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Martha
by Max Lucado
Every church needs a Martha. Change that. Every church needs a
hundred Marthas. Sleeves rolled and ready, they keep the pace for the church.
Because of Marthas, the church budget gets balanced, the church babies get
bounced, and the church building gets built. You don't appreciate Marthas until
a Martha is missing, and then all the Marys and Lazaruses are scrambling around
looking for the keys and the thermostats and the overhead projectors.
Marthas are the Energizer bunnies of the church. They keep
going and going and going. They store strength like a camel stores water. Since
they don't seek the spotlight, they don't live off the applause. That's not to
say they don't need it. They just aren't addicted to it.
Marthas have a mission. In fact, if Marthas have a weakness,
it is their tendency to elevate the mission over the Master. Remember when
Martha did that? A younger Martha invites a younger Jesus to come for dinner.
Jesus accepts and brings his disciples.
The scene Luke describes has Mary seated and Martha fuming.
Martha is angry because Mary is, horror of horrors, sitting at the feet of
Jesus. How impractical! How irrelevant! How unnecessary! I mean, who has time to
sit and listen when there is bread to be baked, tables to be set, and souls to
be saved? So Martha complained, "Lord, don't you care that my sister has left me
alone to do all the work? Tell her to help me" (Luke 10:40).
All of a sudden Martha has gone from serving Jesus to making
demands of Jesus. The room falls silent. The disciples duck their eyes. Mary
flushes red. And Jesus speaks.
"Martha, Martha, you are worried and upset about many things.
Only one thing is important. Mary has chosen the better thing, and it will never
be taken away from her" (Luke
10:41--42).
Apparently Martha got the point, for later we find her serving
again.
"Here a dinner was given in Jesus' honor. Martha served, while
Lazarus was among those reclining at the table with him. Then Mary took about a
pint of pure nard, an expensive perfume; she poured it on Jesus' feet and wiped
his feet with her hair. And the house was filled with the fragrance of the
perfume" (John 12:2--3 NIV).
Is Mary in the kitchen? No she is worshiping, for that is what
she loves to do. But this time Martha doesn't object. She has learned that there
is a place for praise and worship, and that is what Mary is doing. And what is
Mary's part in the dinner? She brings a pint of very expensive perfume and pours
it on Jesus' feet, then wipes his feet with her hair. The smell of the perfume
fills the house, just like the sound of praise can fill a church.
An earlier Martha would have objected. Such an act was too
lavish, too extravagant, too generous. But this mature Martha has learned that
just as there is a place in the kingdom of God for sacrificial service, there is
also a place for extravagant praise.
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