Decorously watching from her place at the front window, she smoothed a hand down the front of her robe and tucked a stray hair back into place. Excitement had her heart beating wildly in her chest. He was here! Coming down the path to her house. She could hardly stand the wait. She loved His visits. Cherished them. These moments when Jesus stopped to visit and spend time teaching in her living room were the highlights of her life. Nothing mattered more. Not the cleaning. Not the cooking. Not the dozens of tasks that normally filled the hours of her day. When Jesus was there, things were different. The dusting could wait. The sweeping could stop. The elaborate cooking could be replaced with simple bread and cheese. There was nothing so desperately in need of attention that Mary wouldn’t gladly set it aside to spend a few hours at Jesus’ feet.
It was exactly where her sister found her. Decorum gone, she had plunked herself down nearly on top of His feet. Her legs were obviously criss-crossed under her robe. Elbows rested on her knees. Chin in her hands. Body leaned forward at the waist. Eyes trained on Jesus’ face. Ears tuned to every word. Mind filing every truth for later contemplation. Mary sat entranced, completely oblivious to the fact that Martha had plans. Big plans. Elaborate plans. Plans that required help and hands, scurrying and scuttling. Plans that left no time to sit and learn and lean.
Martha didn’t have time to hang about listening to stories and lessons. She didn’t even have time for a proper visit with their guest. Not that she didn’t want to do so. She did. But she was busy doing the work. All of the work. Enough for two. Too much for one. She very much needed Mary to pull her head out of the clouds and help. There was still cleaning to finish. The table needed to be arranged. The food wasn’t completely prepared. And someone was going to have to help serve. No matter how adept she was at juggling tasks, a girl could only do so much on her own. Yet there sat Mary, enraptured by Jesus’ words, heedless to the havoc her absence in the kitchen was causing.
Several times Martha had snuck to the doorway and tried to get her attention. She’d waved her apron. Whispered her name. Snapped her fingers. Cleared her throat. Nothing worked. She seemed to be invisible. Or Mary was really good at ignoring her. Disgruntled, Martha finally approached Jesus. He was reasonable and fair. He could judge between them. Considering the unfairness of the workload, Jesus would surely tell Mary to get off her seat and help her sister. Mary needed to pull her share of the load. Surely Jesus would agree with that! Except He didn’t.
In loving and gentle words of rebuke that would repeat in Martha’s mind over the coming days, Jesus declined. Mary needed to be right where she was. Martha was welcome to be there as well. Jesus didn’t visit so He could judge the cleanliness of the house or the quality of the food set before Him. He didn’t care if the table was elaborately decorated. He wasn’t interested in a four-course meal with all the trimmings. No. That wasn’t why He came. Jesus came to visit so He could teach them more about God. He stopped to encourage their hearts and feed their souls. He was not at all interested in sending Mary out to be distracted by the things of earth. He was happy to have her where she was. Learning. Leaning in. Completely distracted by the things of Heaven. (Luke 10:38-42)
Jesus knew there would be plenty of time for the things of earth, the ideas of the world, the pressures of life to creep in and distract Mary. Things would happen to make her question her faith and what she knew about God. She would be shaken to her core. Her brother, Lazarus, would die an untimely death that Jesus wouldn’t arrive in time to prevent. Not because they wouldn’t send for Him. They would. He simply wouldn’t arrive on time. Mary wasn’t going to understand His tardiness. In her angst and grief, her heart would be tempted to believe He had removed His love. Her grief would lay blame because the pain in her heart would overwhelm her memory of the lessons she’d learned at His feet. Her soul would be tempted to wander as she wondered how Jesus could withhold His presence when they so badly needed Him. Yet none of her wondering would keep her from going back to Him. Back to her place at His feet. The place where she learned to lean on Him and trust His word.
For all the time Mary spent sitting at Jesus’ feet, soaking in His lessons, she learned one thing well. Lean in. Lean in to Jesus. Lean into His love. Lean into His promises. Lean into His commands and teachings. Listen and learn and lean. Don’t let the mundane things of life sneak in and rob you of your time with Jesus. Hear His words. Sit in them. Contemplate their meaning. Apply them to your life. Lean in to obedience and reverence and relationship. Know Him. Really know Him. Know His nature, His character, His heart. Know that He loves you. Know that He is working for you. And, when life takes an unexpected turn, lean in to His sovereignty. Sit there. Stay there. Trust His heart.
It is what Mary was doing when she went to see Jesus as He sat on the outskirts of town. Leaning in. It didn’t change what happened when she got there. She didn’t become some docile being who couldn’t formulate words to exhibit the searing pain in her heart. Rather, Mary did exactly what she knew she could do. Spoke her heart to Jesus, painful words pushed through a throat tight with unshed tears. “If You had come when we sent word, my brother would still be living.” It sounded like an accusation. It wasn’t. Not really. It was more a statement of faith. For herself. A reminder to herself that she knew Jesus. She knew who He was. She knew His character, His nature, His heart. She knew that He was always working for the good of His people. And, even if she couldn’t understand why things had happened the way they did, why He was tardy, or what had been more important than her brother’s life, she knew she could still lean in and rest in His wisdom and love. (John 11:1-43)
We all need the reminder. As the world implodes around us, we need to remind ourselves of what we know about Jesus, what we have learned at His feet. His love. His care. His heart. As wars and hate and fear explode both far and near, we need to find ourselves back at His feet. Leaning in. Listening. Learning. We need to spend time in His Word. Really reading. Not just putting in time to check a box or brag at the next Bible study. We need to dig in deeply. Sit in His teachings. Search our own hearts. Allow ourselves to be challenged and changed. We need to pray. Really pray. Pour out our hearts to the Lord. Our needs and requests, yes, but our cares and concerns as well. We need to talk to God. About everything. Even if it doesn’t seem very flattering to Him. Tell Him anyway. He wants to hear what you have to say. No matter what it is. Then let Him answer. Sit in His presence as He addresses your words. Let Him speak. Let Him reveal His heart. Let His words of love and kindness, tenderness and care, wash over your soul and heal your heart. Stay there. Knowing this. Through every storm and trial and care of life, when you don’t understand, when it doesn’t make sense, when the timing seems off, when you are scared, shaken, or spooked, the great heart of God for His people never changes. He is always the same. He is sovereign. He is love. You can trust Him. Just lean in. (Hebrews 4:16; Lamentations 3:40: Psalm 62:8; 91:15; 139:23-24; 145:13; Job 42:2; Isaiah 45:6-7; Proverbs 21:1; Matthew 10:29; I John 4:16; John 15:4-7)
