7-11-16 - Welcoming Jesus

How would you feel about welcoming Jesus into your home? In my former congregation in Bethany, we invited children to take home the Jesus Doll for a week at a time, asking them to record where they took Jesus, what they did, how it felt. One mother brought him back after two weeks, and said, “It was very stressful! When Jenny took him to school they made her put him in her cubby all day, because it was a religious doll. At home, the dog tried to eat him, and then our Jewish neighbors came over, so we put him away… it just wasn’t a good week to have the Son of God at your house.”

Our story this week is about welcoming Jesus. Only five verses, it is packed with meaning. One of two gospel stories about dinner parties for Jesus in the home of Martha, Mary and Lazarus, it has given encouragement to mystics and fits to hostesses since it was recorded. It is seen as an affirmation of the contemplative way of faith over the active, a teaching on anxiety, an exploration of devotion. And it begins with hospitality, which is where we left off in the story of the Good Samaritan.

Now as they went on their way, he entered a certain village, where a woman named Martha welcomed him into her home.

Other accounts about this family tell us the “certain village” is Bethany and that Martha is a sister to Mary and Lazarus. It strikes me as significant that Luke identifies Martha as the head of household. Elsewhere she is referred to as Lazarus' sister, but here she is primary. And she is in a position to offer Jesus hospitality, along with his entourage. As we will see, they are close enough that she can whine at him, and he gently rebuke her. It is one of the most vivid of Jesus’ friendships in the gospel record. And yes, welcoming Jesus into her home, causes Martha a bit of stress.

Are you aware of Jesus with you at home, or do you tend to connect with him elsewhere? Have you set aside a spot for prayer and study, a place where you sit to connect with Jesus? What if we tried it this week, settling in, inviting him to join us, seeing where the conversation went? Would you feel you had to clean up? Dress nicely? Serve something?

Or would you find he was the host?

As we explore this very rich encounter between Jesus and these two sisters, I hope it will deepen our own encounters with him. On one hand, it’s never a good week to have the Son of God at your house. On the other, his presence enriches everything else that goes on there. Invite him over. I imagine he’ll accept.

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