The Ultimate Promotion
Why Jesus Walked Away from a Crown (And What It Teaches Us About Approval)
5/22/20263 min read
Imagine you’re offered the ultimate promotion. Total power. Royal status. A guaranteed spot at the top of the social and political ladder. You are literally being crowned king.
Would you walk away?
Most of us would jump at the chance. But over two thousand years ago, someone did the exact opposite.
Throughout the Gospels, people explicitly called Jesus the "King of Israel." He was the long-awaited Messiah, the prophesied ruler. Yet, in John 6:15, when an enthusiastic crowd tried to take Him by force to make Him king, Jesus didn't lean into the hype. He didn't accept the political power. Instead, He literally escaped to a mountain—completely by Himself.
Why would the rightful King refuse a crown?
The answer changes everything about how we should look at our own lives, our goals, and the approval we chase every day.
A Kingdom of a Different Kind
If Jesus was born to rule, why run away from a throne? Because He knew exactly where His kingdom belonged. Later in His ministry, during His trial before Pontius Pilate, Jesus stated it clearly:
“My kingdom is not of this world.” — John 18:36
Jesus wasn’t interested in earthly political power. Why? Because earthly kingdoms rise and fall. Think of the greatest empires in human history—the Romans, the Egyptians, the Babylonians. They all turned to dust. As 1 John 2:17 reminds us, “This world and its desires pass away.” Jesus refused a temporary throne built by men because He already held an eternal one. Psalms 45:6 tells us that Christ’s throne is “forever and ever.” He chose the radiant, everlasting reality of God’s kingdom over a decaying earthly monument.
The Trap of Human Applause
Because His eyes were fixed on eternity, Jesus operated on a completely different wavelength than the rest of society. He didn't look to culture or crowds to validate His worth. In John 5:41, He flatly stated:
“I receive not honour from men.”
Jesus didn't need human applause. He didn’t seek man's approval because He was entirely focused on God’s will.
When we look at our own lives, this hits incredibly close to home. How much of our daily stress, anxiety, and decision-making is driven by what other people think of us?
We obsess over likes, views, and comments online.
We overwork ourselves to impress bosses who might never notice.
We compromise who we are at school or in our friend groups just to fit in.
We constantly chase the "ultimate promotion" in the eyes of others. But the Apostle Paul gives us a reality check in 2 Corinthians 10:18: “For it is not the one who commends himself who is approved, but the one whom the Lord commends.” Human praise doesn't actually count in the grand scheme of things. It's fickle, temporary, and empty. True, lasting approval comes from the Lord alone. If the Savior of the world didn't live for human applause, we shouldn't either.
Living for the Eternal
The message of Jesus' life is a call to trade the temporary for the eternal. It's an invitation to step off the exhausting treadmill of people-pleasing and find rest in the approval God has already given us.
When you live for an audience of One, the pressure falls away. You no longer need to force your way onto a throne of human approval because you serve the King who sits on an eternal one.
Your Challenge for the Week: Think about your own life right now. Where is that one area where you are actively chasing people's approval? Is it on social media? Is it in a specific relationship? At your job?
Identify it, and intentionally hand it over to God this week. Trade the temporary pressure for eternal peace.
