"As for me, my life has already been poured out as an offering to God. The time
of my death is near." (2 Timothy 4:6, NLT)
I have a confession to make. By the end of most days, my drama queen comes out and wants to commiserate with Paul here. "Tell me about it, Paul. I've been there, man. Near death due to excessive self-sacrifice? Yes. I think I'm there right now after the day I've had."
You can laugh at me. I'm laughing at me, because I know this is not what Paul meant when he wrote these words. And yes, I do realize that I have never been beaten, imprisoned, starved, or shipwrecked for the sake of Christ. I have no right to lump myself with Paul.
But, the truth is, I have been pulled in ten different directions in any given hour, puked on, pooped on, peed on, spit on, shot with dart guns, laughed at, cried at, yelled at, complained to, tattled to, and countlessly begged and questioned. I feel used. And I think this is a common complaint among women, whether or not we are mothers. Women, in my experience, give and give until we often feel sucked completely dry.
Our third inspirational woman has been on my heart for months. Her act of worshipful giving and what followed has helped me see my life with new eyes:
Six days before the Passover, Jesus arrived at Bethany, where Lazarus lived,
whom Jesus had raised from the dead. Here a dinner was given
in Jesus’ honor. Martha served, while Lazarus was among those reclining at the
table with him. Then Mary took about a
pint of
pure nard, an expensive perfume; she poured it on Jesus’ feet and wiped his feet
with her hair. And the house was filled with the fragrance of the perfume.
But one of his
disciples, Judas Iscariot, who was later to betray him, objected, “Why
wasn’t this perfume sold and the money given to the poor? It was worth a year’s
wages.”
He did not say this
because he cared about the poor but because he was a thief; as keeper of the
money bag, he used to help himself to what was put into it.
“Leave her
alone,” Jesus replied. “[It was intended] that she
should save this perfume for the day of my burial. You will always have the
poor among you, but you will not always have me.”(John 12:1-8)
I feel like I've been having a never-ending conversation with God about this passage. He's kept me here, I think, because what I can learn is so life-changing, He doesn't want me to leave until I get it. I'm still here. I might be here for awhile, but these are some things I've learned so far:
The difference between living a "poured-out" life and a "poor me" life is all in my mind.
Loving my family, my job, and my life is not enough. Despite all the love, every
now and then I'll catch a naughty thought running around in my mind like a naked
toddler:
"Everyone around here gets the weekend off but me."
"If I weren't here
this place would fall apart."
"Nobody realizes how much I sacrifice."
"Why
doesn't anyone else see all these things that need to be done?"
"I'm tired of
volunteering for stuff. Let someone else have a turn."
If I don't catch these
thoughts right away, in a matter of minutes they can put down roots in my mind
and start growing. Before I know it, I'm living the "poor me" life playing the part
of Bitter Betty, Martyr Mommy and Worn-Out Wife all wrapped up in one frightening package.
It turns out these roles are
completely unfulfilling, because the thoughts they are based on are only half
truths at best and really more like outright lies. The Bible tells me lies have
a father and his name is Satan. I really don't want Satan's babies running around
in my head. Ephesians 4:23 tells me instead to be made new in the attitude of my mind.
No one forced Mary to pour out her expensive perfume on Jesus. She didn't
feel obligated or guilty. She wasn't resentful that no one else was doing it. I
believe she did it because she wanted to. She was compelled by
love for Jesus and Jesus alone. But dare I say even loving Jesus is not enough? Because no matter how I love Him, even still the
thoughts will come. So how do I be made new in the attitude of my mind? There is
only one way. My mind is renewed by the Word of God. A lying thought comes. I
must catch it quickly and bring it to my Lord.
"Lord, Your Word says to come to You and You will give me rest."
"Lord, Your Word says that You are the one who holds all things together--not me."
"Lord, Your Word says that when I humble myself before You, You will lift me up."
"Lord, Your Word says that whatever I do, I should do it in the name of the Lord Jesus, giving thanks to God the Father--not complaining."
"Lord, Your Word says to never tire of doing good."
If I want to live a poured-out life for Jesus, I must renew my mind.
I am the perfume.
For quite a time after I began meditating
on this passage, I tried to re-create the scene between Mary and Jesus. I wanted
to do what she did and have that precious moment with him. I would kneel down in
my bedroom, close my eyes, and imagine a jar of perfume in my hands. I imagined
Jesus before me and myself pouring the perfume. Only I could never decide
whether to pour it on his head or his feet. If I poured it on his head it might
sting his eyes. If I went for his feet it didn't seem like enough coverage. As
silly as this sounds, I actually had some sweet times of worship as a result, just
telling Him that I wanted to pour my praise on Him. But then I would
leave my room, be instantly confronted with the chaos of life, and it would all evaporate.
One day, I finally heard what he had probably been saying to me the whole time: "You
are the perfume. There is nothing more expensive or dear that you could give me
but you. Your worship is not just a moment in your quiet room. It is every
moment if you choose it. Every breath you take, every word you speak is an act
of worship if you make it so." Yes, of course! Didn't I already know this? I thought I did. But I don't really know something until I've lived it. And I haven't lived this way. Not really. But, oh how I want to.
In that moment when I am dog-tired, the last one up, and crying for bed, and realize that I have forgotten something that must be done before morning--it is then that I want to stop myself before I sigh and whine. I want to be perfume poured out then, while I do what needs to be done with a heart that remembers Jesus did everything for me. He died for me. And in living every moment for Him, I am sweet perfume, poured out on my Savior.
There will be naysayers. Go ahead and let them say nay.
Mary was criticized for what she did. The room did not stand up and applaud her or thank her for her inspirational display of generosity. There will always be someone to criticize my efforts at living a poured-out life. Instead of encouraging a life of self-sacrifice, many will argue that it is more important to fill my days with "me time," pampering, and self-indulgence in order to make me a happier, more fulfilled woman. But, I just can't seem to find that verse in my Bible. What Jesus teaches is quite the opposite. And it is what He thinks that really matters to me. Jesus defended Mary. He acknowledged her sacrifice and called it a beautiful thing in the book of Matthew. What the world calls foolish, Jesus calls beautiful.
Living a poured-out life smells good.
I love that what Mary did for Jesus affected everybody. The whole house was filled with the fragrance of her perfume. I will tell you the opposite is also true. When I am in a "poor me" frame of mind, I stink, and everybody around me smells it. My whole family gets cranky when I am cranky. But when I am intentionally worshipful throughout my day, the house is filled with sweetness. Not only is Jesus blessed, but so are the people with me.
Jesus is the best example of a poured-out life.
Follow God’s example, therefore, as dearly loved children and walk in the way of love, just as Christ loved us and gave himself up for us as a fragrant offering and sacrifice to God.(Ephesians 5:1-2)
Jesus was a fragrant offering on the altar that should have been mine. He poured out His life for me. The greatest thing I can do in response is to imitate Him.
Oh, let me see You, Jesus, ever before me as I go about my work. Let me see your face on every person I encounter in this life. Let my life be an act of worship, fragrant and pleasing to You. I pour out my thanks, my praise, my adoration, and all my love on You.