“When Jesus understood it, he said unto
them, Why trouble ye the woman? for she hath wrought a good work upon me.
For ye have the poor always with you; but me ye have not always. For in that she hath poured this ointment on my body, she did it
for my burial. Verily I say unto you,
Wheresoever this gospel shall be preached in the whole world, there shall also
this, that this woman hath done, be told for a memorial of her.”
— S. Matthew xxvi, 10-13.
There never was a prophecy more strange than this. When our
Lord predicts the destruction of Jerusalem,
when His mind leaps across long ages of time to anticipate the Day of Judgment,
He deals with big events and vast movements that come of necessity, as it seems
to us, within the range of vision of the Son of God. We so revere the lofty
Person of Christ that when, even at the foot of the Cross, His flashing eyes
command a view of all after history, the rising and fall ing of nations and
kingdoms, pestilence, war, earthquake, the final trumpet, and the rushing of
ten thousand times ten thousand angels, we are not too greatly amazed.
But here He seems to labor in prophetic utterance concerning
a mere trifle. He would seem to desire permanence for an evanescent perfume
that floated through a banquet hall nearly two thousand years ago.
For, as He sits at the feast given in His honor at Bethany, a woman enters,
having an alabaster cruse of precious ointment, and reverently anoints the head
and feet of Jesus. The stingy ill-nature of Judas Iscariot stirs in some of the
disciples, unused to such luxuries, a feeling of protest. Why waste this
precious liquid in the gratification of a mere sentiment? If one would do good,
why not something useful? Why not something permanent?
Even as they grumble, S. John tells us, the house is filled
with the odor of the ointment. The guests are conscious of a subtle and
delicious fragrance that steals upon the senses, and adds a languorous delight
to the breath of life, compelling attention and awakening memories like a
strain of ethereal mu sic. But, just when it most delights the nostrils, the
odor begins to vanish. It be longs only to the moment, and is the very symbol
of all that is transitory, as opposed to that which is permanent.
Then it is that Jesus makes His strangest prophecy.
"No," He seems to say, "This is not transitory. The perfume of
this hour is, in fact, its only permanent possession. This anointing with the
alabaster cruse of ointment is a deed that shall live in history."
"Verily I say unto you," declares the Christ, "wheresoever this
Gospel shall be preached in the whole world, there shall also this, that this
woman hath done, be told for a memorial of her."
If the prophecy is strange, its fulfillment is even more
amazing, in literal fidelity to the promise. Wheresoever the Gospel is
preached, the fragrance of this woman's deed in Bethany abides. Nearly two thousand years
have wrought their changes in the world, but here today once more the strange
prophecy is fulfilled, and the story is told again. And wherever the Gospel is
preached of the wonderful things that Jesus did for humanity, there goes the
record of this one loving service that humanity performed for Jesus.
The anointing of our Blessed Lord at Bethany, when one tries to measure its
significance, is found to be bound up with one of the most difficult but most
fascinating problems of New Testament interpretation. Each one of the four
Gospels — S. Matthew, S. Mark, S. Luke, and S. John — contains an account of an
anointing of our Lord, at a feast, by a woman. Three of the accounts are so
much alike that they must be held to de scribe the same incident from the
points of view of three different witnesses. But one of the accounts — that of
S. Luke — is quite un like the others. While the incident described resembles
the other, it is dissimilar in time, in circumstance, in purpose. It is the
penitential act of a woman who has been a notorious sinner. The other anointing
is the devout deed of a woman prominent in the Christian community. There were,
therefore, two anointings of Jesus — the first by a penitent woman at a feast
in Galilee, the other, two years later, at Bethany, by a woman who stood high
in Christian discipleship.
Was there any relationship between the two women thus
described? Did the second, who won the praise of Christ at Bethany,
know that the other had so anointed Him, two years before, in Galilee?
In the answer to these questions lies the chief significance of the story. The
difficulty of answering these inquiries with absolute certainty arises out of a
manifest effort on the part of the writers of the Gospels to shield the family
at Bethany from
too much publicity. It is natural that there should be great public interest in
the house hold at Bethany, of Martha and Mary and Lazarus, where Jesus of
Nazareth was an in timate friend, and where Lazarus had come back from the
grave. But the reporters of the Gospel seem careful not to gratify the public
curiosity. There seems to be some reason why the family at Bethany — Martha and Mary and Lazarus —
desire to be screened from too much notoriety. And strangely enough, this sensitiveness
to the public gaze appears to be connected not with Lazarus, as one might
suspect, because of his journey back from death — not with him, but with Mary.
One glimpse into the home of Martha and Mary S. Luke allows, and shows Mary
sitting devoutly at the feet of Christ. But her public appearance at the feast,
where she anoints the Lord with pre cious ointment, S. Luke passes over in
silence. S. Matthew describes the incident of the anointing at Bethany, but does not give the name of Mary.
S. Mark describes the same incident, but does not give the name of Mary. They
describe her as just a woman, well knowing who she is — the famous Mary of
Bethany — yet they do not give her name, although they record the promise of
the Lord, conferring everlasting fame upon her deed. Yet they leave her
nameless.
It is only from S. John, writing many years afterward, when
some of the causes of silence had been removed, that we learn the name of her
who anointed Jesus at Bethany, and whose deed of love He declared to be
immortal — Mary of Bethany, the sister of Martha and Lazarus. It often happens
in biographical writing that names are sup pressed, or publication suspended,
until time has removed the cause of silence. It seems to have been so in the
Gospel story. There is more than one indication of regard for the feeling of
those who appear in the sacred narrative, as where Mark and Luke evade the fact
that Matthew was once a publican, while Matthew himself glories in his shame.
Even S. John, who tells us most frankly of Mary of Bethany, hesitates to
identify her, except by a stray hint, with any other stage of the Gospel
narrative. Yet the conclusion is almost irresistible that the Mary whom he
calls Magdalene, who next appears under that title for the first time in his
story, within less than a week after the scene of the anoint ing, is the same
as Mary of Bethany. It is incomprehensible that Mary of Bethany in the
administration of perfumed ointment should have exhausted her brave devotion,
and, within a week's time, should not have appeared with the other faithful
women at the foot of the Cross, or at the sepulchre in the garden. But if Mary
of Magdala be the name by which Mary of Bethany was known to the world — a
distinguishing name not needed or loved at the home in Bethany — a consistency of action between
Mary of Bethany and Mary Magdalene illuminates the narrative. The devotion of
Mary of Bethany is vindicated under her more famous name of Mary Magdalene. Not
only did she sit at the feet of Christ at home. Not only did she anoint Him at
the feast of Beth any. She followed Him to the Cross; she watched Him at the
tomb. She was the first to see Him risen from the grave.
It is ill work to uncover family skeletons. But fortunate is
the family that has none in its closet. It is more common than one would be apt
to believe that a family noted for its cultivated Christian atmosphere, and for
the fine ideals of its household life, none the less is shadowed forever by the
memory of dis grace in respect of some member of it, and shrinks at secret
recollections that bring al ways a wince of pain. Thus the blameless suffer in
silence for the sins of others. There is no excuse for mentioning such a
situation except to describe the splendid triumph that sometimes arises out of it.
There is reason to believe that such a shadow rested upon
that pure and perfect home in Bethany,
where Jesus of Nazareth was the most intimate of friends. That would be the
reason for the marked reserve of the Gospels in the references to this home —
the stray hints that mercifully concealed the unnecessary truth so long as the
living might be wounded by it, yet offering clues that to after ages, when the
four Gospels were put together, would be certain to reveal the story, as a
lesson in the inner history and redemption of a human soul.
"While there is nothing in Holy Scripture definitely to
settle the question, the tradi tions of a thousand years have held that Mary of
Bethany and Mary Magdalene and the Woman that was a Sinner are the same. Such
is the testimony of Tertullian, and S. Cyprian, and S. Jerome, and S.
Augustine, and S. Gregory the Great, and Clement and Cyril of Alexandria, and
such has been the belief, in more modern times, of English Churchmen like
Lightfoot, and Farrar, and Pusey.
According to this view, support is given to the tradition
that at one time Mary of Beth any had broken away from the quiet life of her
village, and had become notorious for a life of delirious and reckless
pleasure. There are legends in the Talmud which speak of her beauty, the fame
of her lovely hair, her wealth, her intrigues. Her hus band was a doctor of the
law whose jealousy was so great, that he was wont to keep her closely
imprisoned. The high-spirited Jewess revolted against this hateful restraint,
joined fortunes with a gay officer of Magdala, and accompanied him to that
town, where she led a' life of such brilliant and un bridled indulgence that
she always kept the name of "the Magdalene." She was beautiful; she
was fascinating. But she was vain; she was avaricious; she was lustful;
gluttonous; jealous; tempestuous and indo lent. For out of her Christ drove the
seven demons of mortal sin.
It is she that is the penitent whom S. Luke describes, but
does not name. In the old calendar of the English Church
she was so identified and commemorated on the Feast of S. Mary Magdalene, the
twenty-second of July. It is she who originates the act of devotion which she
repeats two years afterward at Bethany.
It is this first anointing that gives significance to the second. S. John
remembers this long afterward, when he de scribes Mary of Bethany as "that
Mary which anointed the Lord with ointment, and wiped His feet with her
hair." S. Luke, who describes the original penitent bestowing her ointment
upon the Christ, makes no mention of her name. But he seems to hint at her
identity when he takes care to begin the next succeeding paragraph with the
name of Mary Magdalene.
If this interpretation of the story be accepted, the
anointing at Bethany,
beautiful and full of meaning already, gains immensely in significance. Mary of
Bethany has been for two years a changed woman. She has become generous, and
humble, and chaste, and temperate, meek, kind, and diligent. She has renounced
her evil associations, and all her old charm is exerted in a life so noble and
pure that everyone is convinced of her sincerity. She has become what it had
always been in her inmost soul to be, and what God had put her in the world to
be. The miracle that had taken place within her soul dated from the time when
Jesus Christ, had said to her, "Thy sins are for given. Go in peace."
Then two years pass. The Pharisees have plotted the
destruction of Jesus. Within a week the Son of Man is to be lifted up upon the
Cross of Calvary. She may not suspect the whole truth, but Mary of Bethany has
some intuition of the approaching end. A feast is given at Bethany in honor of Jesus. A large concourse
of people is there. Mary desires to pay some great farewell trib ute to the
Master to whom she owes her life. It shall be a public tribute, but it shall
tell the inner history of her soul, and what she owes to Him, without the
speaking of a word, and none but He shall understand her meaning.
She brings with her an alabaster cruse of ointment, just like
the one she had brought two years before, when she came as the penitent
Magdalene. It gleams in her hand like a lustrous pearl, and the balm which it
contains is priceless. She has kept it from the time of her old life, a
souvenir of her discarded vanity. What she had done two years be fore as a
penitent she now does again, with the gladness of one redeemed. She breaks the
alabaster cruse, as she had done then, as if to say, "Do you
remember?" She anoints His feet, as she had done then. Now, as then, her
hair falls in rippling masses, and she wipes His feet, as she had done then,
with the long tresses. Nothing is changed, except that now she does with a
smile what she had done then with bitter tears, and be fore she has finished
she anoints His head also, as a tribute to a King. The house is filled with the
odor of the ointment. A peculiar fragrance steals upon the senses, and brings
back the memory of that day in which she gained her pardon, and began her
expiation.
S. Matthew says that "when Jesus under stood it, ' ' He
made His declaration concerning the everlasting fame of Mary's tribute to Him.
He understood it. None but He could understand that in a public tribute this
woman had managed to convey to Him her private gratitude, and to repeat the
secret history of the salvation of her soul.
The modern Biblical students who reject the identification of
Mary of Bethany with Mary of Magdala and "the woman who was a sinner"
appear to do so chiefly for two reasons external to the bare record of the
narrative. They say that the beautiful and devout character described in Mary
of Beth any is inconsistent with the notion that she was ever a notorious
sinner. It is remark able that this objection prevails most widely among those
who have ceased to emphasize the power of divine Grace — a gift coming in from
the outside to change human nature and life. Yet the story of the whole New
Testa ment may almost be said to be a story of changed lives. It is quite
consistent with the Gospel story to regard the character of Mary of Bethany as
one of the fruits of the saving grace conferred by the life of Christ.
The other objection to the identification of Mary of Bethany
with the sinful woman of the earlier incident is based upon the contention that
the same woman would be unlikely to perform twice exactly the same act of
anointing. But the truth is that, if we admit the identification, the
repetition of the anointing is the very thing that gives it its intense
personal significance, and accounts for the extraordinary commendation of our Lord.
And if Mary Magdalene told the story of her changed life by
anointing Christ at Bethany, with a designed reference to her former anointing
of Him at the beginning of her expiation, then she has also described to us, by
a striking symbolic action, the right attitude of every Christian life toward
its own past failure.
For the fact that
always most squarely faces a changed inner life or experience lies exactly in
the repetition of things un changed. The new spirit finds not a new task, but
the repetition of an old task. This repetition, this sameness, the same
alabaster cruse, the repeating of an old action, the floating upon the senses
of a fragrance charged with memories — this is the greatest trial that
confronts him who has determined upon a new life, a fresh resolution. And also,
— more inspiring truth, — this sameness, this repetition, is the very element
that contains the utmost opportunity for the expression of the new life; no
other could contain so much.
An intense emotional change, or alteration of current, within
one's soul seems to demand, at first, a corresponding change in all that lies
outside.1 The realization comes, al most with the force of a blow, that nothing
in fact is changed at all. Here is a village household, whose inmates are
passing through some agonizing crisis. Within this house the atmosphere is
charged with the most poignant anxiety. Life and death sway in the balances.
Nerves are held tense, and souls are upon the rack of dread. At last the crisis
passes. The tension is relieved. The dread uncertainty is past. Then the
village clock strikes an hour, calmly, deliberately, as though it were like any
other hour. Its slow strokes beat upon the consciousness the cold, dull fact
that nothing is changed; all is the same. One is brought back to the old
routine of life that must be taken up again. The world, which should have held
its breath during the hours of our agonized suspense, has moved on
relentlessly. The new is like the old.
When a great grief sweeps over the soul, its most persistent
pain arises from the fact that the change which has touched one's in most life
is set over against an everlasting sameness of all things else. The future
seems cruel in its too exact resemblance to the past. There is a repetition of
scenes that wring the heart with old memories. The same duties face us as
before. The old routine confronts us, as rigid as ia treadmill. Only live to
face this truth long enough, and, at last, the sameness that was so hard to
bear becomes the source of comfort and inspiration. The old scenes, because
they are consecrated by the past, become touched with a splendor that nothing
new and untried can equal. The old tasks begin to call forth new energies
because of the memories by which they are transfigured and glorified. The per
fume that once was mingled with tears stirs in the senses, at last, a deep and
abiding joy.
So it is with one who, becoming dissatisfied with himself,
faces life with some new resolution to make it nobler and more worthy than the
past. The new determination within the soul seems to require a new world to
work in. In the inspiration of some high resolve one wishes to escape from the
old, and feels that the new energy requires new circumstances in which to
express itself. One almost believes that the old circumstances will some how be
changed by the fervor of the new resolution. But the first test of the new
enthusiasm is its discovery that nothing is changed at all. Here are the old
duties to be taken up again, and the old temptations to be resisted. The test
of real progress answers the question whether under the same circumstances one
will yield again to the same temptation. The life that has real power behind
its change of determination often discovers at last what it was meant to be,
not in the finding of some new task, but through the in fusion of a new spirit
in the old task. The finest dedication of life for the future is fragrant with
an odor that belongs to the past.
Mary of Magdala is no mourner over her past failure.
Innocence is good ; but virtue is better. She regrets the past. But somehow the
memory even of her failure reflects the glory that now shines upon the present
and the future. There is no perfume so grateful to the soul as the fragrance
heavy with the odor of a past that has been redeemed.
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