+ 6th Sunday after Pentecost – July 20th, 2025 +
Series C: Genesis 18:1-14; Colossians 1:21-29; Luke 10:38-42
Beautiful Savior Lutheran Church
Milton, WA
In the Name of the Father and of the + Son and of the Holy Spirit. Amen.
Don’t just do something, sit there!
No, that’s wasn’t a slip of the tongue. You heard that right. Don’t just do something, sit there.
You and I are used to hearing, perhaps even saying, the opposite… “There’s no time for lollygagging, dillydalling, or thumb-twiddling. Get off your duff. Don’t just sit there, do something.”
But then along comes Jesus. Martha invites him into her home. Mary and Martha are both good friends. Beloved disciples. And sinners and saints like you and I. Jesus enters as a welcomed guest, but honestly, he’s really the Host, the Divine Visitor. Jesus comes as the Holy Hospitality Worker serving up a gracious surprise for Mary and Martha and you. Jesus throws all our plans out the window. “Don’t just do something. Sit there. Rest. Receive. Rejoice.”
For when Jesus comes, he comes as a gracious host full of good news for Mary and Martha and for you. Jesus is the Son of Man who came not to be served but to serve and to give his life as a ransom for many. When Jesus shows up, he brings with him a holy hospitality.
Just ask Abraham and Sarah. When the Lord, the Malak YHWH, the Angel of the Lord, Jesus before his incarnation, pays them a visit under the oaks of Mamre, he comes bearing gifts. Yes, Abraham prepares the BBQ. Sarah prepares some cakes of grain. But YHWH delivers the main course. A promise. “Don’t just do something, sit there and watch me do what sounds impossible and too good to be true, but it is…By this time next year, you’ll be changing diapers on a little bundle of joy.” And a year later, YHWH delivered on his promise and Sara delivered a son. Isaac – laughter – was born.
Is anything too hard for YHWH? Not at all. Don’t just do something. Sit there. “If you thought that was wild, just wait and see what I’m going to do when I send my own promised Son from the family tree of Abraham’s son…to a Virgin named Mary.”
When YHWHW takes on human flesh, he does for you what he did for Abraham and Sarah. He comes with holy hospitality to serve and save and sanctify you. This is what Jesus, the Divine Visitor does when he steps into the home of Martha and Mary. “I come with holy hospitality, to satisfy your anxiousness by my presence and word. To fill your emptiness with the bread of life. To bear you burdens. To serve you by my sacrifice. To clear away all your distractions and give you with my divine, steadfast love. I give you the good portion of my grace and goodness that will never fade away.”
Luke draws our attention first to Mary. Mary, we are told is sitting at Jesus’ feet, listening to his teaching. This is the posture of the disciple in the Scriptures. At the feet. Hearing the Word. Continually. Ongoing.
Then, Luke shifts the camera around to Martha. She’s a gracious hostess. Welcomes the Rabbi. Prepares the food. Pours the wine. Shows hospitality. She serves (literally diakonia). But there’s a problem. Well, two problems really.
Martha brings the first problem to Jesus’ attention. “Lord, do you not care that my sister has left me to serve alone? Tell her then to help me.”
Seems like a reasonable request, especially to any of you who have worked hard or grown weary serving others, and we’ve all been there. “Come on, Mary, don’t just sit there, do something!”
And this is where Luke reveals the second problem. Martha is distracted (overburdened, feeling dragged or pulled around) by much serving. Pay close attention to the words used here. The problem isn’t Martha’s service (her diakonia). That’s a good thing. A holy thing. Jesus doesn’t rebuke her loving service and hospitality, but he does remove her distractions. So that he can give her what is most needful…his word. His life. His teaching. His good news. His gracious promises.
Martha isn’t alone in her distractions. You and I are right there with her. Daily life overwhelms you in a Jenga tower of distraction upon distraction. Always looking to distract from the pain or the joy or the sorrow or the silence. Your sinful flesh is like Labrador, always chasing the next squirrel. Breaking news alerts. Scrolling phones. Checking emails. Notifications. Texts. Wifi. Radio. It’s not that these are all bad things…much of it can be good, but never at the expense of God’s Word.
Distraction has been Satan’s greatest tool against the Word of God since the beginning. Is the fruit good for eating? Is it desirable for making one wise? The ancient dragon is an expert distractor. Even distracting us with good things in order to keep us away from the Word of Life. But there’s one man he cannot distract or deter or defeat. The Son of Man.
Remember, Jesus loves Mary and Martha. Jesus comes to their home as Rabbi, Teacher, but also their friend, the friend of sinners, and as the Gracious Host full of divine hospitality for them and for you.
“Martha, Martha, you are anxious and troubled about many things, but one thing is necessary. Mary has chosen the good portion, which will not be taken away from her.”
In other words, Jesus tells Martha… “There is time for serving. But now is the time for hearing. To serve the Lord you must first be served by me. So, don’t just do something, sit there. Rest. Receive. Rejoice in my holy hospitality for you.”
Jesus is gentle in his reply to Martha. He doesn’t rebuke her service, but he does seek to calm her anxious heart with his holy word, same is true for you. Jesus comes to make your burdens his own. To clear all your distractions and deliver you his divine goodness and grace. Jesus leads you, as he did Mary and Martha, to the good portion of his Word, his life, his steadfast love.
You and I are a lot like Mary and Martha, sinners and saints, visited by the holy hospitality of Jesus. Jesus cares for Mary and Martha. Visits them in their home with his presence. Fills their ears with his teaching and proclamation of good news. Brings Mary and Martha true rest in his rescue.
So it is for you. “Here in my house, where I am host and guest, I care for you. I visit you in my word and supper. I fill your ears with my teaching and proclaim to you, I forgive you all your sins. I bring you rest in my redemption. I bring you life from the dead. I give you the good portion, my promises as you hear, listen, sing, pray, meditate, kneel. Here I am serving you. forgiving you. blessing you. I am your gracious host and today I come bearing gifts.”
And today, Jesus, your Holy Hospitality Worker has prepared everything for you. The table is set.
So, don’t just do something. Sit here. Rest. Receive. Rejoice.
In the Name of the Father and of the + Son and of the Holy Spirit. Amen.