Introduction
So
we’re continuing our series of talks about what our vision as a church is going
to mean for us going forward; praying always, serving together, sharing Jesus’
love in our communities.
Praying
always means learning to pray with faith, with perseverance and in unity. The
Lord is our only hope, and only praying churches are ever growing churches.
Serving
together means we serve, like Jesus did, different people side by side; young and
old, black and white, male and female, clergy and lay, richer and poorer,
introvert and extravert…
Because
we are all different, we all have different ways to serve. Some are more drawn
to practical things. If there are chairs to be put out, floors to vacuum, meals
to cook, lawns to mow and bins to empty there are people I know I can count on
who will be there.
Others
are naturally drawn to more spiritual ways to serve; if there are intercessory
prayers to lead, children to teach, prayer breakfasts to attend, small groups
to facilitate, or if there is sung worship to lead, again, I know I can rely on
quality people to do an excellent job.
Full-Time Christian Service
But,
before I say anything else, I’d like to start by asking you to raise a hand please
if you are in full-time Christian service… Thank you.
I
would guess that most sermons preached in churches are about how to be a
Christian in your spare time. What we hear about in church is things like how
to pray, how to read the Bible, how to witness, and how to serve in the church.
Those
are all good things to do, but that approach tends to give people the
impression that they can only really serve the Lord out of working hours. I
have met people who are desperate to leave their jobs and get into some kind of
church ministry because they don’t see how they can possibly serve the Lord in
their secular work.
But
the New Testament vision is that all Christians are in full-time service for
the Lord. All of us. The way we work, the way we study, and the way we spend
our retirement are opportunities to express our discipleship.
The
Apostle Paul said to work hard with integrity and honesty, not just when the
boss is looking but at all times, with all your heart, as working for the Lord,
not just for human managers.
There
was a road sweeper in Leeds (I think) who, every morning, used to go into his
local church, kneel down at the communion rail with his broom by his side and
offer his day’s work to God. “Lord, by your grace and with your help, I will make
every littered street immaculate to your praise and glory today. This is my
service of worship to you.” That is no less pleasing an offering to God than his
vicar sitting down to prepare a Sunday service.
Whether
you’re a full-time mum, or a part-time teacher, or an occasional volunteer, or
a full-time accountant, or a part-time cleaner, or are full-time retired often
looking after grandchildren… if you do all you do for the glory of God, you are
in full-time Christian service.
Now.
How many of you are in full-time Christian service...?
Practical or
Spiritual?
I
say this because people often think that practical service is somehow, in
itself, unspiritual. And our Gospel reading is one of the passages in the Bible
sometimes used to justify that view. Martha was practical, Mary was spiritual.
Jesus said Mary chose best, so practical work, they say, is of no interest to
God - QED.
That
is not what the passage means as we’ll see.
I
think the best way to say what I want to say is to share with you a story I
once heard about a group of computer salesmen from Milwaukee who were
travelling to a trade convention in Chicago.
They
promise their families that they will be home in time for dinner. But the event
runs over time, and they have to dash back to the train station.
They
have their tickets ready and are running through the station to catch their
train when one of them accidentally kicks over a table with a display of fruit
for sale as he runs.
But
they just run on without stopping, and just make it to their train - except that
one of them, a colleague of the man who knocked the table over, doesn’t feel
right. As the train is pulling out, he jumps off and walks back. It means he
will not be back home in time for dinner but he is so glad he made that decision.
Because
there is this young man standing beside the fruit stand, and the guy notices
that he is very upset and completely blind. So he stoops down and helps gather
up the fruit. He notices that the apples are all bruised. Some of the plums and
bananas have got squashed and dirty. A few oranges have rolled off onto the
railway track.
He
picks up all the fruit, arranges it nicely on the display, then pulls out his
wallet and presses twenty dollars into the young man’s hand. “Here,” he says.
“Please take this for the damage we did. I'm sorry, and I hope we didn’t spoil your
day."
And
as he starts to walk away, so the story goes, one puzzled young man calls out after
him, "Hey mister, are you Jesus?”
Question
– is what that salesman did for that blind fruit seller practical or spiritual?
You
see, it’s not clear-cut. Jesus said, “As much as you visit, feed, water,
clothe, shelter and look after the least, you do it to me.” Doing something
beautiful for Jesus in person - is that practical or spiritual service?
He
said, “If you give a cup of cold water to a prophet you get a prophet’s
reward.” In other words, if you do something practical backstage and low-key
for the Lord it’s just as important to
him as when you do something spiritual that is upfront and high-profile.
Martha and Mary’s
World
So
what is the Martha and Mary story all about? Some say it’s about two different
temperaments – the activist and the contemplative. That’s not what it’s about.
It’s
about three things. And we need to get inside the culture a bit to understand
what it means. So welcome to the world of Martha and Mary; two sisters who
invite Jesus to their home.
The first thing is that Martha is the elder sister. If you’ve got an older sibling, as I have, you know how they often like to take charge. My elder sister always called the shots. That was the pecking order when I was growing up. It was ever thus. If you’re a younger sibling, I sympathise with you. If you’re an older sibling, just remember Jesus said that the first will be last! But you see, Martha is used to being in control and having things her way. So there’s that going on.
The second thing is that Mary is behaving in a way that was considered unbecoming to her gender. Instead of running round the men, as was expected of the women, she sits at Jesus’ feet and learns from him. The rabbis largely excluded women from the study of the Torah. Rabbi Eliezer said for example that “anyone who teaches his daughter Torah, it is though he has taught her lechery.”
The second thing is that Mary is behaving in a way that was considered unbecoming to her gender. Instead of running round the men, as was expected of the women, she sits at Jesus’ feet and learns from him. The rabbis largely excluded women from the study of the Torah. Rabbi Eliezer said for example that “anyone who teaches his daughter Torah, it is though he has taught her lechery.”
But
here she is, Mary of Bethany, adopting the traditional pose of a disciple,
sitting at the rabbi’s feet. Martha’s complaint is partly that Mary doesn’t
know her place. And Jesus says, “Oh, yes she does.” So let’s have none of this
“women can’t” stuff. Yes they can, and if you don’t like it, you can take it up
with Jesus.
The
third thing is that, in their culture, hospitality was not an option; it was an
obligation, a social requirement – and in the Middle East it still is. Martha
gets that totally. She does everything she can to please, she puts herself out,
and takes charge of the kitchen.
Even
in 21st Century Britain, if you’ve got someone coming round, you’re
not going to serve up a tired old sandwich and an out-of-date yoghurt are you? But
in their world it was a great disgrace to be seen as inhospitable. That’s why
in Jesus’ story people would rather bang repeatedly on their neighbour’s door
at 3am to borrow some bread, than suffer the shame and disgrace of not giving
their visitor something to eat.
On
this particular occasion, Martha seems to be behind schedule with the dinner. My
guess is that she’s been preoccupied with getting the rest of the house sorted.
·
Put
the dog out the back so it doesn’t salivate enthusiastically over the guest of
honour
·
Tidy
away all the junk
·
Move
out of view that basket of ironing that Mary still hasn’t done
·
Make
sure there’s toilet paper in the loo
·
Ooh
– while we’re at it, a bit of Febreze in there
·
Brush
the dog hairs off the sofa
·
Put
a little background music on
·
Light
a scented candle for a bit of ambiance
·
Don’t
forget the bowl of nibbles
Now
she’s dashing round the kitchen:
·
Flipping
through the cookery book
·
Washing
and peeling vegetables
·
Mixing
up a sauce
·
Cutting
up and grilling the meat
·
Making
sure the dessert is setting nicely
·
Laying
the table
·
Polishing
the glasses
She
is like a bumble bee frantically buzzing round your garden; bzzzzzzz.
But
maybe Jesus comes to the door a bit early and she’s not finished. She’s barely
half-way through. He comes in and makes himself at home. Mary, the younger one,
sits with him. She is calmness personified, hanging on Jesus’ every word. She
drinks in the presence of the Lord like a freshly watered garden flower.
Finally,
in v40, just as the spuds boil over, it all gets too much, and Martha snaps.
"Hey,” she says, “Tell her to peel the carrots! Doesn’t it bother you that
my sister has left me to do all the work on my own? Tell her to pull her weight!”
Oooh,
it’s a bit awkward, it’s heavy, but who cannot understand Martha’s frustration
and annoyance? She’s got a point hasn’t she? When you’re busting a gut to get
things done, and everyone can see it, and no one lifts a finger to help, it is
very, very irritating.
The
thing is that Martha and Mary both love Jesus. They both want to serve him. But
they’re not serving together. Martha
thinks that Mary’s way of serving Jesus is inferior to hers. She’s so busy winning
MasterChef that she doesn’t see that, in her desire to serve, she is actually neglecting her guest.
So
Jesus says gently that it’s Mary who has made the right choice.
Here
is what it feels like from Jesus’ point of view: imagine that a friend comes to
visit you. You have not seen her in months. She made a long journey to be with
you. She’s worn out from the travel. Now she is all alone in the living room
and you are ignoring her in the kitchen. Is that why she has come so far?
That
is why Mary is content to sit at the feet of the Lord. Notice that Jesus did
not rebuke Martha for her service. He doesn’t say, "Why are you spending
all that time in the kitchen!" He tells her that she is simply attaching
too much importance to it.
Let
me ask you a question; do you ever get so busy doing things for Jesus that you neglect to spend time
with Jesus?
You see, I wonder if you noticed that Luke placed this story immediately
after the Parable of the Good Samaritan, a story about doing good and loving
your neighbour. This little story balances that teaching. You can be so busy
doing good and loving your neighbour that you lose focus and forget to love the
Lord.
So I want to say this loud and clear. Our vision is to pray always
and serve together. We will serve our communities together with all our heart,
but never as a substitute to serving the Lord together first.
Yes, we are committed to loving our communities and serving them
with all our heart. But when your Christian life gets out of balance, when your
practical service starts to replace your spiritual worship, you can become
resentful of other people and even end up rebuking to the Lord himself. That’s
where Martha ended up.
Jesus calls a time out. “Martha, Mar…, Martha” he says – it sounds
a bit like he’s trying to get a word in edgeways, while Martha pours out a
stream of complaints. “Martha… you are worried and upset about many things.”
She is. In particular, she’s worried and upset about:
·
laying the table
·
serving the aperitif
·
preparing the starter
·
pouring the drinks
·
baking the main course
·
fixing the dessert
·
setting out the cheeseboard
·
making the coffee
·
and finding the After Eights
“But few things are needed, indeed only one” says Jesus. He hasn’t
come for a 6 course banquet. If Martha had thought to ask him, she might have
found that he wasn’t that hungry and a microwaved omelette would have been
fine.
What he came for was some quality time to share his heart with his
with friends. He didn’t want all that
fussing about and stress. He certainly didn’t go out of his way for a night out
of domestic tension and sibling conflict.
As it happened, Jesus seemed to stay regularly at Martha and
Mary’s whenever he journeyed south to Jerusalem. They lived just a couple of
miles out of town.
Several months before he died he was there. It was then, staying
at Martha and Mary’s, that he must have booked the Upper Room for Passover. It
was then that he must have found a man with a colt and made arrangements to
hire it on Palm Sunday. Someone will take your donkey away the Sunday before
the Passover. When you ask why, the password will be “The Lord needs it.”
And as his death approached, Jesus’, heart began to grow heavy. He
was burdened. He wanted to unload. I am sure he must have shared his heart with
friends like Mary. He knew she would hear him and understand him.
That is why she anointed him for his burial before he even died.
She would never have thought of doing that if she hadn’t sat at his feet and
learnt from him that he would die, and be buried hastily, and that no one would
have time to embalm his body afterwards. So she did it beforehand.
Jesus said that Mary had chosen what is better – better for her but
also better for him.
There’s a reason why we call these Sunday worship meetings
“services.” It says that our most important work is to come before the Lord,
first thing, on the first day of the week, to give him our worship and undivided
attention.
Ending
Let
me ask you a direct question. You coming here today, has it become just a duty (like
being with Jesus was for Martha) or is it a more a question of devotion (like
it was for Mary)?
David
said, "One thing I ask from the Lord, this only do I seek: that I may
dwell in the house of the Lord all the days of my life, to gaze on the
beauty of the Lord." (Psalm 27.4)
One thing
he asked. Jesus said in
our passage, "There is only one thing
that is really necessary."
People
sometimes say “Well, it’s all very well this gazing on the beauty of the Lord
but look, there’s work to be done. Someone’s got to clean the toilets!” Of
course, but Mary knew a secret; that practical service is spiritually more
influential and impactful and effective when we are first replenished in the
presence of the Lord. Spiritual and
practical is not a question of either/or. It’s a question of first/second.
Jesus
looked at Peter and said, three times, “Look after and feed my sheep.” Three
times he said it. But each time, not until he had got an answer to the question
that really counts. “Do you love me?”
For
all us activists, fussing and stressing about getting everything done, Psalm 46
says; "Stop! Be still! Know that I am God." That’s the one thing needed.
Let’s
stand to pray…