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Scripture Text (NRSV)

 

Luke 10:38-42

 

10:38 Now as they went on their way, he entered a certain village, where a woman named Martha welcomed him into her home.

10:39 She had a sister named Mary, who sat at the Lord's feet and listened to what he was saying.

10:40 But Martha was distracted by her many tasks; so she came to him and asked, "Lord, do you not care that my sister has left me to do all the work by myself? Tell her then to help me."

10:41 But the Lord answered her, "Martha, Martha, you are worried and distracted by many things;

10:42 there is need of only one thing. Mary has chosen the better part, which will not be taken away from her."

 

Comments:

 

As I read this I wonder. The emphasis is not on what is being done, but the distraction. Mary is focused on her task, Martha is not. The better thing is to be focus on what we do for God rather than be a distracted disciple that has no heart for the job? Just a little thought. Nancy-Wi


Really listening is very important and very hard when it is the same member of the congregation again and again on the same topic. I believe that we need to listen to people who are different and who hold different views from us. A couple asked my wife and I to attend F 911 something we wouldn't have chosen to do but it was wonderful to hear things from a different slant and so informative to talk about it with my parishioners. Go see the movie and share with people the good news the way Jesus did with Martha and Mary.

good time in F911


Jesus speaks with two disciples. One is very busy, but the other sits quietly and listens.


One of the awesome acts in the circus involves a troupe of performers who climb up or leap onto the shoulders of one another. By climbing and leaping, they fashion a shaky vertical column. When the feat is at its height, as many as six performers may be balanced one on top of another. If the timing were off, if someone leaped or leaned too far, the human tower would collapse and the balancing act would fall apart.

In discussions of ministry and vocation, matters of balance often arise. In order to keep from falling apart or burning out, it seems that an intentional balance needs to be struck between activity and leisure, between involvement and withdrawal, between work and family. If balances are not maintained, the structure of ministry (lay and ordained) eventually teeters and the joy of doing often becomes drudgery.

At the core of Jesus' encounter with Mary and Martha is this concern over balance. In commending Mary, Jesus did not deride Martha's work of hospitality. Rather, he expresses disquiet at her distraction. Jesus observed that she was so busy with work that she had lost her sense of balance and proportion, leaving insufficient room for the better part. It is as if one of the members of the troupe had overshot a leap, lost the balance, and landed topsy-turvy.

In a different story (John 11) Martha eventually got things right, her balance clearly in place. She was upset about her brother's death. Even so, she responded to Jesus in a way that showed she had regained her equilibrium. Questioned about resurrection and belief, Martha gave a commendably balanced response: "Yes, Lord, I believe that you are the Messiah, the Son of God, the one coming into the world" (Jn 11.27). When seeking to serve, busy is not bad; but balance is better.

Robert Brusic


Jesus has just met a man skilled in Scripture who has trouble hearing the word of God, and Jesus offers him an example, a Samaritan. Now Jesus visits with a woman so busy serving she does not hear the word, and Jesus offers her an example, her sister. To the man, Jesus said to go and do; to the woman, Jesus said to sit down, listen, and learn.

Only Luke relates this episode, but John joins him in knowing Martha and Mary. John knows them as sisters of Lazarus and locates their home in Bethany near Jerusalem (Jn 11.1; 12.1-3). In both stories that John tells, the behavior of the two corresponds to Luke's description: Martha goes out to meet Jesus, while Mary sits in the house (Jn 11.20), and at dinner Martha serves and Mary anoints the feet of Jesus (Jn 12.1-3). In Luke, it is Martha's house, she receives Jesus into the home, and the story centers on her and Jesus. Her sister Mary is described, but she never speaks or otherwise enters the action. The radicality of the story should not be missed: Jesus is received into a woman's home (no mention is made of a brother) and he teaches a woman. Rabbis did not allow women to "sit at their feet," that is, to be disciples. However, this story accords well with 8.1-3; Luke has no problem with women being numbered among the disciples.

Martha has extended hospitality and is in line for the blessings that go to those who receive Jesus or his disciples (9.48). Her complaint is reasonable, but Jesus' response to her anxiety is not fully clear. Manuscripts differ on verse 42: Some read, "One thing is needful"; others read, "Few things are needful, or only one." Is Jesus saying that Martha is preparing too many dishes; only a few, in fact, only one is needed? The specific words are cloudy, but the symbolism seems clear enough. The word of God and not food is the one thing needful, for we do not live by bread alone but by every word that comes from the mouth of the Lord (Deut 8.3; Lk 4.4; Jn 6.27). This is the portion or dish Mary has chosen. But we must not cartoon the scene: Martha to her eyeballs in soapsuds, Mary pensively on a stool in the den, and Jesus giving scriptural warrant for letting dishes pile high in the sink. If we censure Martha too harshly, she may abandon serving altogether, and if we commend Mary too profusely, she may sit there forever. There is a time to go and do; there is a time to listen and reflect. Knowing which and when is a matter of spiritual discernment. If we were to ask Jesus which example applies to us, the Samaritan or Mary, his answer would probably be Yes.

Fred B. Craddock


from PBOB,

Perhaps we could start our posts with our "handle" then those who don't value our opinion or scholarship can skip our comments easier? That would "grease" the skids, pun intended!


five verses. 116 words. A ton of DaVinci Code fodder here. Mary is taking "footnotes" to write her gospel which will later be hidden by Martha in jealousy and become the subject of a best seller.

Who owned this house? Why did Martha appeal to Jesus to tell her sister what to do? Who was older, Mary or Martha?

If they knew Jesus was coming why weren't they more prepared? Are we prepared for his return?

PC in GA


I want my bulletins done a certain way. I don't want to use mass-produced ones, I want them to be special. Therefore, I turn down any offers of help with bulletin preparations. Ditto the church newsletters. Then I mumble to myself that I am a slave to my computer and wish I had more free time to do more valuable things. I am a control freak to the nth degree. I can fully relate to Martha. We make our own problems.

Now, Type B people are the bane of my existence. Our church Organist is a Type B, and if it weren't for me lighting fires under him, he'd never lift his hands to play the instrument. He'd rather sit around and air lofty thoughts about God and how music is a grand celebration of God. How the man gets through the day is a mystery to me. I can fully understand how Martha was irked with Mary's "don't worry, everything's all right" attitude.

Martha tries to change Mary. It can't be done until Mary has a reason to change. She doesn't. Mary is unconcerned with Martha's frustration, and probably wishes she's chill out a little. It won't happen, Martha won't change, until she realizes she is hiding behind her busy-ness, and can step out in trust that the world will not fall apart if she's not in control of it.

(side thought, said in jest. Adult sisters ought never to live together. I've known several sets of sisters who tried it and it was Martha and Mary all over again, all the time.)

 


From Jo

It will be hard to preach this one without feeling hypocritical... I am the one who is always moving and actually takes a great deal of pleasure in the busy routines of everyday. I am much more likely to be the hostess with not a detail overlooked, than to sit when there is work to do.

The past few lectionary readings from Luke's gospel are contradictory as well. Jesus says follow me and then the willing disciple is turned away (Lk 9:59-60). Go and do (Lk 10:37) but sit and listen (Lk 10:42). I think I will focus this week on Martha's worry and distraction. Many people in our congregations are faced with anxieties and inadvertently make dissipation a prevalent activity in their lives. How do we trust in God and relieve ourselves of some of the spirit-bruising distractions? Few verses this week but good advice.


v. 41 - (and along Nancy's lines, to give credit where due)

What distracts us as pastors in our churches? What distracts our congregants?

For me in the church I serve, it's not being able to meet expenses (thus, I go without air cond and heat in the office), an immature spirituality of many congregants, sidestepping the control freaks, doing the bulletin and newsletter ... you get the idea.

No wonder I feel tired today!

Come to think of it, not meeting expenses, lacklustre commitment, the feeling that they're there to be served, and finding things wrong with the bulletin and newsletter is what distracts the congregation.

Though we appear to be sitting at Jesus' feet, we can still be distracted!

All the more reason for us pastors to stay focused.

early thoughts

Sally in GA


Distraction, distraction, distraction. It's the constant bombardment of the 21st century. People got so used to it that they cannot function without it. (Some young people won't watch a play because of no shifting camera angles; others have to do homeworks with music in the background and Instant Messenger on a computer infront of them)...

And I thought I am better than them for not getting too distracted by the surrounding, but here the Word reminded me that I too, was distracted from Jesus, as I attempt to serve Him. Some of us may get distracted by the many social services we provided for the flock. I myself get distracted in study and preparation for sermons. For the past many days, I disappeared from DSPer forum so I can prep for this coming Sunday sermon. (My participation in DSP are mostly for devotional purposes).

And today I come back to the text of this week, and I found the Lord saying, "Coho, Coho, you are worried and distracted by many things (including your sermons); there is need of only one thing; and people who sat at My feet and listened to what I was saying, have chosen the better part, which will not be taken away from them."

Lord Jesus, help me to love you and not love your work more. Teach me how to listen to what you have to say; to me as well as the flock. I don't want to preach a message by repeating what I have read and have heard from others. I want to really be able to say, "This is the Word of God, for you, in this time!"

Coho, Midway City.


Nancy-WI & Sally in GA:

WOW! What great insights this early in the week! Thanks for the fodder! I'm going to have to wrap my brain around your comments and probably re-think my whole sermon idea. I think you're right on target. Thanks for helping me see this pericope in a new light!

Steve


Sally in GA

I don't know your setting, but perhaps your congregation isn't busy enough. Can you together find on mission worth doing and worth doing well? I recommend a Book titled "Mapping your congregational Assets" by Luther Snow.

Pr.del in Ia


Oh wow! This passage is so the life of the small church! A few who get in and do the work and eventually get burned out. I have heard so many in my congregation express various types of resentment at those who do not participate, and feel sorry for themselves at having to do it all. (I have even heard myself utter similar words. We are all off our equilibriam, our balance. We need to sit at the feet of Jesus and choose that "better part."

Susan in Wa.


Pre.del in Ia,

What is the publisher on that book? That sounds like something I could use too. Thanks for sharing!

Distraction. My life is a distraction. I was newly diagnosed last summer with ADD, and although I am now 47, I have probably had it most of my life. I have some books on it, and it is like reading my life on it's pages, and now there is a name for the constant barage of messages, and the utter frustration for forgetting things, or not getting things finished; what has been labeled in evaluations as lack of administrative skills. There is both comfort and pain in the knowing. Knowing the pain that I cause others who are frustrated with my "scatterbrained" ways. Medicine helps, but so would understanding, compassionate hearts, sitting at the feet of Jesus to pay attention to the "Better parts."

Susan in Wa.


Here's my question: What happens when there's no Gospel in the gospel?

The way I read this, nobody looks very good. Mary doesn't lift a finger to help her busy sister. Martha deals with this passive-aggressively, instead of dealing with her sister directly. Mary is equally passive-aggressive right back, in her silence.

Even Jesus (I hesitate to say) doesn't have his finest moment here. He patronizes Martha - saying an adult woman's name twice before admonishing her is just plain condescending. And he doesn't help with the tasks, either!

A Gospel with some gospel in it might have all three helping to get the work done, and then all three sitting down in mutual conversation.

I've read and heard all the various interpretations of this text - including the well-known church women's division of themselves into "Marys" or "Marthas" - and none of them has much good news. The closest is Robert Brusic's "gospel of balance" and even that's pretty lame - it could just as well be Buddhist.

I'm not planning to preach on this text this week, but good luck to all of you who are.

LF


Wow, thanks, LF! When I read your contribution I immediately bristled and thought, "Of course there's gospel in it!" But then I had to think about why...

There is gospel in it because Jesus gives us the grace to sit at his feet and not have to run around earning salvation or whatever it is we think we're going to earn.

There is gospel in it because we are released from the world's expectations about our gender, our tasks, our pastoral duties.

There is gospel in it because the free gift of Jesus' teaching and love is right there for us, for the taking, even if we don't "do" anything.

Again, thank you! Peace to all, Beth in Ga.


It's early in the week and as I read the many commentaries written for this site, it reminds me of words spoken in a lecture by Fr. Thomas Keating that I heard last Friday on Contemplative Prayer. I'm not sure where I'm going to go in this text, especially since I serve as Chaplain at a Nursing Home. But, it seems to speak to me that Jesus promise is with both women. Martha was busy, too busy to hear Jesus. Maybe, too busy to enjoy his presence. Mary enjoyed the presence of Jesus. Contemplative Prayer is taking the time to enjoy the presence of Jesus. Fr. Keating also made one statement that will live on in my heart. He said that the time we spend with Jesus is not only allowing us to know Jesus, but it allows Jesus to know us. Maybe, just working through this in my mind, the real desire of Jesus was to get to know Martha. Well, just some random thoughts for a Monday. Lynn in Blair


Martha's life is filled with many tasks. So are ours. Having so many tasks can be appropriately appreciated as part and parcel of the nature of vocation (vocatio). But the malady of these tasks is when they become (as they obviously do for Martha, and for us) a burden, nothing more than life's hassle. It soon becomes clear that her hospitable welcoming of Jesus into her home and the preparation of a meal is itself converted into a "chore" of a demanding (law-oriented) lifestyle. Likewise, in our daily living, we cannot escape the temptation to pervert our work from being our joy into being a demand.

How off-base we can get is evident by Martha's one impetuous question, whereby she (1) violates her so-called hospitality by chastising Jesus; (2) tries to embarrass her sister, Mary, in front of her guest (?!); and (3) seeks to make herself commendable for all her noble efforts. The truth of the matter is that not only is her behavior dis-tasteful, but her inner soul is filled with disdain for God, for others, and for her tasks. Such agitated distraction is a sign of worry (v. 41). But that worry is more problematic than simply the matter of completing the tasks. That worry is the unfaith that if we don't get it done, we will not be righteous—it is the basis on which we have staked our life's merits.

Ultimately, for that worry, it is she who is taken to task by Jesus, who points out to her that she has done her tasks based on her worrying choices for lesser portions. Those who live by the law of having their work-performance as the measure of their life reap those rewards. But the rewards are really recompense, for they (we) fail to love God as well as sister/brother. Indeed, there is some basis to the worrying distraction. We are left unfulfilled by our task-driven life, and ultimately judged as lacking any portion at God's banquet.

Starved by worry and impending judgment, the nourishing presence of our Lord Jesus provides the "one thing" we need. Jesus cuts through the tension by calling Martha by name (twice, almost comically). It is not to ridicule Martha, but to give Martha (and us) the assurance that there is nothing to fear. Jesus has taken our anxieties upon himself, in order that we might live in the joy of his feast. Indeed, Jesus is the Host, not the guest, for our lives.

The faithful response is one of sitting and listening to Jesus' Word as the daily nourishment for sustaining our souls. In turning our attention and our ears to his promise, our attention is diverted from the worry of having to live up to the demands (however much based in the Law) that are pressing upon us—and by so doing, we count ourselves as having self-worth that emanates from our dining on the One Thing Needful.

Nourished, we nourish. Our new task (commission) comes in living our lives, even in our daily working, as though it all depended on the Work of our Lord. Indeed, many in our world have tasted and seen the goodness of our Lord from simply wondering where we get the energy to keep at it, to take on new and bold ventures. It has led to the eventual spread of Christianity—and what a spread it is! But we live the best part, because we live in the best-ing partnership of our hospitable Host.

Mike Hoy


Martha, Mary, and Lazarus, the three friends of Jesus. In all three of the narratives involving this household, Mary and Martha each seem to exhibit the same behaviors in each case. In this story from Luke, Martha is bustling around making sure that everything is taken care of while Mary listens at Jesus' feet. In the story of the death of Lazarus in John 11, Martha is taking care of business. She hears that Jesus is coming and confronts Him in a matter of fact manner that her brother had died because of His absence. She does not appear to be weeping and wailing because there is work to be done; she will mourn when she has time. Jesus responds to her (and re-assures her) by reminding her who He is. Mary is totally undone when she sees Jesus and confronts Him from the depth of her pain. Jesus responds to her by sharing her pain: He cries. In John 12, Martha prepares a feast while Mary pours nard on Jesus' feet and wipes them with her hair. One loves with her service, the other with her emotions. Both love and both glorify. Mike in Soddy Daisy, TN


I will be preaching on the Colossian lection, looking at (as suggested by John Hall on this site) "The image" of Christ which is above all. Asking the question "What does "The image mean to me" It is possible to reflect on What Jesus mean to Martha and Mary. I don't see Jesus as being as harsh to Martha as has traditionally been proported. I want to continue to dig deeper.

What could it mean if we looked at the Martha and Mary side in ourselves? I wonder which side is taking the better part? Could it be at another time Jesus the Christ would have had a correcting word for the Mary side?

What does the Greek word "Agathos" really mean? Good, better?

I heard somewhere that the women activities in the congregations to which this Gospel was written, consisted of too much "busy" work, and that they were not attentive to Christian teaching." Therefore this "saying of Jesus" was used.

When I've preached on this pericope before, even though I wasn't strongly condeming the actions of Martha, the female congregants to which I spoke tended to come to me afterwards and speak condemning words about themselves, and that bothered me. I hope further reflection on the deeper meaning in this story would help guard against self deformation of the Martha personality.

How many offsprings are still trying to let go of the teachings taught their foreparents from Scriptures that say "Slaves be kind to your masters?" Some still will not read Pauline Epistles for this reason. Could this also happen eventually with this story?

Shalom

bammamma


LF

THANKYOU!!!

You did for me what I rarely experience but thirst for: a moment of spiritual stunning and spiritual 'dumbfoldedness'! (sorry I tend to make up words since english is not my first or second or third language ....)

So, LF, before you abandon this text entirely, prod this text some more. What would have needed to happen in this story so it gets "fixed" into the gospel which you preach?

And speaking her name twice ... i had not thought of it as patronizing. I had already imagined he had to to yell at her because she was so busy and it was all so hectic Martha could not hear.

Story Teller


LF

THANKYOU!!!

You did for me what I rarely experience but thirst for: a moment of spiritual stunning and spiritual 'dumbfoldedness'! (sorry I tend to make up words since english is not my first or second or third language ....)

So, LF, before you abandon this text entirely, prod this text some more. What would have needed to happen in this story so it gets "fixed" into the gospel which you preach?

And speaking her name twice ... i had not thought of it as patronizing. I had already imagined he had to to yell at her because she was so busy and it was all so hectic Martha could not hear.

Story Teller


Salvation is not a chore-oriented thing. We don't have to work to win Jesus over, to impress him. We have already won his approval, without all the effort we think we have to put into it. Having thus received, we can stop killing ourselves to look worthy and just enjoy the companionship of our Friend.


i've spent quite a bit of time with the stories of mary and martha. before my final year of seminary i made the decision to drop out of the process which would ordain me, but finish my mdiv.

i used the stories of these women (from luke and john) to help me discern my call. mary carthledge-hayes calls martha breadmaker and confessor in a book called claiming delilah. this understanding of martha helped me to understand the possibilities of being both a pastor and a wife/mother.

just like the priest and the levite weren't the "bad-guys" in last week's text, neither is martha.

it's clear that these 3 siblings were supporters and close friends of jesus. my guess is that they were a family of means and supported his ministry financially as well as being a "home-base" for Jesus and the disciples when they were travelling around jerusalem. (remember mary annoints jesus right before he goes to jerusalem to die.)

both sisters served jesus. (there is even a theory that lazarus was the beloved disciple in john's gospel, although i don't agree). and jesus taught both sisters how to minister and be disciples.

i love these two women. and as someone pointed out... martha is the only other person (besides peter) in the gospels to make such a confession of faith in jesus.

serving jesus is not just about sitting at his feet and listening, but it's also not just doing the work or going through the motions. the story about martha and mary is about serving christ with our whole self. in the things we do and in the way we listen to christ's message.

serving christ is being a bread maker and a confessor.

God's peace, christine at the shore


Christ's message is to go. Go into the world. Serve God and serve your neighbor. Teach them and tell them all that Christ has taught. But before you can go and do all that you have to know what it is you are going out into the world to do. That's where the listening comes in. We aren't going and doing our own thing, we are doing the work of Jesus Christ. We must first be students of the Lord, disciples in our own right, before we can become go-ers and tellers and servers and ministers.


Just a thought for children's message; passing out M & M's and sharing that no matter what color the candy, it all tastes good, I love them. Jesus talks to Mary and Martha (M&M) in today's message. They were different, but he loved them both very much. etc. Another thought; recently a friend asked me to pray for her daughter-in-law. Seems the children run wild and the house is a mess, because Mom just listens to Christian radio or watches Christian TV all day long, all night long. The children are neglected as is the house. My friend said,"She loves focus on the family, but that is the one thing she does not do. Pray for her, we are worried about the children." Seems this young lady has chosen to sit at the feet of Jesus exclusively. Thoughts? LS


I liked the Living by the Word this week from the Christian Century, where the focus was upon hospitality. Martha is the one being "hospitable" at first blush, but is focused not really on her guest (or she would have recognized his will), but on the expectations she thinks are put upon her and the ones she has for others.

It is Mary who is being truly hospitable in the moment. For Mary sees Jesus, the guest, and hears his heart. I have been on both ends of this. There have been the parties where the goal was to "throw a good party" (and I stay busy) and the parties where the goal was to "be with these people I love," (and I sit and talk).

Martha was doing the first. Mary the second. Both can be fun - but I prefer the second. They are both forms of hospitality, but I will take love over service whenever I can get it.

We need both the sanctuary and the soup kitchen. But some need to be prodded into one and some into the other.

Besides, what better Christ figure can you get than Curly in "City Slickers," who points his gloved finger at us and defines the secret of life as "one thing, just one thing." Which you have to figure out.

Jesus would have liked Curly.

jc in KY


Mary chose "The better part that will not be taken away."

Martin Luther wrote in verse 4 of a mighty fortress:

Were they to take our house, Goods, honor, child or spouse Though life be wrenched away, They cannot win the day The Kingdom's ours forever!

Martha was working on temporary things, creature comforts, and even played a vital role in the service of Jesus, but Mary let Jesus serve her with something that would endure forever.

~~PC in GA


LF, LF, why have you forsaken me?


Whoever you are... I haven't forsaken you.

LF


Beth: I respect your interpretation, and I think it will preach well. But I still disagree with your three key points, because I think the text doesn't support them.

You say, Jesus "gives us grace to sit at his feet and not have to run around earning salvation." Amen! I believe that this is so! But you certainly wouldn't know it from his response to Martha. He does not invite her to come and sit too; if he had, I would agree with your interpretation. Instead his reply is judgment and criticism, and I think you have to squint pretty hard to see any sense of invitation or grace.

You say there's gospel in it "because we are released from the world's expectations about our gender, our tasks, our pastoral duties." I think you are saying that Jesus implicitly supported women receiving theological education.

However, recent feminist scholarship has opined that this text was used to suppress, not support, women's leadership in the church. cf Jane Schaberg in The Women's Bible Commentary.

The NRSV translation above does not quite accurately reflect the Greek text. In verse 40, it says in Greek that Martha was distracted by her "much serving." The word for serving, diakoinein, had become a technical term for diaconal ministry by the time the New Testament was written. While we read the text through our Sunday-school illustration glasses, expecting that Martha is a harried hostess, the technical term for her serving indicates that she is more like the busy pastor of a house-church.

For Jesus to say, in effect, "Sit down and shut up" reinforces a submissive role for women in the church. Even if it is true that Mary's theological education is supported, she doesn't "do" anything with it. She doesn't become an evangelist or spread the word that she's been given.

Your third point is similar to your first, but again, you read into the text your sense of Jesus' love and grace. I guess that's one way to put some Gospel into the gospel.

LF


Someone wrote "Christ's message is to go. Go into the world. Serve God and serve your neighbor."

I'd like to tweak that a little bit. Christ's message is salvation, God's love for all creation--Martha's and Mary's included. Service is well and good, but it is not the center of the message. Martha's work is good, until she forgets the reason for the work, by neglecting her guest (Jesus, the center). Mary's work is good, but if no one has the means to satisfy bodily needs because nothing is prepared, soon they will leave and not hear the story, and the center will again be lost.

The message is the good news of God's love for us in Jesus Christ. The mission is the response, the sharing of the good news through WORD and DEED.

Early, Thoughts...Michelle


LF,

Interesting interpretation I'd not heard before. No wonder you're irked about this gospel not being quite the good news we strive to preach. The KJV did translate the distractions in verse 40 as "much serving," and I see how it could have meant diaconal service. If so, then Martha's request to Jesus would have been to ask Mary to help her with the church work! The "do all the work by myself" is also better translated as "serve alone."

However, to see this text as one that discourages the service of women in the early church would be to contradict the rest of Luke/Acts. It may have been used that way by the early church, but I don't believe it was intended that way by the author (or by Jesus). Usually Luke is known as the gospel that uplifts the service of women.

How to explain Jesus' words here? Maybe Mary does not yet know the good news. Maybe she needs to hear what Martha already knows. Maybe Mary does not yet help with the serving because her heart has not yet been inspired.

Do we need to give the gospel time to sprout and grow in the hearts of the converted before demanding service? Has Martha been serving others so exclusively she has not seen the emptiness in her own sister? Does Mary sit at the feet of Jesus in order to try to discern why her sister is so enthused about her ministry.

Just a lot of questions inspired by your post. Still musing...

Michelle


I'm trying to figure out the beginnings of a sermon while still on vacation, which I know is a no-no, but which will save me much grief later. At least getting started on an angle. And what occurred to me in response to the Christian Century piece is that here, in my mother-in-law's house, I'm the guest, and I can easily act the same way, staying busy, looking at catalogs, doing things that should be relaxing but aren't and that don't connect me to anyone, either. So here I am the guest, and I'm acting like Martha, for whatever reason not letting down and centering in on what's important when you're on vacation. Which I assume has something to do with resting and becoming refreshed, in myself and in God. Just funny that the dynamic extends way past hospitality.

Laura currently in MA but normally in TX


what a great site this is, although I rarely contribute..too shy! Was it the present Pope who said 'Be careful of spending all your time doing the work of the Lord, and forgetting the Lord of the work'? Last week was more focussed on being a neighbour to others (the work of the Lord), this week seems to be keeping the balance in spending time with the Lord. I thought last week's contributions were really helpful! jonno


I gotta toss in my two cents here...

Sometimes I wanna just wring the throat of people who want to ignore the challenges of Kingdom living by saying, "It's just about loving Jesus." Other times I wanna swing the other direction and say, "Hey, dummy... don't forget it's all about grace, not about your own feeble/failing efforts."

This passage makes it clear that it's just about listening Jesus. The problem is that we don't wanna say that too clearly, because we're afraid all our congregants (and maybe us too) will sit around on their big fat behinds even more than we do already, and ignore the work of the kingdom (or at least, the work of our church).

Of course, this worry ignores the context of the entire life of Jesus. If nothing else, the life of Jesus teaches us that if you listen to him, you will be challenged to accept or reject kingdom living!

Martha's failing is not that she's working. Her failing is that she's not learning what she should be doing and how she should be doing it. In addition, she's ignoring the great opportunity to immerse herself in the presence of Jesus, much as we do when we ignore the people in our world to do the tasks of our ministry.

(I hope that makes as much sense when I recover from insomnia as it does right now at 4:30 in the morning.)

Love & Bananas, Pastor Stinky


jonno,

thanks for the quote from the Pope. It will preach, or at least it will help illustrate this text. I really like this idea of juxtaposing doing the work and taking time to listen to the work.

Steve in NC


Mary is the true host for she has chosen the one thing needfu! Her willing attention at the feet of Jesus, listening ... unmoved by the world around her, not distracted by worry ....

Martha is a true host, she prepares something to eat, to welcome Jesus at her table, but she is distracted, resentful, anxious ... unable to serve her Lord with gratitude and love.

The early church fathers saw in these two the two hands of the church, the contemplative life (which of course was far better) and the active life (for those who just couldn't sit still). But in truth, we are the contemplatives and the actives, we house Mary and Martha within ourselves. When Mary gets wrestless, or forgets what is needful then Martha becomes upset and angry .... why don't others help me, why am I the only one to really care ... But when our inner Mary centers herself in the presence of Christ, our Martha is content and happy and loving.

We know so many people within our parishes that are Martha's and a few Mary's. We need to introduce Mary and Martha to one another. We cannot have a lasting active ministry, no matter what it is, Outreach, Stewardship, Pastoral Care, Christian Education, Evangelism, etc without developing the Mary within us.

It is amazing to me how many of us run away from the quiet presence that we are invited into, there is nothing more healing and refreshing than simply being in the presence of the living Lord:

"Be stil and know that I am God."

tom in ga


Michelle, you are right, and so am I. It was the Great Commission where Jesus told the disciples to go out into the world and preach, baptise, teach all that he had commanded. Within that would be the message of salvation, right? So, his final message was to Go and share what you have listened to me say.


I tend to read the Gospels as complete narrative unto themselves rather than piecemeal. So...

We are on the way to Jerusalem. Jesus has "set his face" (9:51f)...

For me this text is a anti-thesis of the story we preached earlier in Luke 9:52ff with a Samaritan village's inhospitality. Martha is the very anti-thesis of the Samaritan village. She welcomes Jesus. She is the model of how to do it right.

Earlier on the disciples had come to Jesus and had asked him to endorse their threat to annihilate the inhospital Samaritan village. Jesus tells the disciples to let the Samaritans be. In a very similar situation Martha comes to Jesus and asks him to endorse her policy on Mary to get off her fat-lazy-you-know-what. Jesus tells Martha to let Mary be.

...still listening to and for the story.

Story Teller


A new participant to your discussions... Luke puts this text and last weeks text up against each other. A number of times in his gospel he moves from a story featuring a person of one sex to a story featuring another. It is a pattern repeated at times through the gospel, though not entirely consistent.

But he also does it to show a paradox of spirituality- doing and not doing. In the GS story, he lifts up the doing of religion (and calls the non-doers on the carpet). In this text, he lifts up the non-doer and calls the doer on the carpet.

The practice of our Christian life and faith involves both aspects. However, we are most comfortable celebrating the doing; after all we need the doers, and our parishoners expect us to be the chief doer of relgious activity. What would it look like if we could come to celebrate the "being" of faith (the non-doing)? What would it look like if we could encourage the "being" in the same way we encourage the doing? Would that shape our ministry in a different way? Would it provide a balance to the current ministry picture?

I think the two texts tell us that faith has a rhythm- the breathing in (being) and the breathing out (doing). Both are neccessary for wholeness in the activity of faith. revnewt in CA


Storyteller, thank you for your post. I am in full agreement with you when you say that Martha should let Mary be.

We're not all cut from the same cloth, and we offer Jesus different gifts. Sometimes we mumble and grumble about what we give, other times we give with a heart full of love. Some people are better at working in the nursery with the babies every Sunday and missing the worship service, others are better at painting the fences, and some are better at praying for other people or holding a hand in time of sorrow. Let's just pool our resources and together we can get all the work and learning done.

Besides, who's to say Mary didn't do her fair share of the work before Jesus walked in the house? Maybe she chopped the wood for the fire, or cleaned the house and picked the vegetables from the garden. We don't know the whole story here. Cooking and serving and fretting and fussing may have been Martha's "look at ME!" thing, you know, like a hoity-toity chef.

If Mary had been in the kitchen too, Jesus would have been sitting there by himself. In that culture, to ignore a guest would have been inhospitable for sure! (Lazarus is not mentioned)

Early thoughts with no clear message.

KHC


Question: If Martha had just rejoiced in her service without demanding that Mary "do it her way," would Jesus have said anything? If the "doing" was bad and the "sitting and listening" was good, one would expect Jesus to have said something before. Until Martha "condemns" Mary, Jesus doesn't "condemn" Martha. Different gifts are involved here and there is no issue until the "hand" tries to make the "ear" into a "hand." Mike in SD, TN


Ah, Jonno and tom in GA, I think you've got it. Together with the very first posts this week. Martha's problem was not in serving but in being distracted. She was probably "running on empty" as many of us do from time to time, without taking time to "Be still and know that I am God," without listening to God in silence to be refueled for the neighboring we were called to in Luke 10:25 -37 last week. If Martha were focused on the source of her call to serving, she would not have been distracted. A balance is needed. I'm calling my sermon "Do Be Do Be..." (Not very original, but it says what I'm aiming for)

Max in NC


If this pericope had been teamed up with Paul's words about there being different gifts (as someone mentioned earlier) but the same Spirit who gives them, I wonder which direction this text would be taking this week.


A small-potatoes example here, but at our church we have a fellowship time after services. Coffee, cookies, salty snacks, juice. It seems very few people were signing up to provide the treats, but many were coming to enjoy them. One woman got very emphatic that she was not going to do it all the time, that it was too expensive, too much work and everyone needed to take their turn. She was giving me her spiel one day when I calmly told her if she chose not to do it any more, to stop doing it. Those who thought the fellowship time was important would step up to the plate and provide treats. She looked like I had hit her with a lawsuit. She was back at baking cookies within the month, but did begin a sign-up list and took it around for others to have the chance to sign up. Here's the kicker - they all thought she loved doing it, and did not want to tread on her turf by providing treats. Once they knew the real story, she has only had to bake about twice a year because everyone is sharing the load and nobody is unhappy about too much work.

If you want help, ask, and ask the right people. Don't go gripe to the minister.

Glen


GEC Comments Jc in KY wrote: “We need both the sanctuary and the soup kitchen. But some need to be prodded into one and some into the other.” A really helpful and succinct observation!

Perhaps when we read the Gospels we are looking for more detail than is really warranted. I think the gospels, basically, are messages, not biographical sketches. Martha is anxious, Mary has chosen the better part, Jesus speaks with love and authority! Maybe that’s all the gospeler wants us to see: Not Martha’s whole life experience, not Mary’s motivations, but the fact that we should not be driven by obligation to the point we forget to listen to the Lord of Life when He is present. Some of the ideas already posted have pointed to this view, and I just thought it was worth a little summary…


from GEC in Mich I’ve been reading a book called “Not Trying Too Hard” by David Sitze. It’s about church growth and renewal, etc. The premise is that we should work smart, not “hard”. We should choose tasks that are do-able, not trying to push our congregation from this world into the Kingdom of God, by our own efforts, in one single push. Sitze points to the myth of Sisyphus: The king who was condemned to an eternity in Hades of unceasing effort pushing a boulder up a hill, only to have it roll down again... He notes than when you have your shoulder pressed against a task bigger than yourself, you can’t see around it; you can’t see other ways to go; you can’t invent a successful strategy. It's hell, and it's in your face! Is Mary the one who has chosen to work smart, and does Martha have to learn this?


Thank you all for the cogent conversation this week! Especially the quote from the Pope, and the illustration of the woman who spends her days watching Christian TV and listening to Christian radio while her family goes neglected.

I am still struggling on how to present this to MY congregation, though. It is another link in the chain of thought of "focus," yet in this particular pericope, my congregation seems to be neither Mary nor Martha.

At the risk of airing dirty laundry, here is a case in point ... we're holding, for the first time in over 20 years, a Vacation Bible School (praise the Lord LOUDLY!) - this is the beginning of my fourth year here, and each year has been a small step forward for having a VBS. The first year, all I heard was, "but we don't have any children." The second year, I heard (I swear I'm not making this up) "but we don't have the right kind of septic tank." Last year, I didn't hear much of anything, but I also didn't get any help, either. This year, after receiving a conference grant for a person to do it - plus a church merger increasing our labor pool, plus using my ministry candidates and several friends, it's a go! So, one of the things we wanted to do was to serve a simple meal since this will be an evening VBS... It is fairly popular in this area to do this. The objection? "I don't know why we have to serve them dinner! We're not a big church. When I had my kids, I fed them at home!" you get the drift. Yet, this is from the crowd that, if we were to call a "tater bash" we'd have no lack of help! We'd have a surplus of potatoes and toppings. The difference? One is inviting in outsiders (VBS) the other is a church get-together (tater bash).

Their Sunday school is poorly attended, and from everythign I see, they've been having the same conversation for 20 years in each class.

I speak frankly because I know that my church is not alone in this; many on this site could express the same phenomenon in different scenarios. The mainline church in the USA has become the third sister - (Mavis?) ;-) - we're helping ourselves to all kinds of service, while neglecting BOTH the doing of and the being in the Word. It's time for the mainline church in America to get out of the countryclub mindset and into the Lord's mindset! It's time for the mainline church EVERYwhere to find some Gospel for a new Gospel conversation.

Someone asked "when is the Gospel not the Gospel?" My reply: the Gospel is most unlike the Gospel when it fades to embers then dies and no one cares enough to try to fan the flames back up again.

And, it's a long post (but better than my usual bit-by-bit, huh?), so I apologize (I'm fired up) ... a confession. Last night was the community club meeting. I blew it off because I was tired - missing at least 45 contacts for VBS. I didn't sit at the Lord's feet, though, I watched "Fear fActor." Like those I just griped about, I neither did nor heard the word.

And one last weird comment: I can't help but envision this scenario, and I picture Mary being rather vapid.

Sally in GA


LS-- Thanks for the thoughts on a children's sermon. As someone who does one every week, it's nice to have some ideas. I would also recommend for you sermons4kids.com. It's been a great help.

I would also echo the story this week reflects last week's text. We've been told to go and do, now we hear the fact that we need to sit and listen. Perhaps it is because after we go and do, we need to be reminded why we are going and doing, and that requires a return to the feet of the Lord.

PBG in IL


great conversation.

for the last few years i have slowly been writing a fictionalized story of mary martha lazurus and jesus in a modern day setting.

the premise i've imagined is that martha is the middle child who wants to be noticed; lazurus is the oldest child and is successful in all he does, and mary is the baby... a free spirit. laz is jesus' best friend.

martha... in trying to find her place in life sees her gift as being the care-giver and baker. i remember somewhere reading that mary's sitting at jesus' feet is a very intimate act, devoid of modesty, perhaps her head even rested in his lap.

martha is seaching for her own intimacy with jesus (aren't we all in our own ways?) and over does it with preparations and being hospitable... she's making a seven course meal when jesus would have been happy with a sandwich.

ultimately i see this story as one about relationships. how do we relate to jesus? how do we see ourselves relating to jesus? how should we relate to jesus? and how do we relate with our neighbors (or siblings) when it comes to our faith?

i suppose i'm taking quite a bit of poetic license, but it helps me to see the text. don't know if i'll ever finish my book, but i do love this story.

God's peace, christine at the shore


Sally - thank you for your speculation on the third sister, "Mavis". I know exactly what you mean.

LF


This is off the subject, perhaps. I was thinking about the subject of balance. Our congregation is going to try doing the Forty Days of Purpose in the fall. Rick Warren says worship is all about God, trying to get us to think about the things we need to do in worship for non-believers/pre-Christians/seekers. I do agree we need to be sensitive to others. But if we only sing choruses, use screens and cater to these people (the business of Martha), what about us sitting at the feet of Jesus? If everything in worship is about praising God, giving, etc., what about sitting and receiving food from God, being spiritually fed? Don't we need the balance of both? PH in OH


from JG in WI (per the suggestion of PBOB)

LF - Dr. Robert Smith, whom I've often heard lecture on preaching has been able to preach the gospel from just about every passage in the Bible. It's there, one just has to find it.

I believe it was he who presented this three-point outline from this passage (and borrowing from John 11).

In this town of Bethany (meaning "house of dates," or "house of misery,") Jesus found welcome in the house of Lazarus, Mary, and Martha. These three demonstrate proper balance (in keeping with Robert Brusic's fine comments) in the Christian life.

Martha was a servant - a worker.

Mary was a listener - a learner.

Lazarus was obedient - he came when he was called (John 11:43-44).

Neither the worker nor the learner is of much use unless they are obedient to the call of the Lord. The call of the Lord won't mean much if one is only a worker when the Lord calls to listen, or if one is only a listener when the Lord calls to work.

"Blessed are the balanced." - Dr. Warren Wiersbie.

The gospel is a call to obedient listening and working.


wow i haven't used the Gospel readings as my text for sermons in the last few weeks so i haven't been looking on the gospel section I forgot how much stuff there is here. Anyway, I think I'm running down the same track as stinky (theres no way to make that sound good). I always shy away from the "one woman does good the other does bad" idea or even the whole distraction angle. Mostly because i think in order to be destracted you have to know what you are supposed to be doing in order to be distracted from it. I'm not convinced that Martha "knew better". She was doing what she was supposed to after all there are LAWS about hospitality in her culture. Ithink the problem is that she never took the time to ask what Jesus wanted. Or to notice that Mary was recieving something from Jesus. I know that often i think I know exactly how what and how Jesus wants of my worship devotion and service and never take the time to ask him. Its not that I'm distracted from what Jesus wants but that I never took the time to find out what Jesus wants.

Mark in SW WA


to PH in OH

I don't think it's off-subject at all! We've been doing the Warren study (though not in its formulated time frame, quite) and in teaching it, I've been concentrating on our "focus." Trying to help folks see "what's really important," or, maybe better said, "what's really a spiritual issue (the ultimate craving we have for God)" vs. what's just an issue (typos in the bulletin). Ironically, I had a typo on this study in the bulletin - it read "The Purpose-Driven Live" rather than "Life." A woman who has attended every one of the classes circled it and showed it to me. That was the day when we looked at what spiritual needs are vs. what we often spend our time focusing on. Oh, the irony!

Sally in GA


Here we go with the add-on posts again! Sorry, but I just had a thought...

It's interesting that Jesus would (just last week, in lectionary time) exalt the doing above the learning and knowing ... and now he's exalting the learning over the doing...

It's also interesting that the learning is by a woman this time, and it occurred to me that maybe Jesus isn't simply saying that "it's ok for women to learn, too," but by placing a woman as learner, he's (from the ancient Jewish paradigm) highlighting the learning of SITTING AT THE FEET, learning submissively like an ancient Jewish woman rather than with an agenda, like a Pharisee.

While in real-life I see that we all have a Mary and a Martha (and even Mavis) side, Jesus is nonetheless clear in v. 42: "there is need of only one thing. Mary has chosen the better part, which will not be taken away from her."

The difference is in the MODE of the learners (last week, the Lawyer's agenda vs. this week's desire to drink in the goodness).

God is good all the time!

Sally in GA


Found this on a link to an article by Chris Rice, called "Choosing the Better Part" - from the Gen. Board of Discipleship of the UMC website.

If God stripped away your works, who would you be?


The parable of the Good Samaritan and the real life story of Martha and Mary and Jesus are mirror-images of each other, and illustrate the same one point:

Love for myself as each word and its opposite is the one thing I need: which us why God commands me to love myself first: so that with my whole Love: Love for myself as each half of each word, two half-Loves making one whole Love: I will know when to do in Love and when in Love to not do: Eccles 3:1-8, and so I'll never know when to not to have that ONE needful thing: Love in attitude or in spirit to myself as all others and Love in spirit to all others as myself. John 13:35. And not only will that God-given whole Love not be taken from us; we will never give it up once we have it! Romans 11:29

Therefore:

The Levite and the Priest and Mary and JC do nothing: so the one needful thing that the Levite & Priest lacked had nothing to do with they did NOT do: it had everything to do with the sin of the lack of the needed Love for themselves as or with the sin of the unneeded Hate for themselves as helpless and as unhelpful and as helpees. They only loved selves with HALF of the Love they needed: they loved selves as helpful and as helpers. So it was in Hate that they were helpless: they were doubly helpless: no helping of Love and no physical help.

So too, the Good Samaritan[GS] and Martha do many things for their respective neighbors, who do nothing back for the GS and Martha: so too Martha's problems and the one needful thing she lacked had nothing at all to do with all the things she did. It had all to do with the sin of her lack of that needed Love for herself as, or Hate for herself as unhelpful, which led her to hate JC and Mary as unhelpful. Like Love/Charity, Hate also begins at home.

In effect, the Levite, the Priest and Martha each had what we all and all of our members and all humans have until and unless we all are led by the goodness of God to repent of it:

that loathsome combination of Love and Hate that JC referred to in Matthew 6:24 and 5:43-48, and that Tom Jefferson used with a few other words: 'that loathsome combination of Church and State.' NB: Therefore Martha was not distracted because of how many things she had going on: she had ALREADY been distracted from Love OF SELF, the one needful thing, a long time before: whenever she was taught to hate herself as being helpless! So too, in that unneeded self-hate, she wd have been STILL distracted even IF she were sitting listening with rapt attention to JC as Mary in Love was!

On the other hand, what the GS and Mary and JC each have is whole Love for themselves: Love for self as helper AND Love for self as helpless and as any synonyms.

So in and with that whole Love for self as helpler and Love for self as helpee/helpless/unhelpful,

the GS helps because he wants to, and gives his help with no looking for someone else to love him back nor to help him in return: Luke 6:35: In Love he is doubly helpful: his helping of Love and his physical help.2 Corin 12:10.

and Mary and JC do not physically help Martha, but give her the full helping of ALL of their WHOLE Love: so that in Love, Mary and JC are totally helpful spiritually even when they are NOT helping physically! 2 Corin 12:10.

By the way, this proves that even when JC is at his worse, he is better than any man in Hate is at his best and finest! Psalams 39:5.

Plus,.... uh oh, this is going on too long already! I literally have to tear my fingers away from typing more so that this will not be so long! smile

So let me oil-skidaddle in Love outta here!

in all love,

one in whole love: oiwl