Harvest – festival?
Early autumn can be a beautiful time in England. It’s often warm, and the golden sunshine lights the reds, russets and browns of turning leaves. Fruit ripens, seedheads pop and dewdrops diamond the spiders’ webs. In a tradition going back millennia before the start of their own religion, Christians take some of the harvest into their places of worship to honour the God who gives them food. Yet in the midst of the rejoicing, there is hard work organising sheafs of wheat, displays of elaborately plaited bread, and vases of chrysanthemums. One lady commented cheerfully to me, ‘I’m glad we only have to do this once a year!’
The feast of Passover is in essence a similar event. Although six months removed from the English harvest, Passover is a celebration of the barley harvest as well as of the Exodus. Joyful pilgrims went up to Jerusalem from all over ancient Israel to celebrate together. The third day after Passover is called the Feast of First Fruits, when they took their tithe of barley to the temple. One Sunday nearly two thousand years ago, such a band centred on a rabbi from Nazareth. With his twelve lieutenants, assorted women who funded his work, and possibly dozens of hangers on, he would have found difficulty staying in the crowded city, so they all stayed at the home of some friends in Bethany.
Martha and Mary remind me of Marilla and Anne in the book Anne of Green Gables. I can imagine Martha fussed with the responsibility of catering for so many: ‘Well, Anne, we’ll need to wash all the best crockery, and get some of my pickles out of the larder, and for goodness’ sake let’s have none of your daydreaming today!’ ‘Oh but Marilla, isn’t is SO exciting that Jesus is coming to our home! I’m so happy that I could die perfectly contented even if the rest of my life were misery and squalor.’
It’s not surprising that Martha got stressed with the catering. It would be a massive task hosting such a crowd. Yet Jesus, who presumably ate the supper she cooked, said that Mary, distracted from her responsibilities by the joy of being with Jesus, had made the better choice. It seems that Jesus is not looking for servants – he already has plenty of those. Jesus is looking for kindred spirits.
Many of us active in ministry are so busy with the work we do for God, that we often don’t have the time to sit down and be with him. We run around Martha-ing away, and seldom sit and Mary. In order to combat the stress and busyness in our lives, we need to make time listen to what Jesus has to say to us. One friend of mine has it in his job description to spend one whole morning in prayer each week. We may think that’s a luxury we cannot afford with so much responsibility to carry, but if we asked Jesus whether he’d prefer us to be busy, what do you think he would answer?