Weekly Church Service – Lent Five: 7th of April – 2019

 Includes Sermon Audio

Sentence:

Those who go out weeping, bearing the seed for sowing, shall come home with shouts of joy, carrying their sheaves.
Psalm 126:6


Collect of the day

Christ, whose feet were caressed with perfume and a woman’s hair, you humbly took a basin and towel and washed the feet of your friends: wash us also in your tenderness, that, in bracing your service freely, we may accept no other bondage in your name.
Amen.


Today’s readings

  • Isaiah 43: 16 – 21
  • Psalm 126
  • Philippians 3:3 – 14
  • John 12:1 – 8

Next week

  • Isaiah 50:4 – 98
  • Psalm 31:9 – 18
  • Philippians 2:5 – 11
  • Luke 22:14 – 23:56

A thought to ponder upon

Lent 5 – John 12:1 – 8

The gospel reading for the 5th Sunday of Lent in year C of the common lectionary is the 4th Gospel’s account of Mary and anointing Jesus’s feet with perfume. This incident takes place six days after Jesus’s raising of Mary’s brother Lazarus from the dead, just before Jesus’s palm Sunday entry into Jerusalem. As the Evangelist notes in the verses immediately preceding today’s gospel, Lazarus coming back from the dead has all of Jerusalem buzzing – and not all of it is good.

Jesus comes to Bethany, to the home of his good friends, Lazarus, Mary and ever-busy-with-hospitality Martha. Mary welcomes Jesus by anointing his feet – not washing them with water, the usual courtesy – but with Nard, a very expensive fragrance, imported from northern India. This precious spice mus have cost Mary everything she had. Her extravagant act blocked her sister’s dinner party – but how can you adequately thank someone who gave you back your brother?

Judas, the keeper of the company’s purse, objects at this wasteful extravagance (the 4th Gospel description of Judas here is the most devastating picture we have of Judas in the Gospels: he is described as a thief, a manipulator, a betrayer). While Judas’s protests sound reasonable, he is not fooling anyone. Jesus deflects Judas’s objections. Mary’s act of kindness is exalted by Jesus as prelude to the wonders that are to come.

Mary’s act in today’s gospel is not a matter of extravagance and waste but one of gratitude and love. The gift comes not from the extra she could spare but from her own need, her own poverty. She expresses with a litre of ointment love she feels in the depths of her soul, a love that is beyond any word she knows to adequately express it.

In today’s gospel, while Judas and the other guests deride Mary for her ostentatious display, Jesus graciously accepts her act of loving hospitality. In doing so, Jesus transformed her humiliation into joy, her ridiculous display into prayer for offering. Throughout the Gospels Jesus lifts up and calls for the good from everyone he meets – from the most despised tax collector to a little boy’s offering of his lunch. As Jesus transforms the lives of these “real” people, so we are called to do the same: to accept one another to love one another as God has accepted us and lifted us up and loved us.

Broken as an act of welcome to her beloved friend, later to be broken as an act of courageous compassion to anoint the body of the crucified Jesus, Mary’s small jar of spices is an example to all of us of the “fragrance” of joy and peace, of the comfort and care with which we can fill our own “houses” when we dare to “waste” our own time and energy to “break” our own “vessels” of humility and selflessness in the spirit of God’s risen one. © Connections/media Works


Sermon Audio

The Reverend Josie Steytler preaches from the text after the gospel reading.

Direct MP3 Download ⇓

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