Martha, Martha, Martha… We cannot just go out and do
and expect greatness – we must first have direction and meaningful
purpose. If we do not first listen to
what God wants of us, then our actions are just busy-ness without holiness as our
end.
Luke 10:39-42
39.
And she had a sister
called Mary, which also sat at Jesus' feet, and heard his word.
40.
But Martha was
cumbered about much serving, and came to him, and said, Lord, dost thou not
care that my sister hath left me to serve alone? bid her therefore that she
help me.
41.
And Jesus answered and
said unto her, Martha, Martha, thou art careful and troubled about many things:
42.
But one thing is
needful: and Mary hath chosen that good part, which shall not be taken away
from her.
It wasn’t Martha’s serving of others that was wrong
– for Jesus said that he himself had come to serve and that, if others wished
to follow him, then they, too, must serve.
However, in her serving, Martha was “careful and troubled about many
things,” she was “cumbered about much serving” and complained about it. Was there, then, true love in Martha’s heart
that inspired her serving? Or was she,
on that day, being one of those people who takes pride in being seen as hospitable
and laying out a sumptuous table? Martha’s
pride seems rather evident for she questions whether or not Jesus cares about
her plight, about justice, and then proceeds to tell him what to do. Compare that to Jesus’s mother at the wedding
feast in Cana when she brought what she saw as a problem before her son – she
did not tell him what to do, but, rather, told the nearby servants to listen to
Jesus and do what he told them to do,
whatever it would be. There is deference
here and trust in Jesus, something which Martha did not demonstrate in serving
(but which she did demonstrate later when her brother Lazarus died).
Martha’s sister Mary, on the other hand, was
purposefully sitting at Jesus’s feet to listen to him. She left Martha with the details that the
older sister had chosen to encumber them both with, choosing, rather, to hear
the word of God. Mary’s humility here is
visually evident as she sits in a low place, at the feet of Christ. Her eagerness for and attentiveness to what
Jesus says is not lost on him. She “heard
his word” – it won’t be lost on her.
Jesus reminds Martha that there are only a very few
things that human beings truly need. This makes me think of how we need to eat in
order to survive – but we don’t need to dine with elaborate meals that are
difficult to prepare and serve. We need
shelter to keep us safe – but we don’t need spacious houses appointed with
every convenient or luxurious amenity. And
as Christ tells the over-anxious server, “But one thing is needful”. As he
makes clear elsewhere in the Bible, “Man cannot live by bread alone, but by
every word from the mouth of God.” Martha
seeks to attend to Jesus the man in the flesh, but Mary seeks to attend to the
Word of God. By her choice, Mary is truly
serving the Word of God made flesh, who is Jesus Christ, because she is
attending to what he says and seeking humbly to learn from him as his
disciple. Meanwhile, Martha is
busy. Yes, she is adopting the role of a
servant, which should be a good thing – but she is adapting the role of a
servant to suit her own self-centered needs, worrying and troubling about many
things that are not necessary. On the
other hand, a God-centered servant listens to God’s word, attentive to what is
truly necessary for every human being: divine love, mercy, redemption.
The fact that I’m writing this two days before the
beginning of Lent is not lost on me.
Soon, Catholics around the world (and other Christians, too) will be “giving
up” something for the season of Lent. We
humans, like Martha, can daily encumber ourselves with the care and trouble “of
many things.” How many of these things
are needful? Letting go of some of them
for the 40 days of the Lenten discipline can help open our eyes to see how very
few things we really need. Some people
think that they can’t function in the morning and start their days properly if
they don’t begin with a cup of caffeinated coffee. If they give up that coffee for Lent (and
stick with the deprivation through the first week or so of difficulty) then
they will see that they were able to live and function well without that
supposedly needful thing. Someone else
may want to give up daytime television or staying up late playing video games
or going onto Facebook every day – and the time that that person will gain
every day can be spent being with family and friends, thus nurturing essential
relationships, or reading to expand the mind and soul, or embarking on that
creative project he or she has been dreaming about but has not yet
started. I often see Lent as a kind of
spring cleaning – I get rid of the clutter of things in my life so that I can
get back to basics and remember what is truly important: love. The giving and receiving of love that is
divinely sourced – this is what is truly needful. So, I will try, with the grace of God, not to
worry and busy myself about things that, in the end, don’t matter at all. And, being thus freed, I will be more aware
of who I truly am and of what – Who – I truly need to be ever joyful, to be
fulfilled. I sit at His feet…
Christina Chase
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