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Lesson 85 |
Golden Text: She hath done what she could. (Mk. 14:8)
Lesson Subject: The Story of Mary of Bethany and Her Alabaster Box
Lesson Plan
The Conspiracy (vs 1, 2)
Jesus and His Disciples Entertained at Bethany (v 3)
Mary the Heroine of Bethany and Her Immortal Deed (v 3)
The Money Bag of Judas vs. The Alabaster Box of Mary (vs 4, 5)
Mary Vindicated by Jesus (vs 6-9)
The Contrast (vs 10, 11)
Lesson Setting
Time: Tuesday afternoon or evening, April 4, A.D. 30.
Place: Bethany, in the house of Simon the leper.
The first anointing of Jesus in Luke
7:37-50.
The three visits of Jesus to the home in Bethany; Lk. 10:38-42; Jn.
11:20-44; Mk. 14:1-11.
Marys object in anointing Jesus.
What did the fault-finding of Judas reveal about his character?
Would this act of love to Jesus affect the amount of gifts to the poor?
A great Scottish preacher was once asked how he made his sermons, and he replied, I cannot make a sermon. I receive messages from God through the Bible, nature, history, current events, human beings, and my own soul. When I receive one of these messages, I turn my heart into a garden of the Lord, and plant the message in it, focusing always on the central theme of all my sermons, Jesus Christ. I brood over it with my mind, pray about it, and most of all try to live it. By and by it grows, and blooms, and when the time comes for me to preach, I simply walk into that garden of the Lord and pluck one of the blooming plants and take it with me into the pulpit and ask the people to enjoy its beauty and fragrance with me (Joe Nisbet). Such is a good suggestion to begin our present lesson.
Jesus had completed His day-long labors on Tuesday, seeking to convince the rulers that He was the Messiah, thus saving the nation. That evening He had gone to Bethany on the Mount of Olives. Our Tuesday evening was, by Jewish reckoning, the beginning of Wednesday.
14:1 ... After two days, Wednesday (from sunset of Tuesday to sunsetof Wednesday), and Thursday (from sunset of Wednesday to sunset of Thursday). After sunset Thursday, that is the beginning of Friday, was ...
14:1 ... the feast of the Passover which is also call the feast ...
14:1 ... of unleavened bread because during the Passover week only bread that was unleavened could be used. It was on this Thursday evening, the beginning of Friday, that Jesus ate the Passover with His disciples, and instituted the Lords Supper.
The nearness of the Passover is mentioned to show why it was proposed to delay their plans to kill Jesus.
14:1 ... Sought how they might take him by craft [by stratagem, in some underhand, secret, tricky way], and put him to death. This had been determined before.
14:2 ... Not on the feast day, lest there be an uproar, which would bring the Roman authorities down on them. For there were great multitudes of Jews not only from Galilee, but from every part of the world, present in Jerusalem. Hence they proposed to leave Jesus unmolested during the seven days of the feast, and after that to kill Him, when the great number of His Galilean friends and sympathizers had returned to their homes.
This is the second anointing of Jesus, the other being recorded in Luke 7:37-50... (Coffman, Commentary on Mark).
Picture the scene
The Banquet of the Wise
This gathering at Bethany was much more important than that of the Greek writer Athenaeus who represents a number of the most eminent men of the time, gathered as guests in the house of learned man of Rome, at a banquet prolonged for seven days. He called it The Banquet of the Wise, where the learned guests poured forth an unbroken stream of quotations, extracts from the great Alexandrian Library of Egypt.
14:3 ... There came [unto Him] a woman. This woman was Mary, the sister of Martha and Lazarus (Jn. 12:3).
14:3 ... Having an alabaster box, rather, a cruse or flask. Literally, an alabaster, just as we call a drinking vessel made of glass, a glass. These alabasters were usually made of the Oriental or onyx alabaster, with long, narrow necks, which could easily be broken. The shape and material varied.
14:3 ... Of ointment of spikenard, literally, ointment of pistic nard, pistic meaning either genuine or liquid. It was pure nard, like Attar of Roses, unadulterated, in full strength, thus very costly. The oil was derived from the nard plant, which was native to India. Spikenard (spiked-nard) was a plant closely allied to valerian, and now found in the Himalayan region. It has been used by the Hindoos as a medicine and perfume from a very remote period. The odor is described as resembling that of a mixture of valerian and patchouli. It was so strong that it filled the whole house with its odor (John).
14:3 ... Very precious. Horace offers to give a cask of wine for a very small box of it (Odes, IV, xii). Matthew says it was exceeding precious. Judas estimated its value as more than 300 silver pence or denarii, worth about a years work.
In The Spell of France (1912) we are told that in the rose gardens of Grasse in S.E. France 3,000,000 roses are required to make 22,000 pounds of roses, which is required to make one pound of Attar of roses. From these gardens we find two or three suggestive facts:
14:3 ... She ... poured it on his head, R.V. over His head. John adds that she also anointed the feet of Jesus with the precious nard, wiping His feet with her hair. Anointing the feet was unusual, and expressed the tenderest, most humble, most reverential affection.
The fondness of Orientals for all kinds of perfumery is very remarkable ... The garments of the richly dressed ladies who pass along the streets of an Oriental city all smell of myrrh, and aloes, and cassia. ... It is the custom at feasts and various social entertainments for servants to enter the banquet hall bearing censers smoking with burning perfumes, while others, holding in their hands sprigs of sweet basil or some other plant, dip them in perfumed water, and sprinkle it over the guests. The water also, with which the guests wash their hands before and after eating, is highly perfumed (Dr. Albert Long, written to the S.S. Times from Constantinople).
Another writer from Syria says: I have seen bridegrooms, brides, and their parties sprinkled with it and other perfumes from the roofs of friendly neighbors, as a mark of respect and affection for those sprinkled.
Marys Purpose
This act of Marys was the expression of her love and devotion to her Savior. No words could express her feelings. No common deed could tell Him how deep was her gratitude, how strong her desire to honor Him, how loving her sympathy, how great her faith in Him, as the Messiah, the Redeemer of the world.
Her eyes are homes of silent prayer, Nor other thought her mind admits But, he was dead, and there he sits, And He that brought him back is there.
Then one deep love doth supersede All other, when her ardent gaze Roves from theliving brothers face, And rests upon the Life indeed. Tennyson
Sacrifice of the Magic Books, for Jesus Sake
This womans giving up her alabaster box of precious nard reminds us of the burning of the magical books at Ephesus when the sorcerers turned away from their arts and came to Christ for pardon (C.D. Robinson).
Savonarolas Bonfire of Vanities
About five hundred years ago the great reformer Savonarola had an immense Bonfire of Vanities in the Piazza, the great square in Florence. The youth of the city, in white robes, with olive crowns on their heads, went from house to house gathering all the vanities of life -- the apparatus for gambling, pictures that incited to vice, worldly musical instruments, rouge pots, false hair, perfumes, powders, mirrors, bad books, and many things that were perfectly innocent, but regarded as worldly. These were piled in a huge Pyramid of Vanities sixty feet high, crowned with a symbolic figure of the old debauched Carnival. Within were an abundance of fuel and gunpowder. This pile was set ablaze in the evening to the sound of trumpets, and the old Carnival tumbled into the flames amid the songs of reforming triumph.
Judas acts as if he has found poison in Marys flask of sweet odors.
14:4 ... There were some [including some of the disciples, Matthew] that had indignation within [or among, R.V.] themselves. The ringleader and spokesman, according to John, was Judas Iscariot, the betrayer of Jesus. Judas was the treasurer of the disciples meagre funds, and no doubt now saw a chance for a sizable treasure, from which a thief could easily gain riches beyond any previous opportunity. He was not interested in the poor. The plausible arguments of a positive man, wearing a mask of virtue, and speaking on behalf of some of the very principles their Master had enforced, he had brought some of the disciples into more or less sympathy with his feeling and indignation. It is easy to see how it might seem a useless waste, as perhaps some today think that money spent on a church building, mission-work, caring for orphans and widows might better be given to the poor.
14:4 ... And said, Why was this waste of the ointment made? Think of throwing away a whole years income on perfumes that would fall on one person and last only one evening! when the poor whom Jesus fed, the blind and the sick and the lepers, whom Jesus spent His days relieving, must go without the aid which the sale of this ointment might bring!
14:5 ... And they murmured against her. The Greek word translated murmured has also a much stronger meaning. The Int. Crit. Com. translates it were very angry.
What Is Waste?
That is wasted which is expended without valuable return; or which brings small returns where it might bring great: which fails to accomplish the purpose for which it is designed. Food is not wasted if it strengthens the body, but used gluttonously it is wasted, for while it brings some pleasure it also brings disease of body and stupidity of mind. Waste means, literally, perdition. There is something almost terribly suggestive in the fact that our Lord repeats the self-same word when He describes Judas as a son of perdition (waste) [John 17:21]. He had wasted that which was more precious than the ointment of spikenard, even the gift of eternal life which had once been within his reach (Plumptre). The simple question was whether the best, the most enduring use was made of this ointment.
The Master proves that her use of the precious ointment, so far from being a waste, was the most effective use she could possibly have made of it.
14:6 ... And Jesus said, Let her alone; why trouble ye her? Judas words were very rude and discourteous to Mary, even impudent, thus criticizing one of the ladies of the house where he had just been entertained. The gentle Mary must have been shocked by this criticism, overwhelmed, mortified, prostrated, abashed. Perhaps, as Maurice says, She could not herself have answered Judas Iscariots complaining question.
Jesus answers with a sharp rebuke of indignation, as any gentleman would under the circumstances, and it was especially fitting from One who knew the hypocrisy of Judas.
1. 14:6 ... She hath wrought a good work on me. The Greek implies something more than good, a noble, honorable work. The manifestation of such loyal devotion and love gave comfort, strength, encouragement to Jesus during this trying time. No doubt it was especially comforting in the face of the depressing effect of the lack of character and self-serving conduct of Judas.
2. That spontaneous, uncalculating devotion of hers came to Him in a crucial moment. His human nature was yearning for a sympathetic atmosphere of fellowship ... She wrought a beautiful deed. The motive made it radiant, put it altogether out of the cash-value class (Bib. World).
The spirit which offer precious things simply because they are precious ... is a good and just feeling, and as well pleasing to God and honorable to men, as it is beyond all dispute necessary to the production of any great work in the kind with which we are at present concerned. In the Levitical sacrifice, costliness was generally a condition of the acceptableness of the sacrifice. That costliness must be an acceptable condition in all human offerings at all times -- an external sign of their love and obedience, and surrender of themselves and theirs to His will. It is not the church we want, but the sacrifice; not the emotion of admiration, but the act of adoration; not the gift, but the giving. (Ruskin, Seven Lamps of Architecture)
3. 14:7 ... For ye have the poor with you always. They would have plenty of opportunities to aid them, because the more they did for their Master, the more they would do for the poor. It is through the poor that the increased love of the Master is expressed. Marys gift expressed the spirit of love to Jesus, in a way that made it the fountain and source of good to the poor. Giving to the poor is of no great value without this spirit of love. But with the spirit of love, it is an act of the highest and noblest part of our nature, building up and edifying the givers soul.
While working to satisfy physical needs, we sometimes fail to focus on and provide for their hunger for something to satisfy mental and spiritual longings. It is beginning to be more widely understood that the poor and sick need to be treated more as Jesus treated them, giving spiritual life and health, new opportunities to help themselves, uplifting toward God.
4. 14:8 ... She hath done what she could. The poor were not there at the time; but Jesus was there and here was her one opportunity ...
14:8 ... to anoint my body to the burying. (R.V., anoint my body aforehand for the burying) Whatever she did personally for Jesus must be done then, for ...
14:8 ... Me ye have not always. Later there will be abundant opportunity to help the poor.
5. 14:9 ... Wheresoever this Gospel shall be preached throughout the whole world. This story has been told for 2000+ years, and is now being told in many hundreds of different languages, and to every great nation on earth. No monument is more enduring. She is still pouring out the precious nard in an endless living stream, its fragrance still is filling human hearts and lives all over the world. Like Abel, being dead she yet speaketh.
14:9 ... For a memorial of her. By which her deed shall be remembered; not to glorify her, but to continue her usefulness, giving immortality to her character and influence.
Marys beautiful deed is set in contrast with that of Judas Iscariot, who, angered and disappointed, began immediately to plan another way of getting money, by betraying Jesus to the Jewish rulers. Judas betrayed Jesus because he had never learned to be lavish, uncalculating, extravagant, in his love for Jesus.
A Chorus of Odors from Marys Flask
Several years ago, in the Encyclopedia Britannica (11th edition), we are told that Dr. Septimus Piesse endeavored to show that a certain scale or gamut existed among odors as among sounds, taking the sharp smells to correspond with high notes, and the heavy smells with low ... He asserted that properly to constitute a bouquet, the odors to be taken should correspond in the gamut like the notes of a musical chord -- one false note among the odors, as among the music, destroying the harmony.
Marys noble act has become such a chorus of heavenly odors, a whole cathedral choir, filling the centuries with their music of heavenly fragrance.
The sweetest perfume that the home circle ever knows rises from deeds of living service which its members do for each other.
Mothers Legacy
To the best of her ability mother preached the gospel of brotherly kindness. In her last letter, written a few days before leaving this earth, mother wrote, Do not keep the alabaster boxes of your love and tenderness sealed up until your friends are dead, but fill their lives with sweetness. Speak approving and cheering words while their ears can hear them, and while their hearts can be thrilled and made happier by them. The kind things you will say after they are gone, say before they go. The flowers you mean to send for their coffins, send now, and brighten and sweeten their homes before they leave them.
If my friends have alabaster boxes laid away, full of fragrant perfumes of sympathy and affection, which they intend to break over my dead body, I would rather they would bring them now in my weary and troubled hours, and open them, that I may be refreshed and cheered, while I need them and can enjoy them. I would rather have a plain coffin without a flower, and a funeral without an eulogy, than a life without the sweetness of love and sympathy. My son, learn to anoint your friends before their burial.
Post-mortem kindness cannot cheer the burdened spirit. Flowers on a coffin shed no fragrance backward over the weary way loved ones have traveled (Frances E. Tyner).
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