by Chip Brogden
"I entered into
your house, and you gave Me no water for My feet..." (Luke 7:44ff).
[B]How often do we take the presence of Jesus for granted? Our psuedo-Christian culture is profane. I speak not of the profanity
of foul language, but the profanity of treating divine things with a
casual, apathetic, flippant attitude. We profane holy things by making
them common, ordinary, usual, mundane, and routine.
[/B]
Interestingly enough, only those who know the Holy are in
danger of becoming too familiar with it. Unbelievers, those who are not
yet acquainted with the Holy, cannot profane what they do not
understand.
The danger of familiarity is in knowing and
taking for granted.
This is illustrated for us here in Luke
7. A Pharisee invites Jesus to dinner. This is not an irreligious man
who invites the Lord, but a member of the strictest religious order. Jesus
accepts his invitation and they sit down to have a meal.
While
they are sitting at the table, a woman enters the room with an alabaster
box of ointment. We know she is a sinner, because Luke says, "A woman in
the city, which was a sinner..." (Luke 7:37ff). This sinner does a strange
and wonderful thing. She washes the feet of Jesus with her tears, wipes
them with her hair, kisses His feet, and pours the fragrant ointment out
on Him.
The Pharisee, of course, is highly offended that this
sinner has come uninvited to his home. He is also a bit embarrassed
about this display of affection. And he thinks to himself, "If Jesus were
a real prophet, He would know that this woman is a sinner!"
But
in the mind of Jesus, the real issue is, "Who really loves Me, and who
takes Me for granted?"
No one traveled for pleasure in those
days, the way we do now. Travel at that time was universally despised as a
hot, dirty ordeal to be avoided if at all possible. Most people, Jesus
included, traveled on foot. So the ritual of taking care of guests
followed a predictable pattern and centered around the feet. Upon entering
someone's home, the host would greet his guests with a kiss on each cheek
and offer water for their tired, dirty feet. If available, some perfumed
ointment would also be offered to soothe and freshen them up a bit.
But the Pharisee failed to provide Jesus with even the most
basic, usual, and customary courtesies given to guests:
"You gave me no water for My feet... No kiss of greeting...
No oil for My head" (Luke 7:44-46ff).
The presence of Jesus
was taken for granted! Was it just a case of forgetfulness on the part
of His host, or was it something else? Something deeper?
Perhaps
the Pharisee was becoming too familiar with Jesus - just a little bit too
casual. From a distance Jesus was pretty amazing. Now that he had Jesus
sitting there at his own table, in his own house, he saw that Jesus was a
man. Maybe he came to believe that Jesus was someone not too unlike
himself.
It's only Jesus, so there's no need to get all
excited. Let Him get His own water and wash His own feet.
That is the danger of familiarity.
It is said
that familiarity breeds contempt. In the beginning we coveted the presence
of the Lord, but today perhaps we take it for granted. In the
beginning we were awed by Him, but today perhaps we are not so amazed. His
visits become more routine, more ordinary, more commonplace. The songs we
sing become a habit. The Bible we read becomes dry and old. The
testimonies of our brothers and sisters do not move us because we have
seen and heard it all before.
The woman, on the other hand,
maintained a quiet reverence, a godly sense of awe, a majestic sense of
wonder before the Holy. She gave honor to Whom honor was due. She made
up for what was lacking. When she arrived she saw that no one was
ministering to the Lord, and she made Him the focus of her being there in
that moment.
[B]Few people today truly minister to the Lord
Himself. They expect that the [/B]
Lord will minister to them. And indeed, He does. But the nature of the Lord Jesus is such that He will
never call attention to Himself. He will never say, "Why do you not
minister to Me? Why do you take me for granted? Why have you not washed My
feet?" He will remain silent, and wait for someone to notice Him.
Perhaps that is the reason why He is so often overlooked and taken
for granted: because He never seeks anything for Himself.
When
the Lord first showed me the importance of ministering to the Him, He made
no demands upon me to do anything. He simply let me experience how lonely
He was in the midst of a lot of religious activity. There, in the
middle of our wonderful church service, I understood that we were taking
Jesus for granted.
We were too familiar with His Presence. When I
understood the pain of the Lord, I knew immediately what needed to be
done. That is when I understood that to minister to the Lord was the
preeminent thing, the most important thing, and our primary purpose and
reason for being.
The best waiters and waitresses are the ones
who anticipate your needs and move at once to meet them - without you
having to ask. They do not say, "Would you like some more tea?" They
watch to see what you need, and if they see that your glass is empty, they
move to fill it.
A waiter, a servant, a minister: all three
have the same meaning. To wait on the Lord; to be a servant of the Lord;
to minister to the Lord; all three describe the same purpose and
function. The foremost thing is not to preach, or teach, or travel, or
build a big ministry.
We are to watch for, anticipate, and meet the
Lord's Need so that He is never taken for granted.
The
Lord gives all day long. He teaches the crowds. He heals their sick. He
meets their needs. At the end of the day He is tired. His feet are dirty.
He needs to be refreshed. But as is often the case, the needs of Jesus are
completely overlooked at we eagerly stretch out our hands to get OUR
blessing.
Certainly, this woman had many needs. Yet she comes
to the Lord Jesus, not to receive a blessing, but to be a blessing:
"She has washed My feet with her tears, and wiped them with her
hair... She has not stopped kissing My feet... She has anointed My feet
with ointment..." (Luke 7:44-46ff).
When Jesus enters "our house"
- whether it is our place of worship, our home, our workplace, or our
heart -
do we take Him for granted? Is His Need being met? I pray
the Lord will convict us of our profanity and deliver us from familiarity.
Let us repent, and rediscover the One Who sits at the table with
us.
http://www.watchman.net/articles/familiarity.html