Mark 1:29-39
“He came and took her by the hand and lifted her up. Then the fever left her, and she began to serve them.” Two simple sentences. And like so much of Mark’s gospel, a surprising amount of action in surprisingly few words.
After preaching with authority on the Sabbath at the synagogue at Capernaum, then casting out an unclean spirit from a man who interrupted him, Jesus was ready for a break. So he went to the house of his new disciples, Peter and Andrew. It happened that Peter’s mother-in-law is sick and in bed with a fever. They told Jesus about her right away and Jesus went in to see her.
And here is where the translation maybe is not our friend. “He took her by the hand” sounds much gentler than what it says in the original language. Kratésas it says in the Greek. Kratéo is the verb. It’s not a tender word. It means to grasp firmly or strongly.
He grasped her firmly and then it says he “lifted her up.” Which is fine. But again, something is lost in translation. The verb Mark used is egeiro. It’s the same word Jesus will use when he raises Jairus’ daughter from the dead and says, “Little girl, get up!” It’s the same word the angel will use to tell the women that Jesus is not in the empty tomb because he is raised up—egeiro.
So maybe this isn’t quite the gentle scene I had always imagined. Maybe this is a scene full of strength and energy and power. Jesus grasped her strongly, firmly by the hand—and hand, by the way, could mean anywhere from her fingertips to her elbow—Jesus grasped her firmly and raised her.
And the fever left her.
And she began to serve them.
It’s tempting to get a little upset about that last part—she began to serve them. After all, she’s just been sick with a fever. And now here are all these guys who come traipsing into the house and because of the expectations of the society they live in, she jumps out of her sickbed to rustle up some dinner for them. Oh, and by the way, does anybody care that it’s still the Sabbath?
Some commentators have pointed out that she would be happy to serve them because, in a culture where roles are clearly defined, she could now resume her place as matriarch of the household along with all the social currency that comes with that.
That interpretation about her immediately resuming her social position and role is all perfectly fine and no doubt played some part in her rising immediately to serve, but there’s also something going on in the language that deserves a moment of attention. It’s a little thing. But, as I’ve been learning, Mark often uses these subtle little things to make big points. In this case it has to do with the word “served.” The Greek word in question is the verb diakoneo. It does mean “to serve” and it is often used in the context of serving food and drink, but it also has another layer of meaning, particularly in Mark’s gospel.
Here’s how Ched Myers explains it in his book, Say to This Mountain: Mark’s Story of Discipleship—
“Peter’s mother-in-law is the first woman to appear in Mark’s narrative. We are told that upon being touched by Jesus, “she served him(1:31). Most commentators, steeped in patriarchal theology, assume that this means she fixed Jesus dinner. However the Greek verb “to serve,” diakoneo (from which we get our word “deacon”)_ appears only two other times in Mark. One is in 10:45—“The Human One came not to be served but to serve”—a context hardly suggesting meal preparation.
“Mark describes women ‘who, when Jesus was in Galilee, followed him, and served him, and…came up to Jerusalem with him’ (15:41). This is a summary statement of discipleship: from beginning (Galilee) to end (Jerusalem) these women were true followers who, unlike the men (see 10:32-45) practiced servanthood.”
So here is Peter’s mother-in-law—sadly we don’t know her name—but Mark identifies her service with a word that implies that there is a sacred aspect to her serving, a holiness that springs not from her sense of duty or social propriety, but from her faith.
She is a deacon.
In Mark’s gospel, the men surrounding Jesus are often argumentative and a little dense. But the women, though not mentioned often, are astute and faithful.
Astute and faithful women have kept the ministry of Jesus alive and well in this world for more than 20 centuries.
Think of the women mentioned in the Gospel of Luke who travelled with Jesus and financially supported Jesus and the disciples. Luke tells us that Mary Magdalene, and Joanna, the wife of Herod’s steward Chuza, and Susanna, and many others provided for them out of their resources.
Some of these women came to be called the Myrrh Bearers because after Jesus was crucified, they were the ones who went to the tomb to anoint his body. Because they went one last time to serve him in that way, they ended up being the first ones to hear the good news of the resurrection.
Mary Magdalen was known to be particularly close to Jesus and was regarded as an Apostle by many among the early followers of Jesus until patriarchy asserted itself, suppressed her influence, and sullied her reputation in the 6th century by spreading the story that she had been a prostitute. But it was Mary Magdalen who, according to the Gospel of John, first encountered the risen Jesus. It was Mary Magdalen who first proclaimed his resurrection, making her the first evangelist.
Another Mary who was part of this group of women disciples, was Mary, the wife of Cleopas. Tradition tells us that her husband was the brother of Joseph, Jesus’ foster father, so she was Jesus’ aunt, and sister-in-law of Jesus’ mother, Mary. She, too, was a Myrrh Bearer and is probably the unidentified person traveling with Cleopas on the road to Emmaus in chapter 24 of Luke’s gospel. That means that she was also one of the first witnesses to the resurrection.
Joanna, the wife of Herod’s steward, Chuza, is someone we know a little more about. We see her later identified in the letters of the Apostle Paul where he uses her Roman name, Junia. In Romans 16:7, Paul says that she is prominent among the Apostles and that she knew Christ before he did. Junia was a remarkable person, a woman disciple of Jesus who travelled with him in his ministry, and continued in ministry as an Apostle, travelling as far as Rome for the cause of the gospel. Some scholars have suggested that she might be the author of the Letter to the Hebrews.
Priscilla and her husband Aquila are mentioned six times in the New Testament. Four of those times, Priscilla is mentioned first before Aquila, and it’s clear that she is a full partner in their work together for the sake of the gospel. Priscilla and Aquila are also traditionally listed among the 70 that Jesus sent out on a mission. Priscilla, who is sometimes called Prisca, her more formal name, was one of the first women preachers in the church. Acts 18:24-28 tells us that she, along with Aquila, instructed Apollos in the faith. Some scholars speculate that Prisca may be the author of the Epistle to the Hebrews.
Phoebe was an overseer and deacon in the Church at Cenchreae. St. Paul referred to her in Romans 16 as a deacon and a patron of many. This is the only place in the New Testament where a woman was referred to with both of those titles. Diakonos kai prostateis. A chief, a leader, a guardian, a protector. St. Paul had such trust in her that he provided her with credentials so that she could serve as his emissary to Rome, and deliver his letter to them—that letter we know as the Epistle to the Romans.
Lydia of Thyatira, was a wealthy merchant of purple cloth, who welcomed St. Paul and his companions into her home at Philippi where, after listening to Paul’s teaching, she became a devoted follower of Jesus. In doing so, she helped Paul establish the church at Philippi, the first church in continental Europe.
In that church at Philippi were two women, Euodia and Syntyche who were serving in positions of pastoral leadership. At some point they got into a disagreement, and in his letter to the Philippians, Paul urges them to “be of the same mind in the Lord” so that their disagreement doesn’t split the church. In calling them to unity, he notes that they have “struggled beside me in the work of the gospel.” They were his full partners in ministry in that city.
Jesus took Peter’s mother-in-law in his firm grip and raised her up. And she began to serve. She became a deacon. She began making sure things got done. Making sure ministry happened. And it’s the women who have been making sure things get done and ministry happens ever since.
Yesterday we celebrated the installation of a new pastor at Christ Lutheran Church in Long Beach. If you include the long-term interim ministry of Pastor Laurie Arroyo, then Pastor Nikki Fielder is the fourth or fifth woman to serve Christ Lutheran as pastor. Another woman, Pastor Jennie Chrien, preached at Pastor Nikki’s installation, and a third woman, our bishop, Brenda Bos, presided. For several years now, the presiding bishop of our denomination has been a woman, Bishop Elizabeth Eaton. Having women serve in these important roles in the church has become so normal that it’s hardly worth noting. But it wasn’t always so.
It was only fifty-four years ago, a time still in living memory for many of us, that our denomination began to ordain women to the ministry of Word and Sacrament. To be pastors. On the one hand, it seemed then—and to some people it still seems—like a bold and progressive thing to do. But when you look at the witness of the New Testament itself and what we have learned about the roles that women played in the earliest years of the church…well let’s just say that our historically recent ordination of women was shamefully long overdue.
I think of the women I’m indebted to in my ministry. I think of my beloved spouse, Meri, who has always challenged me to look deeper than tradition in my understanding and practice of faith. I think of all the women teachers I’ve had, like Dr. Martha Ellen “Marty” Stortz, professor of Church history, who opened my eyes to the rich goldmine of our heritage. I think of the women scholars and writers I turn to for thought-provoking insights in theology and biblical studies, women like Debi Thomas, Barbara Brown Taylor, Rachel Held Evans, Roberta Bondi, Diana Butler Bass, Nadia Bolz-Weber, Heather Anne Thiessen, and Amy-Jill Levine. I think of my women clergy colleagues who are so amazing and indispensable as we puzzle our way through the week’s texts and the week’s issues, and our life together in the church.
I think of the women in our congregations who make things happen. Without whom things would not happen. The Tabithas, the Junias, the Priscillas, the Marys, the Pheobes. The Myrrh Bearers. The Apostles in our midst.
I think of them all. And I am so grateful.
Jesus has grasped them by the hand and raised them up. And they have served. Showing the presence of Christ and proclaiming the kin-dom of God, or as Diana Butler Bass calls it, “the commonwealth of God’s justice and mercy.”
Jesus has raised them up and we are all richer for it.
Jesus grasped them firmly by the hand and raised them up.
Because that’s what Jesus does.
He reaches into our fevered immobility and raises us up out of the sickbed of patriarchy and our fearful status quo. He frees us from the illness of coersive social conventions and oppressive patterns of business-as-usual so we can serve each other, so we can take care of each other and lift up others in meaningful ways that show the world what the commonwealth of God’s justice and mercy looks like and how it works.
He raises us up so we can live together and work together, so we can use our unique abilities and gifts in a beloved community where, as Paul said in Galatians, “there is no longer Jew or Greek; there is no longer slave or free; there is no longer male and female;” and we can add there is no longer gay or straight or queer or trans, “for all of you are one in Christ Jesus.”
He raises us up so we can show each other the healing love of Christ as we serve each other and work together to make the reign of God a reality on earth as it is in heaven. In Jesus’ name.
First class bit of exposition, Steve. I knew “serve” was the root of the word deacon, but hadn’t heard its application to Mark’s use of the word re. Peter’s mother before.
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