Monday, July 18, 2016

Martha & Mary

Luke 10: 38-42    
July 17, 2016

Are any of you here do-ers?
Do you relate to Martha?
Do you like to get things done and be productive?
Do you like to keep yourself busy doing things?
Do you like to get ahead of things?
Do you like to make and complete a to do list?
Do you like to be responsible and accomplished?
Do you like serving others? Making a difference?
Turning your faith into action in solid and real ways?
Good.

Your service is valued, and necessary.
I’m not here to tell you to stop doing that.
And not just because I’m a pastor
and churches depend on people doing things.
God needs our work and tasks.
I’m not going to scold anyone for being like that.
I don’t think Jesus was at Martha’s house to do that either.

And why would we want to do that?
We serve a God and a Messiah who was incarnational.
Who’s love wasn’t just an airy fairy kind of statement of love.
It was real, it was solid and practical.
The Word became flesh and lived among us
and our words are expected to become flesh too.

Mary Sitting at Jesus Feet Scott Freeman
Love is shown in actions, day in, day out actions.
Wiping snotty noses, giving hugs, taking out the garbage.
We just got finished with Jesus parable of the Good Samaritan.
Being a neighbor is stopping to help, tending wounds,
and lifting someone out of the dirt.
It’s not just saying “God loves you” and passing by.

So Martha putting together an olive and cheese platter
and sweeping the floor for her guest was not just idle busy work,
it was her way of showing her love and respect for a special guest.
It was also very much her job and duty,and not really a choice she made.
In Martha’s time,
women were not expected to just sit and talk to guests.
They were expected to be up and doing stuff,
making the meal, getting what guests needed, cleaning up

Martha is doing exactly what is expected of her.
She is filling the role that women had filled forever.
Maintaining the home, making the food, and raising the children.

And frankly, we’re not too far away from that mindset.
I’ve heard that one of the major objections about opening
our own Play and Learn Child Care Center in 1980 was that
in doing so, Gethsemane was encouraging
women to work outside the home.

In Martha’s time, women did all the home
stuff so that men could work and earn the money
and also so they could be the spiritual guides for the family.

The man was to attend and participate
in the prayer services he was to go and spend
the afternoon at the synagogue and listen to the teachers,
and contemplate God’s will for everyone
and then come home and teach his family.
The men were supposed to sit at Jesus feet.
The men were disciples, the women were supposed to
serve so that the men could do that.

So then we come to Martha’s home.
And it’s referred to as Martha’s home which is very interesting.
and she’s doing exactly what is expected of her.
She’s doing the “right thing”.
She’s filling her duties, she’s earning her keep
She’s doing what is necessary to keep the system running.

It’s Mary who’s not acting appropriately.
She’s not doing, she’s just sitting and listening.
She probably looks lazy and presumptuous by a lot of
people’s standards those days.
Certainly, she’s not doing what is right and presentable for a woman to do.

So Martha wants help, but she also wants
her sister to come back and be normal again.
She wants her to fill her expected role.
And she wants Jesus to back her up on this.
“Jesus, are you just going to let her do this?
Tell her to get back to what she should be doing.”
And the first hearers of this story
would probably have been with Martha.
Mary is acting weird. Jesus, tell her to stop it.

But Jesus won’t. Jesus actually says that
Mary has made a good choice.
This is exactly what Mary should be doing.
This is exactly what women should be doing.
And maybe Martha could do that sometimes too.
To come and sit at Jesus feet and hear words of
love and forgiveness and not worry about the world,
Not worry about the world’s expectations,
about the role that she’s supposed to fill.

So I don’t think this story from Luke’s gospel
is a statement from Jesus about how the church
should be weighted towards worship and learning
instead of hospitality and service to the outside world.
Although some preachers have tried to do that.

And I don’t’ think that Jesus is scolding the doers of the world,
the social workers, the service project people,
the habitat for humanity, or food pantry people,
the Sunday school teacher,
or anyone who is moved to do the work that needs to be done
this is not Jesus telling everyone to just sit down
and pray and read the bible.

And I don’t think the world is divided into Marthas and Marys
We’re not divided in to busy workers and contemplative thinkers
and this is not Jesus saying “yay” for the Marys of the world
and “nay” to the Martha’s.
I think the truth is that we’re all Marthas and Marys.

We all have that Martha side of us.
We are driven by our need to fill our role
We live under the pressure of what the world
wants and needs us to do,
at home, at work, at church, in our communities.
We stress about our to-do list and get frustrated and distracted.
We set out to accomplish what the world expects us to accomplish,
and when it doesn’t happen we get filled with anxiety,
and self-doubt and we wonder whether
we’re worthy of Jesus company.

But also have that Mary inside us.
That part needs to be coaxed out.
To be reassured to be told that
just sitting and being is good enough.

Sometimes when we’re running distracted,
Jesus reminds us “Martha, Martha.
You’re trying to do too much.
I don’t need you to do everything.
Your presence with me is enough.”

It is enough to just sit at Jesus feet,
and hear the word of God --
the word that says that we are loved
not for what we do,
but just because we are God’s–
It is enough just to sit and be loved.


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