(preached
February 10 2008, Markham Presbyterian
Church, Ontario)
Extravagance?
Deuteronomy
15:7-11
Mark 14:3-11
Shortly
after ordination I was transferred to Maritime Conference of The United
Church. I had been in my
New Brunswick
congregation only a few weeks when Dr. Robert McClure, missionary
surgeon and, at that time, moderator of the denomination, visited the
area. The regional clergy
met with him over supper in a steakhouse.
I ordered my steak rare. When
it came to me it appeared not to have been cooked at all. My
steak was hemorrhaging. In
that gruff abrasiveness for which McClure was known everywhere he barked
at me, “Shepherd, do you want a tourniquet for that thing?”
A few months earlier I had seen a different side to the man, and
a different manner of expression. McClure
was speaking to a group of students at the
University
of
Toronto
about his work in the Gaza Strip. He
was telling us that we North American “fat cat” students knew
nothing about much that matters in life; specifically, we knew nothing
about gratitude. He told us
that on one occasion in the Gaza Strip he had stopped at a peasant hovel
to pay a post-surgical call on a woman on whom he had operated.
(He told us he had done a “rear axle job” on her.
Since I lack medical sophistication I can only guess what this
might be.) The woman and her
husband were dirt-poor. Their
livestock supply consisted of one Angora rabbit and two chickens.
The
woman combed the long hair out of the Angora rabbit, spun it and sold
it. She and her husband
ate or sold the eggs from the chickens.
Following
her post-surgical examination the woman insisted McClure remain for
lunch. He
told her he had to see another patient a mile or two down the road, but
would be back for lunch in an hour.
When he returned he peeked into the cooking pot to see what he
was going to have for lunch: one rabbit and two chickens.
The woman had given up her entire livestock supply, her own food
supply, her livelihood, her income.
She had poured out herself upon him, reserving nothing.
As he related the incident to us students, McClure –gruff,
blunt, abrasive – wept like a child, and could only blubber and blurt,
“You students know nothing of gratitude, nothing.”
There is another incident of gratitude that will never be
forgotten, says our Lord. A
woman broke a bottle of expensive perfume and poured it over his head
and over his feet even as she wiped his feet with her hair.
Make no mistake: it was expensive. Three
hundred denarii was a year’s income for a labourer in
Palestine
. Why did she do it?
We’ll come to that. What
rejoinder did her deed elicit? With
either disappointment or dismay or even disgust Judas retorted, “What
a stupid waste! Why not sell
the perfume and give the proceeds to the poor?”
Jesus replied, “Let her alone.
The poor you’ll always have with you.
She’s done something beautiful.”
I:
-- We would
misunderstand this gospel story abysmally if we thought for a minute
that Jesus was cavalierly dismissing the horror of poverty and the
plight of the poor themselves. We
are people of shrivelled, stony hearts if we read this story as
legitimating any society’s disregard of the poor.
Only the most insensitive people are unaware of wasted money that
would do eversomuch for the wretched of the earth.
We must remember that the poor of first century Palestine
weren’t those who had a little less than their neighbour, those whose
automobile was older than most people’s, those whose home had only one
toilet. They weren’t those
who had fallen into downward social mobility only to be caught in the
social safety net that we have in
Canada
, which net prevents any of us from falling anywhere near as far as we
otherwise might. In first
century
Palestine
the poor were really poor. The
houseguests who witnessed the perfume-pouring, including Judas; they had
a point; they weren’t without
sensitivity or understanding. They
were piercingly aware of the poverty they couldn’t fail to see and the
staggering value of the perfume wasted on the head and feet of one man.
These people were Israelites.
They knew the Hebrew bible. They
knew that the first responsibility of
Israel
’s king, back in the days before the Roman conquest when
Israel
still had a king, was to safeguard the poor.
(This point we should linger over.
The first responsibility of political authority is to safeguard
the poor.) So exquisitely
sensitive was
Israel
to the horror of poverty that it had many different Hebrew words for
“poor.” One Hebrew word
for “poor” referred to those who were physically frail, sick,
handicapped, lame, wasted. Another
Hebrew word for “poor” referred to those who were forever dependent.
To be uncommonly dependent on others, for any reason at all, is
to be poor, if only because such people are always at the whim and mood
of those they depend on. A
third Hebrew word for “poor” referred to the oppressed.
The oppressed were the powerless, the helpless who were exploited
relentlessly and ground down ruthlessly.
Israel
was so exquisitely sensitive to the plight of the poor for one reason:
God is exquisitely sensitive to the plight of the poor.
The psalmist reminds his people, “God does not forget the cry
of the afflicted.”
Jesus was a faithful son of
Israel
– and more: Jesus is that Son of God with whom the Father is well
pleased. Then our Lord’s
concern for the poor reflected perfectly his Father’s concern and
gathered up the concerns of his kinsfolk.
We Canadians live in a country that continues to display concern,
some concern at least, for the
poor. I have never doubted
why or how we came to display such concern: our nation has been informed
by the gospel of Jesus Christ. In
those countries that lack a Christian history and a Christian memory the
attitude to the poor is very different.
While I was appalled at the wretchedness I saw in
India
, given
India
’s widespread poverty, I was startled to learn how many rich there are
in that country and how rich they are.
Never think that
India
is populated by poor people only. Never
forget that every year since 1870, including the years of the worst
famines,
India
has been a net exporter of food. But
India
has little Christian history and therefore little Christian memory.
For this reason the attitude to the poor there is different.
I have no doubt too that as secularism erodes the Christian
background in
Canada
and dilutes the Christian infusion,
Canada
’s attitude to the poor will change, and change for the worse.
Is there any governmental leader in
Canada
at this moment who knows that his or her chief responsibility, by
God’s ordination, is to safeguard the poor?
In
Israel
the poor could take grain from a field or grapes from a vine, and take
these at any time if they were without food.
(This wasn’t deemed theft on account of the manifest
emergency.) Every third year
10% of the harvest was given to the poor, no questions asked. Every
year a border had to be left standing in every grain field following the
harvest, the border of grain being for the poor alone.
The poor were allowed to borrow money interest-free.
Job says he won’t be able to face God if he hasn’t assisted
the poor. Amos says God will
punish
Israel
for its failures with respect to the poor.
The apostle James is livid when the wealthier members of a
congregation receive preferential treatment.
Since all of this is gathered up in our Lord himself, the people
who rebuke him over the woman’s extravagance can’t be faulted.
They are sensitive to the plight of the poor; they expect him to
be; he is. Then why
doesn’t Jesus fend off this weepy woman and have her do something
useful with the money she wants to give up?
Whatever our Lord meant when he said, “The poor you have with
you always”, he didn’t mean that the poor can therefore be
overlooked. Tragically, what
our Lord didn’t mean is
precisely what too many people have thought he meant.
It was the social consequences of our Lord’s words abused
that drove Karl Marx to speak with no little justification of
religion as the opiate of the people, the drug that tranquillizes the
wretched of the earth in the face of their misery.
The poor matter. They
matter to God. They should
matter to us. Every
Israelite knew this. Jesus
knew it too. Judas knew that
he knew, as did the other onlookers.
Therefore their protest, upon seeing money thrown away on anyone
in a display that lasted only a minute, is entirely understandable.
II:
-- Then why does Jesus
permit the woman to waste her money and jeopardize the poor?
Before we answer that question we must ask and answer another
question. When McClure, the
missionary surgeon, looked into the cooking pot and saw the rabbit and
two chickens, why didn’t he say to the woman, “Why have you deprived
yourself of your livelihood? Don’t
know you know you’ve rendered yourself penniless?
What do you think you’re going to do now?”
Why didn’t McClure shake his head in amazement and say to us
university students, “Those impoverished people in the Gaza Strip;
they are their own worst enemies. We’ll
never be able to do anything for those who evidently can’t help
themselves.” McClure said
no such thing because he knew the meaning of her act: her act didn’t
mean she was unaware of her material predicament.
Jesus said no such thing because he knew the meaning of the
woman’s act: her act didn’t mean she was unaware of the plight of
the poor. Our Lord knew that
what the woman was pouring upon him wasn’t perfume, ultimately,
however costly; it was love she
was pouring upon him. It was
gratitude taking the form of love. It
was a spectrum of gratitude and love that could be seen as pure
gratitude or pure love or any gradation of the two if it even makes
sense to distinguish love and gratitude in this woman’s heart.
Her pouring out the perfume wasn’t the most adequate expression
she could find of her love for the one who meant everything to her; it
was the only expression that
occurred to her in that instant. Of
course it was a waste in one sense; in another sense, no waste at all,
since it was categorically different from all considerations of waste
and usefulness and thrift and expedience.
It can be considered waste as long as a price tag (300 denarii)
is attached to the perfume; it can’t be considered waste as long as no
price can be affixed to love. Does
anyone want to suggest that she should have mailed our Lord a letter for
only 52 cents, or even e-mailed him for nothing?
Jesus didn’t object to her doing what she did once.
Had she attempted to do it repeatedly, I’m sure he would have
stayed her. But to stay her
when every impulse within her moved her to disregard social convention
and public niceties and yammering tongues and cruel gossip; how could
our Lord have halted such an expression of love and gratitude without
crushing her? Had he stayed
her she could only have concluded, to her endless embarrassment, that
she had been as gullible as a child, when in truth she had found herself
forever different thanks to the ministry of this man.
In first century
Palestine
a woman didn’t speak to a man in public, or a man to her, lest they be
thought to be involved in an impropriety.
Neither did they touch each other.
A friend of mine, a psychiatrist whose psychiatric expertise is
matched by his Christian ardour; my psychiatrist friend, in discussing
this incident with me one day, remarked that the woman’s act was
extremely sensual: wiping a man’s feet with her hair, kissing his
feet, trying to dry them with her hair – this is erotic.
Her hair must have been long, so long that she would let it down
and then let herself down; no, not let herself down, simply collapse at his feet oblivious to
everything and everyone, aware only of him upon whom she was now pouring
out everything. Then was
there an erotic element in her deed? There
was. And so what. Our
Lord was no fool. He
wasn’t unaware of the erotic trace element in the woman’s
self-giving. But while he
was no fool, neither was he a sledgehammer about to crush her.
One hundred years ago James Denney, a fine Scottish theologian, remarked,
“You show me someone who hasn’t purchased a gift he couldn’t
afford for someone he loves and I’ll show you someone who isn’t fit
for the kingdom.” Of
course none of us could afford such a gift every week and therefore we
wouldn’t purchase such a gift every week.
The Scottish fellow’s story has point, we should note, only if
we can’t afford such a gift at all, not even once, and yet purchase it anyway in our poured-out
gratitude for someone who is dearer to us than life.
If we have done such a thing, we won’t bother replying to those
who say that such a deed is the height of irrationality and foolishness
and improvidence and should therefore be eschewed everlastingly.
We won’t bother replying just because there is no word that can
express inexpressible gratitude and love and devotion.
Not so long ago Maureen’s best friend from her
New Brunswick
days telephoned us on a Saturday night.
She wanted us to pray for her on the spot, that is, over the
phone. She was very ill,
sick unto death. Her
husband, she told us, wasn’t in the house but rather was stumbling
around outside, beside himself at his wife’s condition and his dread
of losing her, so much does he love her.
She telephoned me subsequently with the same request.
Again her husband couldn’t bear to overhear the conversation.
When Maureen and I lived in her village we often commented on
this couple’s straightened financial circumstances.
They had little money and had come from families with little
money, she being one of 17 children and he being one of 14.
The first Christmas we were in Tabusintac she purchased a
Christmas gift for her husband; it was the most outlandishly expensive
cologne for men. Now he was
a lumberjack. Thereafter he
was the sweetest-smelling lumberjack in the
New Brunswick
woods. But she hadn’t
bought the carriage-trade cologne to make him smell sweet; she had
bought it because it had been the only vehicle she could think of for
expressing her love for her husband.
Let’s come back to the woman in the gospel story.
Different accounts of the story in different gospels tell us that
she poured the perfume on the head of Jesus or on the feet of Jesus.
In different gospels Jesus is recorded as making different
comments, entirely understandable in view of what it is about the
incident that most impresses different gospel writers.
When the woman poured the perfume out on the head of Jesus she
was anointing him. Kings and
priests were anointed in ancient
Israel
. When the woman anointed
Jesus, then, she was recognizing him to be the one to whom she owed
obeisance and allegiance and lifelong faithfulness, for he was now her
effectual sovereign. When
she anointed him she was also recognizing him to be priest, not a priest
like those who offered up sacrifices in the temple, but rather the
priest who offers up himself, priest and sacrifice in one, and therefore
her effectual redeemer. In
fact she honoured him as rightful ruler of her life only because she had
first known her sin pardoned at his priestly hand.
It was her experience of forgiveness and freedom that constrained her to bind
herself to him forever. “You
show me someone who hasn’t spent a fortune he didn’t have for
someone he loves, and I’ll show you someone who isn’t fit for the
kingdom”, said the old Scot. Was
the woman in our story fit, fit for the kingdom?
We shouldn’t be asking about her.
We should be asking about ourselves.
What are we going to
say when the same question is posed concerning us?
As a matter of fact our Lord Jesus, risen from the dead, puts the
question to us that he put to Peter on Easter morning in the wake of
Peter’s denial. He asked,
“Peter, do you love me…?” In
fact he asked the question three times in the wake of Peter’s three
denials. On the one hand, by
asking the question three times over he was saying to Peter, “Don’t
answer glibly; take your time and think about it; don’t ‘pop off’
with something ill-considered and hasty.
Ponder the question and weigh your answer.”
On the other hand, by asking the simple question without
mentioning the repeated denials he was sparing Peter the downward spiral
into self-loathing and self-rejection and ever-worsening guilt.
The question was sharp enough not to let Peter off, yet gentle
enough not to let Peter go. “Do
you love me?” Our Lord
puts the same question to us in exactly the same spirit for exactly the
same reason. Peter said,
“Lord, you know that I love you.”
Months earlier a woman whose tears bespoke more than could ever
be said anointed Jesus in public, witnessing to the watching world that
she gloried in his priestly pardon and gladly submitted to his kingly
claim.
A
woman’s poured-out perfume, poured-out tears, poured-out heart
told our Lord how much she loved him.
It should have told the onlookers too.
It didn’t, however, but not because they were concerned –
rightly concerned – for the poor.
Our Lord was unfailingly concerned for the poor, as no doubt the
Israelite woman herself was. Her
deed couldn’t tell onlookers
how much she loved him, however, in that they lacked such love
themselves, and lacking such love themselves were unable to recognize it
in someone else.
Then how much do I love him?
How much more should I love him?
And you?
Victor
Shepherd
February 2008