behind Leadership

Few books from the ancient world place character under a more unsparing light than Xenophon's Anabasis. Written around 370 BCE, it recounts one of history's most harrowing military adventures: ten thousand Greek mercenaries, hired by the Persian prince Cyrus the Younger to help him seize his brother's throne, find themselves leaderless in the heart of Mesopotamia after Cyrus is killed at the Battle of Cunaxa in 401 BCE. Their generals are then murdered through treachery, and the survivors must march roughly fifteen hundred miles through hostile mountains, deserts, and rivers to reach the Black Sea and safety. What makes the Anabasis endure is not merely its military drama but its deliberate moral anatomy. Xenophon, who was himself one of those survivors and eventually their leader, writes in the third person and constructs the narrative as a series of character portraits — what ancient rhetoricians called ethopoeia — revealing not just what men did under pressure but what they were, and what their choices ultimately cost or rewarded them. You are about to encounter a text that ancient readers recognized as a treatise on the soul of leadership, and if you read it through the lens of Scripture, its judgments cut even deeper than Xenophon intended.


Soldiers, Scholars, and the Shadow of Socrates

Xenophon was a student of Socrates, and that discipleship shaped every line of the Anabasis. Like Socrates, he believed that virtue could be examined through conduct and that the outcomes of a man's life revealed the quality of his inner formation. The Anabasis belongs to a rich tradition of Greek literature concerned with the relationship between arete — excellence or virtue — and successful leadership. Homer's Iliad had already posed this question through the rivalry of Achilles and Agamemnon, where brilliance without self-mastery destroys more than it builds. Thucydides examined it through statesmen who trusted cleverness over character and paid for it with catastrophe. Xenophon inherits this tradition and sharpens it through five contrasting portraits, each representing a different answer to the question of what kind of man survives, and why. The literary method of the Anabasis also draws on the traditions of the ancient Near East, where royal inscriptions and wisdom literature regularly evaluated rulers by the justice and piety of their conduct. The text does not simply tell stories. It builds a moral argument by placing characters in situations where the hidden content of their hearts is forced into the open, and it lets the reader draw conclusions from what they see.


The Prince Who Could Not Wait: Cyrus the Younger

Cyrus the Younger is Xenophon's most complex and in some ways most heartbreaking portrait, because his failures are woven so tightly into his genuine virtues that separating them is nearly impossible. Xenophon describes him as the most kinglike Persian since Cyrus the Great — modest with his elders, scrupulous in keeping his word, swift to reward courage and punish cruelty, and possessed of a magnetic personal loyalty that drew exceptional men to his service. As satrap of Lydia he made his territory safe for the innocent to travel freely, a remarkable achievement in an era of routine extortion. His soldiers loved him with something close to devotion, and Xenophon's admiration is evident on almost every page. Yet this same Cyrus recruited the Greek mercenaries through calculated deception, presenting a campaign aimed at seizing the Persian throne as a minor punitive expedition against local troublemakers. He told no lies to anyone, Xenophon says in one breath, and then documents the foundational lie of the entire enterprise in the next — a contradiction Xenophon never fully resolves, perhaps because he genuinely admired Cyrus too much to press the charge. At the Battle of Cunaxa, with the Greeks performing brilliantly on the right wing and the battle turning in his favor, Cyrus abandoned strategic patience and charged directly at his brother Artaxerxes, wounding him in the chest before being cut down by the royal bodyguard. He died at the moment of apparent success, destroyed by the very boldness that had made him so admirable. The Old Testament illuminates what Xenophon can only observe. Proverbs 16:18 declares that pride goes before destruction, and Cyrus's final charge was less a tactical decision than the expression of a soul that could not tolerate the gap between its ambitions and their fulfillment. He was, in Old Testament terms, a man of genuine but incomplete virtue — like Uzziah in 2 Chronicles 26, whose faithfulness brought remarkable success until the prosperity itself fed a pride that reached beyond appointed limits and brought ruin. Cyrus had almost everything needed for greatness. What he lacked was the one thing no military campaign could supply: a heart humbled before a authority higher than his own ambition.


The Soldier Who Loved War More Than Men: Clearchus the Spartan

If Cyrus represents virtue corrupted by unchecked ambition, Clearchus the Spartan represents something colder and in some ways more straightforward: a man who had entirely organized his soul around the wrong love. Xenophon describes him as a thorough soldier who loved war the way other men love gambling or romantic passion — compulsively, at the expense of everything else, squandering his personal fortune on military equipment and campaigns the way an addict spends on his addiction. His physical presence communicated this inner architecture: a scowling expression, a harshly grating voice, a bearing that projected intimidation rather than invitation. He led entirely through fear, operating on the explicit philosophy that a soldier must dread his commander more than the enemy. In a genuine crisis this approach produced results. When his men initially refused to march against the Persian king, Clearchus combined a show of force with a calculated public display of weeping — a piece of emotional manipulation carefully designed to make his troops feel they were choosing to follow him rather than being compelled, even though compulsion was precisely what was happening. The performance worked, and in that moment Clearchus demonstrated both his tactical intelligence and the fundamental dishonesty at the center of his leadership. Once a crisis passed, however, his authority dissolved almost immediately, because it had no foundation in genuine care for the men he commanded. They obeyed him when the situation left them no alternative; they did not trust him, and they had no reason to. He walked into Tissaphernes's trap — a conference called under a flag of truce, an offer he should have refused given everything he knew about Persian negotiating habits — and was seized, transported to the Persian court, and beheaded. Clearchus was a capable man destroyed not by incompetence but by a character that had been systematically formed around domination rather than relationship. Scripture addresses this pattern with unusual directness. First Peter 5:2-3 instructs elders to shepherd the flock not by domineering over those in their charge but as examples to them — a negative prescription that assumes the domineering impulse is always near. Paul's description of his own leadership in First Thessalonians 2:7-8 offers the contrast in the warmest possible terms: he was gentle among them like a nursing mother, sharing not just the gospel but his very self, because they had become dear to him. Clearchus had made himself effective by ensuring he was feared; Paul had made himself effective by ensuring he was loved. The difference was not merely stylistic. It was the difference between a leadership grounded in power and a leadership grounded in the kind of self-giving that makes authority credible precisely because it costs something.


The Good Man Who Was Not Enough: Proxenus the Boeotian

Proxenus the Boeotian is perhaps the most quietly tragic figure in the Anabasis, because his failure is the failure of goodness without wisdom — and that is a failure modern Christians are particularly prone to misread. He had studied under the great rhetorician Gorgias, the finest teacher of persuasive communication in the Greek world, and he came to the expedition hoping to achieve a great name and wide wealth through distinguished service. Xenophon says he had the art of leading gentlemen but could not command rough soldiers, and this distinction is precise. He could inspire and organize men who had already chosen to behave well. He was entirely at a loss with men who had not made that choice and had no intention of making it. He believed, fatally, that praising the virtuous was sufficient for command — that if you consistently affirmed what was admirable and avoided punishing what was base, right conduct would gradually prevail. It was a theory of leadership built entirely on the expectation that other people were as fundamentally decent as he was. When they were not, he had no instruments left. His soldiers lost respect for him without ceasing to like him, which is a particularly demoralizing combination, because it meant they exploited his gentleness without feeling guilty about it. He served as a mediator in disputes between other commanders' troops — a role that suited his temperament and for which he had genuine gifts — but mediation is not the same as command, and when the crisis arrived after Cunaxa, his inability to maintain discipline among his own troops made him a liability rather than an asset. He was executed alongside Clearchus at the age of thirty, a fundamentally decent man whose goodness had not been tempered into the kind of strength the situation required. Matthew 10:16, where Jesus instructs his disciples to be wise as serpents and innocent as doves, names exactly the integration Proxenus lacked. His innocence was real, but it was not accompanied by the discernment that would have made it durable. The wisdom literature of the Old Testament makes a similar point in Proverbs 1:7, where the fear of the Lord is named as the beginning of wisdom — not kindness, not good intentions, not rhetorical education, but a settled orientation toward God that produces the kind of judgment that cannot be purchased from Gorgias. Proxenus had been formed by the best that Greek education could offer, and it was not enough. What he lacked was not information or even effort but a formation of soul deep enough to hold its shape under pressure.


The Man Who Made Corruption His Strategy: Menon the Thessalian

Menon the Thessalian is Xenophon's deliberately repellent portrait, and repellent is precisely the right word, because Xenophon does not present him as a villain who conceals his villainy but as a man who has consciously made corruption his operating system. He is motivated by an insatiable desire for wealth, and what distinguishes him from the merely greedy is that he has developed a coherent philosophy to justify every instrument of acquisition. He regarded honesty as weakness, truth as folly, and prided himself on his capacity for fraud and his ability to mock friends while maintaining their confidence. He secured his soldiers' obedience not through the fear Clearchus inspired or the affection Proxenus cultivated but by becoming an accomplice in their misdeeds — allowing them to steal, bully, and exploit because men who are permitted to sin at their commander's pleasure will follow that commander anywhere. He crossed the Euphrates river early, before the other contingents were ready, specifically to win Cyrus's approval through a calculated display of eagerness — a move that was not courage but theater, designed to purchase influence through the appearance of loyalty rather than its reality. Every action Menon takes in the Anabasis is a transaction, every relationship an instrument, every apparent virtue a mask worn for strategic advantage. Xenophon treats him with barely concealed contempt, and the fate he records carries the weight of a moral verdict: while the other generals were swiftly beheaded, Menon was held by the Persians for a full year and subjected to sustained torture before dying what Xenophon pointedly calls the death of a felon. The Persians evidently found him useful enough as an informant to keep alive, which is itself a final commentary on his character — he was the man others used because everyone understood he could be bought. The New Testament names the root of Menon's ruin with surgical precision. First Timothy 6:10 declares that the love of money is a root of all kinds of evil, and Menon's life is a sustained illustration of that root producing every variety of its fruit: fraud, betrayal, the exploitation of trust, the corruption of those under his authority, and a death that reflected the quality of the life that preceded it. Galatians 6:7-8 supplies the framework: a man reaps what he sows, and Menon had sown so thoroughly to the flesh that his harvest was complete. He is also the figure in the Anabasis most like Judas — not in circumstance but in the structure of his soul. Both men made self-interest the organizing principle of every relationship, and both discovered that a life built on that principle ultimately devours itself.


The Leader Who Bore What Others Would Not: Xenophon

Against the four failed or broken commanders, Xenophon presents himself — with the careful indirection of third-person narration — as the embodiment of what the Socratic tradition considered ideal leadership: transparent, pious, selfless, and psychologically perceptive in crisis. He rose to lead after the generals' murders not because he had been appointed but because the situation required someone who could speak to ten thousand frightened men in the middle of the night and give them a reason to live until morning. He did this through rhetoric grounded in genuine conviction rather than manipulation, calling the army to remember that they still had what no enemy had taken from them: their character and their capacity for disciplined action. When the army was freezing in the mountains and the men were giving up, Xenophon stepped out of his tent, removed his cloak, and began splitting wood in the snow. No order was needed after that. When he was later accused by some soldiers of excessive harshness in discipline, he answered the charges openly and called his accusers to produce their evidence — a willingness to be held accountable that neither Clearchus nor Menon would have recognized as a virtue. When the opportunity arose to allow his troops to plunder the Greek city of Byzantium, he refused, choosing moral principle over the immediate gratitude of an army that had endured months of hardship and felt entitled to compensation. He eventually led the Ten Thousand home, all fifteen hundred miles of hostile territory, and settled in Scillus on an estate given to him by the Spartans, where he spent the rest of his life writing. Xenophon's portrait in the Anabasis parallels the servant leadership of Nehemiah more closely than any other figure in the Old Testament. Nehemiah worked alongside the laborers rebuilding Jerusalem's walls, organized both prayer and military defense simultaneously, refused to use his position to extract food and payment from the already-burdened people, and answered opposition with transparency rather than evasion. Both men led by shared toil rather than exempted rank, and both found that this approach generated a loyalty that fear-based authority could never sustain. Yet the New Testament presses deeper than Xenophon's Socratic framework can reach. The foot-washing in John 13 is not a leadership technique; it is a revelation of what God looks like when he enters the room. Christ does not merely demonstrate servant leadership as an effective strategy — he enacts it as the very logic of love descending into human need. Xenophon's self-giving cost him comfort and political capital. Christ's self-giving cost him everything, and it was not offered as an example to admire but as a ransom to receive.


What Christ Reveals That Xenophon Could Not See

Xenophon saw clearly that character determines destiny. What he could not see — what no pagan philosopher, however perceptive, could see without revelation — is the source and remedy of the character failures he so precisely diagnosed. The New Testament names what Xenophon observed but could not fully explain. When Jesus redefines leadership in Mark 10:42-45, he does not merely recommend servant leadership as a more effective strategy; he roots it in his own self-giving: the Son of Man came not to be served but to serve, and to give his life as a ransom for many. The humility that Xenophon demonstrates by splitting wood in a blizzard, Christ embodies not as a technique but as the shape of divine love descending into human need. Paul's account of Christ in Philippians 2:5-8 presents one who, though existing in the form of God, did not count equality with God something to be grasped but emptied himself, taking the form of a servant, and became obedient even to death. This is not a better version of Xenophon's servant leadership. It is a different category entirely — leadership that is redemptive rather than merely admirable. And here is the place where the Anabasis, read through the lens of the New Testament, becomes more than a leadership manual: it becomes a mirror in which you can see your own heart. Menon's greed, Clearchus's cruelty, Cyrus's deception, Proxenus's insufficient goodness — these are not exotic ancient failures. They are the failure modes of every human heart that has not been remade.


The Character You Cannot Build Without Christ

The deepest lesson of the Anabasis is also its most sobering: character is not primarily a product of education, discipline, or good intentions. Proxenus had the finest rhetorical training Gorgias could provide. Cyrus had every advantage of birth, ability, and opportunity. Neither possessed what their situations ultimately required, and no amount of additional training would have supplied what was missing at the level of the soul. This is the point at which Xenophon's wisdom, honest and penetrating as it is, reaches its limit. He can diagnose the failure; he cannot prescribe the cure. The Christian reader knows the cure by name. Transformation of character at the depth the Anabasis reveals to be necessary — reaching not just conduct but motive, not just action but desire — is the work of the Holy Spirit, who produces in those united to Christ by faith the love, patience, kindness, and self-control that Clearchus despised, Menon suppressed, and Proxenus possessed in sentiment without strength. The gospel does not merely instruct you to be different. It joins you to the One whose death absorbed the penalty of your pride, greed, and cruelty, and whose resurrection is the living source of a character being genuinely renewed from the inside. If you have approached the Christian life as a program of moral self-improvement rather than a death and resurrection, the Anabasis is a mirror worth holding still. Look at Menon and ask whether greed is truly absent from your motives. Look at Clearchus and ask whether fear is the primary instrument in your relationships. Look at Proxenus and ask whether you have confused feeling good about people with actually knowing how to help them. Then look at Christ, who descended not merely to diagnose your failures but to bear them, and who calls you now not to try harder but to come.



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Sunday, May 17, 2026

Xenophon: Anabasis — What a Pagan General Taught Me About Leading Like Christ

Ten thousand men lay in the dark, unable to sleep, unable to eat, thinking of their fathers and their wives and the children they expected never to see again. Their generals had walked into what they were told was a peace conference and been seized; the officers who waited at the doors were ridden down by cavalry before anyone understood what was happening. Every layer of leadership was gone. Every supply line was cut. Fifteen hundred miles of hostile empire lay between the army and home. Into this absolute darkness, before the first light of dawn, a young Athenian private citizen who had come along as a friend of one of the murdered officers pulled himself up from his blanket, asked himself "why am I lying here?", and went to work. He gathered the officers. He reorganized the command structure. He led ten thousand men home across the mountains of Kurdistan and Armenia to the shore of the Black Sea. His name was Xenophon, his book is the Anabasis, and it is one of the ancient world's most honest accounts of what leadership actually costs. Read it alongside Scripture and you will understand your own leadership, and the leadership of Jesus Christ, more clearly than almost any other pairing of books can show you. The comparison works because Xenophon, without knowing the God of the Bible, discovered through necessity and philosophy some of the same principles the Bible commands by authority, and the places where his wisdom runs out are exactly the places where the gospel begins.

 

Three Generals and What Destroyed Them

 The Anabasis's most concentrated teaching on leadership comes in Book II, where Xenophon pauses the narrative to give each of the murdered generals a character portrait. Read together, they form a single argument about what kind of character actually holds. Clearchus loved war the way other men love a vice, spending his fortune and his health on the one thing that made him feel alive. He held his army at peak performance through fear so total that his soldiers felt toward him "as schoolboys to a master," and in the moment of crisis, when everything depended on whether men would obey without hesitation, they obeyed. But "when the pinch of danger was past, many forsook him." Fear is not loyalty. It functions while the threat is immediate and evaporates the moment the pressure lifts. Proxenus was genuinely good, a young idealist who dreamed of becoming great without ever doing anything wrong; but he "feared his soldiers' hatred more than they feared losing his fidelity," and the corrupt men under him treated his gentleness as permission. Menon is the one who should give you pause. He regarded honesty as weakness, cultivated friendships purely as instruments of exploitation, and "contrived to secure the obedience of his soldiers by making himself an accomplice in their misdeeds." He survived the crisis by betraying his fellow generals. Then the Persians tortured him for a year before they let him die. His end is the moral argument made visible in a life: corruption as a leadership strategy does not fail eventually; it devours itself. Ask yourself honestly, not as a rhetorical exercise but as a genuine examination of conscience: which of these three generals do the people under your leadership actually experience? The one who leads by pressure that evaporates when you leave the room? The one whose kindness has no spine and whose followers know it? Or the one whose motives run so far beneath the surface that not even he can see them clearly?

 

What Genuine Leadership Looks Like in Six Feet of Snow

Against the three portraits of failure, the Anabasis traces what genuine leadership looks like under maximum pressure, not in abstract principles but in specific physical moments. In the Armenian winter, when snowfall so deep it has buried the weapons and blanketed the sleeping men generates a warmth that makes rising seem like choosing death, the text records a single detail: "it was not until Xenophon roused himself to get up, and, without his cloak on, began to split wood, that quickly first one and then another got up." He removes his cloak in cold that has already killed men and animals and does the work of a private soldier. The army follows him to their feet. Later, when soldiers bring formal charges against him before the full assembly for striking them during the retreat, he does not invoke his rank. He answers every accusation on its own terms, and when one man confirms that yes, Xenophon struck him, Xenophon says: "I struck you. Yes! you are right, for it looked very much as if you knew him to be alive." The man had been abandoning a still-breathing wounded comrade in the snow. The assembly shouts that Xenophon should have struck him harder. This is what alignment between stated motives and actual actions looks like in public: everyone can see it, and the transparency itself is the authority. When the city of Byzantium is in the army's hands and the soldiers call out to him to seize it and make himself great, he leads them quietly back out. When an official withholds the soldiers' pay for his own advantage, Xenophon confronts him directly and publicly rather than accommodating injustice to protect his own position. At every turn his leadership costs him something. That is the mark of the real thing.

 

The Courage to Tell the Truth While There Is Still Time

One of the principles Xenophon practices most consistently is the refusal to tell people what they want to hear when what they need to hear is harder and more urgent. In Book III, addressing an army on the edge of total collapse, he does not soften the danger or perform a confidence he does not feel. He states plainly that the king and Tissaphernes are plotting their destruction, and then, without minimizing the threat, reframes it in terms that make courage possible: their enemies have broken their oaths and forfeited divine favor; their forefathers defeated a larger Persian force at Marathon; cavalry count for nothing in the kind of direct fighting that the Ten Thousand do better than anyone alive. Truth-telling and hope-giving are not opposites in his hands. The honest assessment of the situation is the ground of the courage he is calling for. The Bible gives this leadership posture a name: watchman. Ezekiel 3:17-19 makes the stakes absolute, the watchman who sees the sword coming and fails to blow the trumpet bears the blood of those who fall. Paul claims his own innocence of the Ephesian congregation's blood on exactly this ground: "I did not shrink from declaring to you the whole counsel of God" (Acts 20:27). The most pervasive leadership failure in any century is not cruelty but a comfortable cowardice: softening what is hard, delaying what will cause friction, offering comfort when the trumpet should be sounding. Proverbs 27:6 speaks to this with a directness that should sting: "Faithful are the wounds of a friend; profuse are the kisses of an enemy." If you love the people you lead, you will wound them sometimes with truth. If you have been managing their comfort rather than serving their growth, that is worth sitting with today.

 

The Heart That Cannot Fix Itself

Here is where the Anabasis and the Bible move in different directions, and the difference is not about the quality of Xenophon's leadership but about the depth of the problem underneath all leadership. Xenophon believed, following Socrates, that virtue is teachable, that the right formation and the right examples can produce leaders of genuine integrity. He is not entirely wrong. Character is shaped by community and practice, and Scripture affirms both. But Jeremiah 17:9 says something Xenophon and Socrates together never said: "The heart is deceitful above all things, and desperately sick; who can understand it?" The leader who appears genuinely virtuous under ordinary conditions may discover in extreme temptation that the virtue was shallower than it looked, and the leader who has been writing his own account for two decades may have quietly become the hero of every chapter without noticing. The Bible is consistently less sanguine about self-knowledge than the best Greek philosophy, and far more insistent on the need for transformation from a source entirely outside the self. The qualifications for elders in 1 Timothy 3 and Titus 1 are almost entirely character qualifications, describing people being continuously remade by the Spirit of God, not self-formed leaders who have mastered the right curriculum. The fruit of the Spirit in Galatians 5:22-23 is fruit: it grows from a root that is not the leader's own striving but the Spirit's personal presence within the believer. Love, joy, peace, patience, kindness, goodness, faithfulness, gentleness, self-control: you cannot produce these by trying harder. They are received by abiding in Christ, and the Holy Spirit who produces them is not a principle or a force but a person who dwells inside those who trust Jesus, bearing witness with their spirit, interceding in their weakness, and working in them both to will and to work for God's good pleasure (Philippians 2:13).

 

The Leader Who Leads Through Death

Xenophon leads ten thousand men through fifteen hundred miles of hostile wilderness and gets them home. Read the Anabasis and feel the full weight of what that cost: the frostbitten feet, the dead animals, the men who sat down in the snow and could not rise again, the grinding pressure of an enemy that harassed without ever quite destroying. And then one morning the men in front crest a ridge in Armenia and a shout starts and rolls back through the whole army: "The sea! The sea!" The Black Sea, which means Greek cities and ships and home. The soldiers "fell to embracing one another, generals and officers and all, and the tears trickled down their cheeks." It is one of antiquity's most moving images. But ask the question the Anabasis cannot answer: home for what? The army disperses to their Greek cities, returns to the ordinary life from which they came, and the men are the same men, only older and more weathered. They reached the sea. They did not become new people. The leadership Scripture describes is not ultimately about reaching a destination. Paul's aim in Colossians 1:28-29 is to "present everyone mature in Christ." Moses does not merely escort Israel from Egypt to Canaan; he is charged with forming them into a covenant people who will be a light to the nations. The sea was never the point. The transformation of the soul is the point. And the leader who defines the Christian understanding of all leadership took on flesh, walked the full length of the road his people walk, bore the weight of the sins that corrupt every leader's heart including yours and mine, died on a Roman cross, and rose on the third day with a life that death cannot touch. He did not lead through the crisis and survive it alongside his people. He led through death itself and came out the other side with room for everyone who follows. And the Spirit he sends does not manage the soul's transformation from a distance; he takes up residence within it, producing year after year the Christlikeness that no philosophy, however brilliant, and no education, however thorough, could begin to generate. One day, on a morning that will make the shout at Mount Theches sound like a whisper, the people Christ has led will see something that makes even the Black Sea look small.

 

The Question This Book Is Asking You

If you are a Christian in any position of leadership, the Anabasis is worth reading slowly with your Bible open beside it, not because Xenophon knew God but because he knew leadership with a clarity and honesty that most of us never achieve, and because seeing the best of human leadership at its most rigorous makes the gospel's claim about a different and better kind of leader shine with unmistakable brightness. See what shared hardship looks like when the leader is the first one in the cold without his cloak. See what accountability looks like when the commander stands before the assembly and answers every charge rather than hiding behind rank. See what integrity looks like when power is literally in your hands and you walk the army back out of the city. And when you have felt the genuine force of all of that, you are in the best position to understand what makes Jesus Christ incomparably greater than the most admirable leader the ancient world ever produced. Xenophon got his people home. He did not get them new hearts. Christ, the good shepherd of John 10, lays down his life for the sheep, deals not only with the danger outside but with the corruption within, and sends his Spirit to dwell inside the very people he leads, to do for them from within what no external example, however powerful, could ever accomplish. If you have never trusted him, today is the right day to follow the one leader whose authority rests not on his own achievement but on what he has already done for you at the cross and in the empty tomb. And if you have trusted him, let this ancient, admirable, and finally limited pagan general send you back to the vine that is the only source of any fruit worth giving to the people God has placed in your care.




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