26 March 2024
St.
Athanasius Lutheran Church
Holy Tuesday Vespers
Vienna, VA
Holy Tuesday Meditation
Text:
Mark 14:1-11
Many people want to make a name for themselves. They want people to remember them after they
die. That is how they will live on - in the hearts and minds of people, with
their admiration and esteem. But we have seen in recent years how poor and
fickle that can be. Those whose names were once synonymous with great deeds are
now having their names expunged and their memorials cast down. What was once
considered great and noteworthy is no longer. Those once considered heroic are
now deemed shameful. Very few are those who will be able to survive such a
purge.
But we heard of such a one tonight. Oh, Mark
doesn’t tell us her name. Maybe he didn’t know it. But her heroic deed and her
faithful witness lives on still, as Jesus said it would. Joseph of Arimathea
was the one who took the body of Jesus down from the cross and placed it in his
own new tomb, but it was this woman who had anointed Jesus’ body for that burial two days before. This woman
who gave a flask of very costly ointment, worth an entire year’s wages, to her Saviour. Why would she do such a thing? Only because she had received a gift far more valuable from
Jesus - the gift of forgiveness and life. And so she who had been made
beautiful by her Saviour, did, as Jesus said, a
beautiful thing.
But there is ugliness in the words we heard
tonight, too. The ugly words of those who want to
arrest Jesus by stealth and kill Him. The ugly
words of those who criticize and scold this woman for wasting this expensive
gift on Jesus. The ugly words of Judas Iscariot, who offers to betray
Jesus to those who want Him dead. Those for whom Jesus is not beautiful are not
beautiful and do not do beautiful. Those for whom
Jesus is Saviour, are beautiful and do beautiful.
This woman was not saved by her deed - she was saved by her Saviour,
and her outpouring of love showed that.
Do your deeds? Do your deeds flow from your Saviour, from his forgiveness and life? Sometimes,
perhaps. But we must confess, often no. Too often the ugly of our sin
and sinful nature is what we do and what others see. Criticizing, scolding,
betraying, even as we act piously, like those who thought a far better use of
this ointment would have been to sell it and give the money to the poor. Lord,
have mercy upon us!
And He does. It is why He was born. It is why He
was in Bethany at the home of Simon the leper. It is why this woman anointed
Him. It is why He died for ugly wretches like you and me. To
mercy us. To make us beautiful. To wash us
clean of our sin, that made beautiful, we do beautiful things. That we not worry about making a name for ourselves, but proudly
bear His Name. The Name He put upon us in our Baptism: Christian.
And even if no one else remembers anything you did, Jesus does. Even the little things. The cup of cold
water. The bite of food. The
clothes for the cold. The visit of the lonely.
For whatever, He says, you did to one of the least of these my brothers, you did it to me (Matthew 25:40).
So maybe instead of aspiring to make a name for
ourselves, we should aspire to be like this woman - someone made beautiful by
Jesus and so who does beautiful things. And if that brings criticism, scolding,
betrayal, and worse, well, Jesus told us it would (John 15:18-16:4). We should not be
surprised. But neither should that stop us. For those for whom Jesus is Saviour, are beautiful and do beautiful. Like this woman,
it is just who we are, in Jesus.