Monday, March 18, 2013

At the Rest Stop


Isaiah 43:16-21; John 12:1-8
March 17, 2013
We’ve been on the journey for a long time. We know where we’ve come from, and we know where we’re going. It’s Lent. We come from dust, and to dust we shall return.
But if we are journeying with Jesus, we know also that the trip is going to go by way of Jerusalem, the cross, the empty tomb and all that they may mean. Those points along the way have been interpreted ceaselessly for 2,000 years, and will doubtless remain fodder for interpretation as long as interpreters – that is to say, human beings – remain.
Take the story literally. Take it as metaphor. Read it as history. Hear it as poetry. I really don’t care. Personally, I understand gospel as a love story. To sum up my own thoughts: Easter is God’s great “yes” in the face of the “no” of a broken humanity. Feel free to interpret that as you may, as well. I really don’t care about dueling interpretations.
Here’s what I do care about: if we say that Jesus is, in whatever way, an important guide, instigator, way-maker, sojourner, bread-keeper, savior, fellow-traveler, choose-your-metaphor for one who plays a key part along our own ways – if we say that Jesus is important then our steps and stops along the way matter deeply and are best understood only in relation to Jesus.
We may be dust on the way back to dust, but the way matters. We are, after all, people of the way – at least, that’s what they called the original followers of Jesus.
Let me unpack that just a bit, and do so in terms that Mary, Judas and, perhaps, Martha can help us with.
Jesus, in the gospels, is on a journey of his own – from the manger to the cross; from Bethlehem to Jerusalem. Despite the fact that the Apostles’ Creed reduces the journey to a comma – “born of the Virgin Mary – comma – suffered under Pontius Pilate” – the gospels insist that the journey mattered. That’s one of the great clues telling us that our own journeys matter, too. No matter how you interpret the ontological status of Jesus, the story that God cares enough about human beings to journey with us assures us that our journeys matter.
This morning’s reading picks up Jesus’ journey in Bethany. Jesus stops off to see his dear friends, Mary, Martha and Lazarus. Bethany is a rest stop along the way for Jesus. Scholars differ on just who these three were and how they were related. Perhaps biologically, perhaps by intention as members of a small Essene monastic order.
In any case, they turn up regularly in the gospels and the women, in particular, are crucial figures: Mary, perhaps symbolizing the contemplative prayerful student of faith, Martha, perhaps symbolizing the life of service in the stories told of them. Taken together, they give us a full picture of the life of discipleship and, certainly, they were important people in Jesus’ life and in the life of the early church.
Lazarus is not as fully drawn a character, but clearly he was also important in the life of Jesus for at Lazarus’ death Jesus was, the text in that story tells us, deeply moved and brought to tears.
On the way to Jerusalem and his own final, decisive encounter with the powers and principalities, Jesus stops at Bethany to visit his friends, and in the brief scene that unfolds in John’s story, we learn something essential about the journey of faithfully following Jesus.
We learn it around the table.
Gathered there: a family of faith that was, like every family, dysfunctional. Now, to be sure, this family’s dysfunctions were a bit more dramatic than most. After all, one of those at table has already died and come back to life. That’s just got to raise some issues. Meanwhile, another family member at the table will soon betray the family’s leader and give him over to be killed. They’ve got issues.
Judas, the betrayer, scolds Mary for wasting resources in anointing Jesus. Jesus responds, famously, “you will always have the poor with you; you won’t have me.”
In typical fashion, the omniscient authorial voice of John ascribes motives to Judas – he’s a callous thief, the text insists. Maybe. Maybe not. Who knows? In the end, what difference does that make? More fodder for ceaseless interpreting.
What matters is what unfolds around that table in that moment.
Martha is serving at table. She plays a crucial, faithful role. Without those who are willing to roll up their sleeves and get their hands dirty nothing that needs doing gets done – including the life-sustaining work of feeding people.
Mary, meanwhile, plays another crucial, faithful role. She recognizes the holiness of the one in their midst and treats him as such. Three things happen at once in Mary’s action: first, her recognition of Jesus prompts her to join the men at table and break down social barriers that are lost to our ears; second, in doing so, she embodies the kind of hospitality that each of us is called to give to every other one – across every social barrier – because everyone is holy, is worthy of such welcome, and carries within a spark of the divine; and third, as theologian Elisabeth Schüssler Fiorenza put it, Mary, "the woman anointing Jesus recognizes clearly that Jesus' messiahship means suffering and death."[1]
We are meant to do likewise. Michaela Bruzzese, a Chilean contributor to Sojourners, put it this way:
It is now our turn to follow her example, to know the suffering Christ, the persecuted Christ, in the lives of our families, communities, and the world. We accompany one another through hardship not for the sake of suffering itself, but because it is only there, when we love and anoint one another through pain, that the new life of resurrection begins.[2]
As Jesus insists to Judas: the poor will be with you on this journey. That is not a statement of resignation about the intransigence of social problems, it is a statement about the nature of Christian life in community. The community of followers of Jesus will always include the poor, the marginalized, the outcast. When it does not it, just like Judas, betrays Jesus. When we do not – for whatever motives or reasons or excuses – include the poor, the marginalized, the outcast we betray Jesus.
Mary recognizes, in that moment, that where there is poverty there will be suffering and that, as followers of Jesus, we will share in that suffering. And, most crucially, new life begins precisely where there is suffering.
Because God cares about the dust; about the least of us; about each of us on our journeys from ash to ash, dust to dust. Jesus calls to us along the way to share in that care and concern. To sojourn with those who hurt, to share with them from what we have, to break bread together with those who suffer. In other words: to be companions in compassion.
Companions in compassion. In other words, as those words mean at their root, sharing bread in solidarity with those who suffer.
This is the new thing that God is always doing: running rivers of life through the barren desert, making a path through the storming seas, bringing life out of death, finding food for the hungry in the midst of the suffering.
On our journeys from dust to dust we are invited to join in something new. We are called to declare God’s praise as God’s people through participating in this always new thing that God is always, already about. May it be so. Amen.


[1] Quoted in “The Path to Resurrection,” by Michaela Bruzzese in Sojourners (Preaching the Word).
[2] Ibid.