Her name means: "Bitterness"
Her character: Mary appears to have been a single woman, totally devoted
to Jesus. The gospel portrays her, by way of contrast with her sister, Martha,
as a woman of few words. As Jesus neared the time of his triumphal entry into
Jerusalem prior to Passover, she performed a gesture of great prophetic
significance, one that offended Judas Iscariot, the disciple who betrayed
Jesus.
Her sorrow: She wept at the tomb of her brother, Lazarus, and must have experienced great sorrow at the death of Jesus.
Her joy: To have done something beautiful for Christ.
Key Scriptures: Matthew 26:6-13; Mark 14:3-9; Luke 10:38-42; John 11:1-12:11
Her sorrow: She wept at the tomb of her brother, Lazarus, and must have experienced great sorrow at the death of Jesus.
Her joy: To have done something beautiful for Christ.
Key Scriptures: Matthew 26:6-13; Mark 14:3-9; Luke 10:38-42; John 11:1-12:11
Her
Story
Jerusalem was swollen with a hundred
thousand worshipers, pilgrims who had come to celebrate the annual Passover
feast. Every one of them, it seemed, had heard tales of the rabbi Jesus.
"I wouldn't have believed it
myself if I hadn't been there," one man exclaimed. "I tell you,
Lazarus drew his last breath a full four days before the Nazarene ever
arrived."
"My cousin saw the whole
thing," said another. "According to her, Jesus simply shouted his
name and Lazarus came out of the tomb, still bound in his grave clothes."
"I hear the rabbi is coming to
Jerusalem to be crowned king during Passover," said the first man.
"Better if he stayed
home," said another. "The chief priests say the whole story is
nonsense, that Jesus is a rabble-rouser who'll soon have the Romans up in arms
against us all."
The rumors spread quickly, like
floodwater spilling over a riverbank. The curious kept chasing after Mary,
inquiring about her brother. Had he really been dead four days? Didn't he smell
when he came stumbling out of the tomb? What was it like to live in the same
house with a ghost? Did he eat and sleep? Could you see straight through him?
Did he simply float through the air wherever he went?
She could hardly blame them for
their crazy questions. Why shouldn't they be curious about the amazing event
that had taken place in Bethany just weeks earlier? How could they know that
Lazarus was as normal as any other living man? After all, raising people from
the dead wasn't your everyday kind of miracle. These days she felt a rush of
joy run through her, like wine overflowing a cup, whenever she looked at
Lazarus. Her own flesh and blood had been called out of darkness by a man who
was filled with light. How she longed to see Jesus again!
But shadows framed the edges of her
happiness. No amount of celebrating could erase the memory of Jesus as he wept
that day outside her brother's tomb. Even as others were celebrating the most
spectacular miracle imaginable, he seemed strangely quiet. What was he thinking
as he gazed at them? she wondered. She wished he would tell her, that she could
plumb the secrets of his heart.
When Jesus finally returned to
Bethany before the Passover, Martha served a feast in his honor. As Jesus was
reclining at table with the other guests, Mary entered the room and anointed
his head with a pint of expensive perfume. Its fragrance filled the whole
house.
The disciple Judas Iscariot, failing
to appreciate her gesture, objected strenuously: "Why wasn't this perfume
sold and the money given to the poor? It was worth a year's wages." Though
he cared nothing for the destitute, Judas was the keeper of the common purse, a
man always looking for a chance to fatten his own pockets.
But rather than scolding Mary for
her extravagance, Jesus praised her, saying: "Why are you bothering this
woman? She has done a beautiful thing to me. The poor you will always have with
you, but you will not always have me. When she poured this perfume on my body,
she did it to prepare me for burial. I tell you the truth, whenever this gospel
is preached throughout the world, what she has done will also be told in memory
of her."
From her first encounter with
Christ, Mary seems to have pursued one thing above all—the deepest possible
relationship with him. She soaked up his teaching, took his promises to heart,
listened for every change of inflection that would yield more clues about him.
Love gave her insights that others missed. Somehow, she must have understood
that Jesus would not enter Jerusalem to lasting acclaim but to death and
dishonor. For a time, the light itself would appear to be smothered by the
darkness. While everyone else was busy celebrating Jesus' triumph in raising
Lazarus, Mary stood quietly beside him, sharing his grief.
Christ found Mary's extravagant act
of adoration a beautiful thing, assuring everyone that she would be remembered
forever for the way she lavished herself upon him. Mary of Bethany was a woman
unafraid of expressing her love, determined to seek the heart of God—a
prophetess whose gesture speaks eloquently even from a distance of two thousand
years.
Her
Promise
The Old Testament Passover lamb was
only a shadow of what was to come. As our Passover Lamb, Jesus has completely
and thoroughly accomplished our redemption from sin. Just as the little lamb
died so that the firstborn in the Hebrew families would not die and would go
free from Egypt, so Jesus, our Passover Lamb, has died so that we can be freed
from our slavery to sin.
Today's devotional is drawn from Women of the Bible: A One-Year Devotional Study of Women in
Scripture by Ann Spangler and
Jean Syswerda. Visit AnnSpangler.com to learn more about Ann's writing and ministry.
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