Wednesday, May 16, 2012
Mark 1:29-31: An Eventful Sabbath at Peter's House
INTRODUCTION
When
I was young, Sundays were always special at our house.
Breakfasts
were more leisurely. We usually had something special for breakfast—maybe
waffles.
We
got on our best clothes, suits and ties for boys, dresses for girls.
Mother
got started on a special meal. It was almost always a roast or chicken in the
oven with potatoes arranged around it. The roast and potatoes cooked slowly
while we were at church—a threehour stint, which always included a worship
service and Sunday school.
She
always put extra potatoes in the roasting pan in case we brought company home
with us.
When
we got home the roast would be nicely cooked and the potatoes would be brown
and delicious.
Mother
made gravy with the drippings from the roast.
And,
as often as possible, we would have company to share our dinner.
Sometimes
it was a visitor who came to church and mother had invited home with us.
We
lived in a university town, and sometimes Mother would invite two or three
students.
Sometimes
friends from out-of-town would show up at church. They’d always get an
invitation.
In
the afternoon we would visit with our guests.
We
would play our favorite Spike Jones records for our visitors.
If
we played outdoors, we were forbidden to be noisy or get dirty because it was
Sunday. We never worked in the garden or mowed the grass or any such chores on
Sunday.
At
suppertime we would listen to the Quiz Kids and Edgar Bergen and Charlie
McCarthy.
Then
in evening we went back to church for the evening service.
Sundays
were different and we always enjoyed the change of activities.
In
the first chapter of the Gospel of Mark we read about how Jesus spent a
memorable Sabbath.
Of
course, the Sabbath was Saturday for Jesus, but it was like our Sunday—a
special day for God.
In
some ways Jesus spent this day like we did.
He
went to church—they called it synagogue.
And
the rest of the day he spent with his friends.
On
the day we will read about, Jesus went to synagogue with the brothers Peter and
Andrew and the brothers James and John.
On
this day several unusual things happened. I suspect that almost every day in
Jesus’s life after he began his public ministry, unusual things happened, but
this day was important enough that Mark tells us about it in his gospel.
At
Synagogue they didn’t have one pastor. The synagogue rulers who would arrange
for the speakers. They would often invite visiting Rabbis to speak. And this
day a synagogue ruler invited Jesus to give the message.
Jesus
gave the morning message, and, we read, “the people were amazed.” Jesus’s
teaching was like nothing they had ever heard before.
But
then something unexpected happened.
A
crazy man—the Bible says he had an unclean spirit—stood up and began to rave:
“What have you to do with us, Jesus of Nazareth?” he shouted. “Have you come to
destroy us? I know who you are, the Holy One of Israel.”
And
Jesus rebuked the spirit, and it came out convulsing him.
All
the people in the meeting were amazed.
After
the meeting, Peter and Andrew brought Jesus, along with their friends, James
and John, home to Peter’s house for dinner.
After
dinner when evening came—remember that the Sabbath began and ended at
sundown—people began to gather around the door of Peter and Andrew’s house.
All
the sick people in the area had assembled to be healed.
They
waited until sundown after the Sabbath had ended because people weren’t
supposed to work on the Sabbath, and—in their minds—healing was work.
But
I left out the most important thing that happened that day. It was when the
little group arrived at Peter’s house for the noon meal.
Here
it is in Mark 1:29-31:
“And immediately he left the synagogue, and
entered the house of Simon and Andrew, wit h James and John. Now Simon’s
mother-in-law was sick with a fever, and immediately they told him of her.
And he came and took her by the hand and
lifted her up, and the fever left her; and she served them” (Mark 1:29-31).
Now
that’s very short story. You probably never heard it in Sunday school. But it’s
interesting and instructive. There’s something here for us to think about.
I.
Notice.
A.
Peter had a house and a wife.
An
early Christian writer, Clement of Alexandria, who lived about a hundred years
later, wrote that Peter had children.
Peter’s
brother Andrew lived in the same house with Peter’s wife and mother-in-law. We
don’t know whether Andrew had a family or not.
One
thing that was different about dinner in Peter’s house than in ours was that
Jews didn’t cook on the Sabbath. In order to make it a day of rest, they
prepared the food the day before, so it was ready as soon as they got home from
synagogue.
B.
But when they got home from church they found Peter’s mother-in-law in bed.
She
hadn’t gone to synagogue. She wasn’t feeling well and so she had stayed home.
But when they arrived, Peter’s mother-in-law was burning up with a fever.
In
Luke’s version of the story we read that “she
had been seized with a high fever.”
In
those days of malaria and little medical knowledge or medicines, a high fever
was very dangerous.
So
they came to Jesus with the problem. We don’t have much detail, so we have to
imagine the scene.
We
read that Jesus came and took the sick
woman by the hand.
C.
We don’t know whether he said anything, but we read that he took her by the
hand and lifted her up.
Have
you ever noticed how many different ways Jesus used to heal people?
Sometimes
he just spoke a word: ”Be healed.”
Sometimes
he touched the person or the part of
the person that was diseased. Remember how he put his hand on the leper. That
was a very meaningful gesture, because no one was supposed to touch a leper.
Sometimes
he healed at a distance. Remember
the nobleman’s son and the Syrophoenician woman’s daughter.
One
time he made clay and put it in a blind
man’s eyes and gave him something to do: “Go
to the Pool of Siloam and wash your eyes.”
One
time Jesus didn’t do anything. A
woman just touched him and was healed. Jesus told her, “Your faith has healed you. Go in peace.”
One
time he healed a blind man in two stages.
The first time the man could see but things were so blurry; he said he saw
people like trees walking.
So
Jesus touched his eyes again and then he could see perfectly.
I
think that Jesus healed people in many
different ways to teach us that God works in each life in a special way suited
to each person.
In
this case we read that Jesus took Peter’s mother-in-law by the hand and raised
her up.
I
think that is an especially beautiful
way restore the lady to health.
Jesus
showed special tenderness in taking her hand and raising her up from her bed.
I
can remember another time Jesus healed in this way.
Do
you remember that when the synagogue ruler Jairus’s twelve-year-old daughter
was lying dead in her bed, Jesus came to her, took her by the hand and said, “Little girl, get up.” And, we read, “Immediately the girl got up and began to
walk about.”
D.
And, we read, Peter ‘s mother-in-law got up and served them.
First of all, that she could get up and
go right to work shows us that the
healing is complete.
People
who have been stretched out in bed with high fevers usually take a while to
recuperate.
But
when Jesus healed this lady, she was completely healed and recuperated right
now.
Perhaps
seems odd to us that she went right to work.
There
was at least one other woman in the house—Peter’s wife. And there may have been
others. Couldn’t these women have done the serving and let the older lady
recuperate?
To
understand we have to consider the social customs of the day.
Peter’s
mother-in-law—being the senior woman in the household—would have had the
privilege of being in charge of the hospitality in the home.
When
Jesus healed her—and she was obviously thoroughly healed—he restored her to her
rightful place as the one in charge of hospitality in the home.
For
her, this was an honor she wouldn’t have wanted to relinquish.
When
we used to have company, sometimes a guest would approach Charlotte in the
kitchen and ask if she can help.
They
didn’t just barge in. They asked permission.
And
generally Charlotte rejected their help. She told them that everything was
under control.
So
don’t feel sorry for the lady. She was where she wanted to be. Glad to be cured
and back where she belonged, in charge of the kitchen.
II.
So what can we learn from the story?
A.
I have reminded you before that each of
Jesus’s healings is an acted out parable.
Each healing has a lesson for us about
salvation.
Jesus
opens the eyes of the physically blind
to show what he does for us who are spiritually blind.
Jesus
makes the leper “clean” to show how
Jesus cleanses us from the filth of our sins.
Jesus
heals the crippled to show what he
can do for those who are spiritually crippled.
Jesus
heals the paralyzed to show how he sets
us free from sin.
Jesus
raises the dead to illustrate the
Resurrection he has in store for all who belong to him.
B.
This woman was deathly ill, weak and helpless. She was burning up with fever.
Jesus came to her—as he comes to each
of us.
Jesus took her by the hand—as he takes
us by the hand, in a figurative sense.
Jesus raised her up—as he raises us up
when he gives us healing and wholeness and salvation.
She got up and served Jesus and his friends—as
he expects us to get up and go to work serving God by serving others.
APPLICATION
Everyone
in this room has been on earth a long time.
Maybe
God has left us here so long because he has work for us.
We’ve
served Jesus in many ways in times past—in our families, and churches, and occupations,
and neighborhoods.
Some
of you have guided others to God.
Some
of you have done God’s work of helping those in need.
What
can you do, even now?
I
can’t tell you. But you’ll find something.
Some
of the small things we do make a big difference.
You
can invite a friend to church.
You
can give someone a nice compliment.
You
can listen to someone tell you their troubles.
You
can be a friend to someone who is lonely. Sometimes you can do a favor or give
a gift.
You
can write a check for a worthy cause or for someone in distress.
You
can write a letter of encouragement or appreciation.
Coming
to our service here is serving Jesus, because if you come, that encourages
someone else to come too.
I
read a story about a servant girl
who was asked at church what Christian work she did.
She
said that she had not the opportunity to do much because her duties were so
constant, but she said,
“When
I go to bed I take the newspaper to bed with me, and read the notices of the
births and I pray for all the little babies.
“And
I read the notices of marriages, and I pray that those who have been married
may be happy.
“And
I read the announcements of death and I pray that the sorrowing may be
comforted.”
Just
to live your life for Jesus is a way of serving him—because your cheerfulness
and gratefulness and kindness will help draw others to God.
Maybe
someone will ask you what makes you the kind person you are, and you will have
the opportunity to tell them.
Maybe
they will just see your peace and strength and be encouraged.
It
is quite possible that you will meet someone in Heaven who is there because you
encouraged her—or him.
I
like to quote this saying from Mother Teresa: “We can’t do any great thing for God, but we can do something little
with great love.”
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