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What can you do? (Mark 14:3-10)

It seems to be in the nature of many Christians to want to do great things for God. Now there is nothing wrong with that and we should be filled with godly ambition. However, we can end up doing nothing because we can't do great things and when the grand gesture eludes us we can feel cheated. We can look at the great heroes of the faith, who travelled across continents, suffered persecution, risked martyrdom, and braved deprivation to bring the gospel and feel pretty deflated.

In this passage we learn a great deal that can encourage us as we trudge along to another 'mid-week' Bible study, prayer meeting, house group etc. The setting is very ordinary although the impending events are monumentally significant. It is a quiet, intimate meal in Bethany at the house of a friend during Passover week outside Jerusalem. Jesus, the disciples, Simon, whose house it was, close family and friends sitting around and making conversation over a meal.

John tells us in his gospel that the woman with the alabaster jar was Mary of Bethany, sister of Martha and Lazarus, and so she probably belonged there. She simply walked in, broke the jar (snapped off the neck) and anointed Jesus with an expensive perfume. The disciple's reaction was one of shock and indignation. This very expensive oil, which had come all the way from India, might have been sold and the money used for the poor. But Jesus saw it differently and the words that stand out for me are,"She did what she could". What did she do?

It is the case that every king of Israel was anointed before his coronation and here was Jesus' anointing, at the hands of a woman. In anointing him Mary was recognising his kingship.

This was also a symbolic anointing of his body in preparation for his impending death. Mary was preparing Jesus' body for burial and recognising that this king had to die.

Of course, those looking on didn't see all this in what she did, quite the opposite. If there was anything 'spectacular' in what she did it was the extravagance, almost pointlessness of it all. But what she did is, as Jesus prophesied, remembered wherever the gospel is preached throughout the world. It always makes me smile to hear this story for this reason, it came true of her just as Jesus said. I wonder if she demurred when he said it, thinking he was just being kind? I like to think she knew him better than that.

How about you, do you know the full value Jesus puts on the 'little' things you do? Saint David's last words to his followers were, "Be faithful in the little things you have seen me do". In truth, there are so many little things that added up together, amount to a great deal in the reckoning of heaven. Like Mary of Bethany we can do so many little things that recognise the kingship of Jesus. The way we conduct our lives, faithfulness in the little duties of Christian pilgrimage, submission to his will as he submitted to the Father. There are so many ways we can recognise and show his death in our lives. Faithful recognition of the body as we share the bread and wine, dying to ourselves and living for him in all our days.

Perhaps some of us will be called to preach to thousands, but all of us can speak to our neighbours. Perhaps some of us will travel continents to be Christ to a lost people, but all of us can be Christ to our families or in the workplace. Perhaps some of us will be called upon to risk a martyr's sacrifice because of our faithfulness to Jesus, but all of us can sacrifice our personal agendas to be faithful to our leaders and to the Saints of God.

We live in troubled times and my prayer is that we can prove faithful in the little things so that Christ can be clearly seen in all that we do.


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