In the story we’ll read in the Bible today, Jesus is visiting some friends, two sisters in fact, and challenges one sister on her use of time.

Now as they went on their way, Jesus entered a village. And a woman named Martha welcomed him into her house. And she had a sister called Mary, who sat at the Lord’s feet and listened to his teaching. But Martha was distracted with much serving. And she went up to him and said, “Lord, do you not care that my sister has left me to serve alone? Tell her then to help me.” But the Lord answered her, “Martha, Martha, you are anxious and troubled about many things, but one thing is necessary. Mary has chosen the good portion, which will not be taken away from her.”  (Luke 10:38-42 ESV)

This can be a frustrating story.  We can relate to Martha!  Think back to Christmas dinner, did you have a lot to get ready, and did some family member frustrate you by doing nothing?  That sounds like what happens here.

Jesus might have gone a different direction here, right?  He might have told Mary to be more sensitive to Martha’s needs, and go help.  Or, he might have gone to help her himself.  Both would be consistent with Jesus’ teaching and character.

But what he says is “Martha, Martha, you are anxious and troubled about many things, but one thing is necessary.”

It comes down to the goal, the plan.  One thing is necessary, and it’s not what Martha is doing.  Two possibilities:

One option: Martha is concerned with gender roles.  In their culture, Mary should be in the kitchen serving, not learning like a rabbinical student. She’s assumed the posture of a learner, sitting at Jesus’ feet, which was an exclusively male pursuit.

Another option: Martha really is just concerned with a meal to honour the visiting rabbi, but Jesus says at this particular moment, there is a more important goal that should consume her time.

Either way, seems she’s missed the goal.  Jesus is here.  He’s establishing his kingdom, starting with teaching a few individuals, his disciples.  Martha and Mary are invited to be a part of that select group of learners while he’s in their own home.  Mary is sacrificing her place in society, and her time, to sit at his feet, learn and grow as his follower.  Martha is letting those same things get in the way.

The creator of time itself is sitting in Martha’s living room, and she doesn’t give him any.

He is the only one who can create time.  I act that way sometimes.  I leave no travel time between appointments, as if I’ll conjure time out of nowhere.

But, we only have so many hours in the day – time is a finite resource.  We have to choose how to spend them.  Sometimes it’s on life’s mundane tasks, preparing another meal or cleaning up, and sometimes it’s on great visionary stuff like sitting at Jesus’ feet.

One Christian, Martin Luther, said years ago: “Oh, faith is a living, busy, active, mighty thing, so that it is impossible for it not to be constantly doing what is good.“

The question is – what is good?

Question: What makes for a “good” use of time?

Read the Bible in Sync Today

Ryan Sim - June 19, 2013

Wednesday - Change It - The Golden Rule

Jesus always has the Pharisees, or religious lawyers, in mind as he teaches. Pharisees were essentially seeking a checklist of laws they can work through. Jesus says that wasn’t the point of the law. Look back to the beatitudes, the content that we started this series with. Jesus was always expanding the law to look at our motivations, not just outward actions we can check off our do/don't do list. It's a good thing, because we know life isn’t like that. Life throws stituations at all of us that we never anticipated, and could never have listed in advance. Jesus describes keeping God’s law with this line: So whatever you wish that others would do to you, do also to them, for this is the Law and the Prophets. He goes on to recognize, this is no checklist, this is very difficult: narrow gate to pass through. Baggage doesn’t fit. All your religious background, credentials, money, power, etc. all get left behind if you want to go through this gate. Every human can go through this door if we are willing to let go of all the sin baggage that keeps us from God. The narrow path – or the cramped path – does not allow us to take with us the things we can carry on the broad path. What are those things? Our failure to live this way, to go through Jesus’ narrow door, is due to our self-centeredness. We are instinctively self-centered, self-loving. Fall. 40% of millenials say that "being self-promoting, narcissistic, overconfident, and attention-seeking is helpful for succeeding in a competitive world." Almost 80% say that their friends use social media for those reasons. So Jesus uses that against us. Uses our self-love to love others. He redeems our self-love. Self-love is powerful. Usually our guide – now Jesus says it’s for others, too. Jesus calls us to an awareness of others as God’s beloved children, too. We’re not the only ones. Prevents need for endless rules for every situation. Put self in other’s shoes. Question: Describe the most self-centered person you know. What do you have in common with them? What characteristics do you share? Why is this so hard to admit?

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