Monday, July 22, 2019

The One Thing Necessary



Although we are observing the feast of St. James, I chose to keep the readings appointed for today because I couldn’t resist this story about Mary and Martha.[1]   We so rarely have women figure prominently in our readings that I didn’t want us to miss one of the few opportunities to hear one of them.   I also wanted to maintain the continuity of the readings, as this story is meant to be heard in relationship to the parable of the “good Samaritan,” which we heard last Sunday (both of which are unique to Luke’s Gospel).  

It takes some work to hear the story of Mary and Martha.  Sorting out what Jesus said, what the early Christian community said about him, and how what was said is heard in our context is a lot to juggle.   That is always true, but this story seems to hit a nerve, especially for women.  Just because a story is about women doesn’t mean it is for women in the sense of expressing their dignity and equality with men.  Let’s take a moment to acknowledge why this is such a hard story to hear.

It is difficult to hear yet another man – even Jesus – telling women what they need and how they should behave.  The options for Mary and Martha are either passively to sit at Jesus’ feet – making him feel special and adored – “Oh Jesus, you are so smart” – or to labor for him in the kitchen.  When Martha asks for help, she complains to Jesus.  Why does he need to mediate the relationship between Martha and her own sister?  Isn’t it possible for women to relate to each other in ways other than as rivals for some man’s attention?  And you can almost hear the condescension in Jesus’ voice when he responds, “Martha, Martha.”  Mary has chosen the better part: me!  Isn’t that what you really want?  What could be better than sitting at my feet?

A feminist interpretation makes one suspicious that our Gospel text re-inscribes women’s traditional role as caretaker of men’s emotional and physical needs; women as trophies or servants or both.  Let’s not give Mary too quick as pass as the “good girl” and Martha too hard a time for being “hysterical.”  It is important to recognize the legitimate discomfort that many women – and sympathetic men – feel upon hearing this story.  How is this story good news for women? 

I suspect Jesus was not quite such a sexist bore as Luke makes him out to be.  There are hints around the edges of the story that move us into more liberating territory.  Notice that Jesus is at Martha’s home.  She is the householder, and she is offering the kind of hospitality that Jesus commends and exemplifies.  Jesus said he came to serve, not to be served.  Martha is anxious about her service – in the Greek, her διακονίαν; what by Luke’s time is a technical term for a leadership role in the early church:  a deacon.   The first hearers of this story would have identified Martha as the leader of a house church. The text of Luke, by the way, doesn’t specify the nature of Martha’s service.  There is no mention of cooking in the kitchen.  We supply that inference through our own sexist assumptions about gender roles; maybe, Luke is playing on that assumption; but maybe, not.   

Many commentators note that Mary’s passive listening is described in terms associated with the role of a disciple, an apprentice to a spiritual teacher.  Perhaps Luke is hinting at the leadership of women in the early church, but obliquely, uncomfortably, in such a way as to obscure their agency.  Is this a hint, or a cover-up? 

Compare the treatment of Mary and Martha in John’s Gospel.  There, the sisters engage in theological conversation with Jesus; they are not passive recipients of his wisdom; and they are not rivals.[2]  Martha is the first to confess that Jesus is the Messiah, a distinction accorded to Peter in the other Gospels.[3] Mary anoints and washes Jesus feet before his arrest, providing the model of sacrificial love that Jesus later employs in washing his disciples’ feet during his last supper with them.[4]  Imitation is the highest form of praise.   This is a discipleship of equals.

Luke downplays all this.  Maybe it is getting too hot to handle by the time he is writing his Gospel, as the early church quickly moved to accommodate itself to patriarchal culture by squashing the leadership of women.   Luke seems to want to have it both ways:  signaling the prominence of Martha and Mary, without scaring the horses. Martha and Mary were just too important in Jesus’ life for the Gospel writers to simply ignore them; their imprint on the theological imagination of the early church too significant.  So why does Luke tell us this story?  

Recall, as we heard last Sunday, that just prior to his visit to Martha’s home, Jesus engaged in theological conversation with a religious leader that culminated in his telling the parable of the good Samaritan.[5]   That interchange revolved around the question, “What must I do to inherit eternal life?”[6]  This, by the way, is not a question about life after death.  It is about participation in the life of the age to come, the promised future in which God’s reign of justice and peace is realized on earth.  It is a question about how to live so as to realize the promise.

When Jesus throws the question back to the scribe, he responds by quoting the Torah, “You shall love the Lord your God with all your heart, and with all your soul and with all your strength, and with all your mind; and your neighbor as yourself.”[7] When the scribe presses Jesus to define the neighbor, Jesus tells the famous parable of the good Samaritan.  The point is shocking: my neighbor is the enemy, the other, the person I am taught to despise, who shows me mercy.  When I break through my prejudices about the other and see them as fully human as myself, as capable of love, then enemies become friends.   This is what it means to love your neighbor as yourself.  When we do this, we share in God’s promised future.

This parable illustrates the second part of the Great Commandment:  loving your neighbor as yourself.  But what about the first part?  Luke tells us the story of Marth, Mary, and Jesus to illustrate what it looks like to love God out of the whole of your heart, in the whole of your being, mind, body and soul, and why this is so important.  Tellingly, Luke sandwiches the story of Martha and Mary in between this parable and Jesus’ instructions about how to pray; providing the Lord’s Prayer as a model and emphasizing the importance of persistence in asking for what we need – as did Martha! – concluding with the startling statement: “If you then, who are evil, know how to give good gifts to your children, how much more will the heavenly Father give the Holy Spirit to those who ask him!”[8]  Let’s look again at Martha and Mary through this lens.

Martha is tired, Martha is anxious.  She is carrying a heavy burden.  It isn’t just the pressure of being a good hostess.  Her service is much more than that:  it is the challenge of loving her neighbor as herself, of leading a community struggling to resist evil without mirroring it.  In this, she is imitating Jesus.  She has the weight of the world on her shoulders; at least, it feels that way. 

Am I doing enough?  Is it making a difference?  What if we fail?  If you’ve ever asked yourself these questions, if you’ve ever worried about the world your children and grandchildren will inherit, it your heart is broken with every new post and tweet, if you are spiraling in outrage with every turn of the news cycle, then pay attention to Martha, because she has the right instinct.  She goes straight to the Source for help, and she demands what she needs: a sister, a community, to help her realize God’s promised future. 

Is Jesus chiding Martha or identifying with her?  “I know you’re worried, distracted by many things; who wouldn’t be?  But keep your eye on the prize:  there is only one thing necessary.  Remember the first part of the commandment.  Ground yourself in the love of God, and everything else will flow from that.  Mary isn’t simply venerating me; she isn’t checked out or avoiding the work.  She is imitating me too; she is opening herself to the gift of God’s Spirit that infuses us with the energy we need to love our neighbor by drawing us more deeply into communion with God, the Source of love.” 
  
Martha, Mary, and Jesus constitute a Trinitarian icon of love in this story.  In the round dance of giving and receiving that they model we are invited to remember that we are created in God’s image.   Yes, we are commanded to love our neighbor, but we can only do that in so far as we become transparent to God, so that love can flow through us from its infinite Source.   If we are trying to save the world on our own steam, we will burnout quickly or worse:  we will do more harm than good. 

Martha, Mary and Jesus are a group of friends who help each other to remember the first part of the Great Commandment when things get tough.  Loving your neighbor as yourself isn’t an easy way to live, but it is the only way to live well.  It takes a community of friends to make it possible; friends who support our desire for God and God’s promises.  

Today’s Gospel isn’t about a choice between Mary or Martha; contemplation or action, worship or service.  It is about Mary, and Martha, and Jesus – you, me, and God - the community of love that realizes God’s promises together. 

Here is the take away:  unplug from the news cycle.  Turn off your phone.  Put the ear buds away.  I’m not asking you to tune out from the world, but to tune into its Source.  Turn to wonder, to awe, to gratitude to God for this most amazing life.  Allow yourself to rest in God’s love.  Take your identity from God – not from mom or dad, not from work or school, not, God forbid, from your Twitter feed.  Don’t let the many distractions tweak you.  Ask for what you need –  the one thing necessary – the love of God which is being poured into our hearts through the Holy Spirit that has been given to us[9] – and you will begin to know how to love your neighbor as yourself, because you will know what it is to be loved by God.



[1] Luke 10:38-42.
[2] John 11:17-37. 
[3] John 11:27.
[4] John 12:1-8; 13:1-15.
[5] Luke 10:25-37.
[6] Luke 10:25.
[7] Luke 10:27. Cf. Deut. 6:5; Lev. 19:18.
[8] Luke 11:1-13.
[9] Romans 5:5.

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