“When in trouble and in doubt, run in circles, scream and
shout!” Perhaps that was Martha’s
thinking. Martha had welcomed Jesus to
her home. He was to be her and her
sister’s honored guest. There were many
things to be done in preparing the home for Him. One can imagine Martha busily sweeping,
cleaning, and setting things in order.
Dinner needed to be planned and prepared. These things all took time and Martha was busy-as-a-bee
seeing to them.
While Martha was busy doing, Mary was quietly
listening. She was seated “as the Lord’s
feet and listening to his teaching” (Luke 10:39). “But Martha was distracted with much serving”
(Luke 10:40). How easy it is to get
distracted by the tyranny of the urgent in our lives! A divine appointment to hear the Master speak
was availed to both Martha and Mary, but Martha was distracted by matters of
lesser importance.
Martha asked Jesus to intervene, “Lord, do you not care that
my sister has left me to serve alone?
Tell her then to help me” (Luke 10:40).
Isn’t that often the way things work amongst siblings? Lord don’t you care? Tell her to do her job? It’s not fair for me to do all the work. The passage indicates that Martha was
“distracted,” “anxious,” and “troubled.”
She had many things on her mind.
Much to do, much to do! And like
a juggler with too many plates in the air, she was frustrated by her inability
to keep track of them all. Vance Havner
once said, "Jesus knows we must come apart and rest awhile or else we may
just plain come apart!" Martha was
in the “coming apart because she had failed to come apart” mode.
But Jesus didn’t tell Mary to help Martha, instead He helped
Martha to reassess her priorities, saying, “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 10:41-42).
D. L. Moody once said that the “main thing in life is keeping the main
thing the main thing.” To love and know
Jesus is the main thing (Cf. Philippians 3:13; 2 Peter 3:18). The
main thing is keeping it the main thing because countless things can work to
distract us.
Life is filled with choices and we make choices according to
what we deem important. Tragically, in
the business of our lives it is very possible for us to lose track of what
matters most. Good things, even
relatively important things (like making a home presentable for an invited
guest) can work to keep us from something that is of infinitely more value.
Jesus would speak to my heart though His Word today. Do I have any time for him? Has the business of my life clouded my
vision? The “simplicity and purity of
devotion to Christ” (2 Corinthians 11:3) is a precious thing, but do I esteem it
so? Do I have time and heart to sit at
Jesus’ feet that I might hear what He has to say to me? He deliberately “chose the bad part,”
stepping out of Heaven to love me by dying for my sins (Cf. John 1:14;
Galatians 2:20), do I “choose the good” that through the ministry of His Word I
might better appreciate the full measure of His love (Cf. Ephesians
3:14-19). I’m prone to wander, but the
Good Shepherd cares for me and knows all about my needs—do I have ears to hear
what He has to say to me this day (Cf. John 10:27-28; Hebrews 4:12-13)? His Word is able to guide me along His path
of righteousness--teaching, reproving, correcting, and training me—but it
cannot achieve its profitable intent if I take no time to sit at His feet and
listen (2 Timothy 3:16-17). He is a
Glorious Savior—the day will come when “He will be marveled at among all who
believe” (2 Thessalonians 1:10)—do I yearn to behold His glory even now as the
Spirit works through the Word to help me to see (Cf. John 16:14)?
Lord, we are a busy and distracted people,
help us this day, like Mary, to choose the good part.
Help us that what truly matters most might be what matters most to us in
the daily practice of our lives. Help us
to yearn to be glad to sit at Your feet and listen!
Monday, March 17, 2014
THE GOOD PART (Luke Chapter 10)
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment