9th April 2006Palm Sunday
Fr Nick Mercer
Mark 11.1-11 ; Isaiah 50.4-9a;
Philippians 2.5-11
You can now get
sniffer dogs for dry rot! Dogs have remarkably sensitive noses and can be
trained in so many different and useful ways. For many animals, the sense of
smell is vital. Over the course of evolution, as humans we have modified its
importance. But it is still a crucial sense. I can still ‘remember’ the smell
of my mother (and how do you do that?) I know what most of my friends smell
like.
Of course it can be
deceptive. Jacob deceived his father Isaac by wearing Esau’s clothes:
Being extravagant in what we spend on God, if it springs from love and deep devotion, will make us generous to the poor and needy.
Gen 27.27 So he came
near and kissed him; and he smelled the smell of his garments, and blessed him,
and said, "Ah, the smell of my son is like the smell of a field that the
LORD has blessed.”
For many of us, smell
is a part of the worship life of the church. When we come to Prayers on Monday
morning, the church is still full of the rich, heavy smell of incense: the
smell of God. The people of
The passion narratives
which we read this week are full of the smell of God made Man: the divine
smells of ‘the Anointed One’; the salvific smells of the bitter herbs, the wine
and the bread of the Last Supper, the Passover; the Garden where now, full
circle, Adam’s sin was coming to fruition in the second Adam as he sweats beads
of blood in his anguish; the myrrh & vinegar of the cross; the human smells
of sweat and blood, of torches and fear, of mobs and bloodlust, of urine and
all the vileness of ritual torture and execution.
In Mark this story is
used as a summary of the Gospel which is why it will be universally recounted.
As Jesus foretold, the Woman is remembered by millions of Christians around the
world whenever the Gospel is read; as she has been remembered today.
The anointing is a
prophetic action which prepares the body of Jesus for burial - there can be no
anointing after death (Mark 16.1) - although the women try - for God will have
raised him.
In this 1st
century context, the woman has gate-crashed a men-only party and the barely
suppressed eroticism of the act of anointing makes the onlookers feel
uncomfortable. They want to be critical of the woman and of Christ. You can see
why the early church, aware of the sensuality of this gesture, were predisposed
to attribute it to Mary Magdalene - a woman with a past.
Of course there were
cultural precedents for what the woman did. Rather like those scented
freshen-up cloths you get given on aeroplanes, it was customary for wealthy
hosts to pour sweet oil on the hair of guests. But not this amount nor of this
quality (a year’s wages).
When I was at
Being extravagant in
what we spend on God, if it springs from love and deep devotion, will make us
generous to the poor and needy. In contrast, those who are niggardly in their
worship of God, bound by laws and a spirit of legalism, are usually ungenerous
in their judgements and stingy with their possessions.
Mark, who was obviously in a Johannine rather than a synoptic mood when he wrote this, is anxious to bring out the cultural and mystical symbolism of the event, which is perhaps why he places it here at the beginning of the passion.
Now at this time it
was not the custom to wash your hair daily – or, for that matter, very often at
all. So the fragrance of this almost outrageous anointing must have been heavy
upon our Lord throughout the coming days of trial and death.
We who live on the
other side of the cross and the empty tomb can see how, in the words of Morna
Hooker, “this woman’s action epitomizes Jesus’ death and resurrection,
proclaims his status as king, and challenges others to share her devotion to
him.”
Perhaps Paul had this
incident in mind when he wrote:
“But thanks be to God,
who in Christ always leads us in triumphal procession, and through us spreads
in every place the fragrance that comes from knowing him. For we are the aroma
of Christ to God among those who are being saved and among those who are
perishing; to the one a fragrance from death to death, to the other a fragrance
from life to life. Who is sufficient for these things?” (2 Corinthians 2.14-16)