The Night the King Did the Dishes

If Holy Week were a play — and in many ways it is — Maundy Thursday would be the quiet scene that somehow contains the entire story.

The parade is over.
The arguments in the temple have settled.
The city hums with Passover preparations.

And Jesus gathers his friends for supper.

Now, supper may not sound especially dramatic, but anyone who has attended enough church dinners knows that important things often happen around tables. Conversations deepen. Stories emerge. Occasionally someone discovers that the coffee urn has been unplugged, which can produce a minor ecclesiastical crisis.

But this meal is different.

Jesus knows the cross is coming. He knows betrayal has already begun its slow march through the city. The disciples, meanwhile, are still trying to determine who among them deserves the most prominent seating arrangement in the coming kingdom.

In other words, it is a fairly typical human gathering.

And then Jesus stands up.

He takes off his outer robe.
He wraps a towel around his waist.
He kneels down.

At this point the disciples should probably have realized that something unusual was happening.

Because the person they have been calling Lord is now performing the task normally assigned to the lowest servant in the household.

He begins washing their feet.

Now, in the modern world, feet are treated with a certain polite distance. But in the dusty roads of first-century Judea, foot washing was not symbolic — it was necessary, practical, and distinctly unglamorous.

It was the sort of job no one volunteered for.

Which makes it precisely the job Jesus chooses.

Peter, always the enthusiastic spokesperson for confused humanity, objects immediately. “Lord, you will never wash my feet!”

Peter understands what most of us instinctively understand: this is backwards.

Leaders are not supposed to kneel. Teachers are not supposed to scrub dust off fishermen’s toes. Kings are not supposed to pick up towels.

But Jesus gently insists.

“If I do not wash you, you have no share with me.”

The kingdom of God, it turns out, is built on a very different understanding of greatness.

In the world we know, authority rises upward.

In the kingdom Jesus reveals, love kneels down.

Maundy Thursday carries its name from the Latin mandatum — commandment. “A new commandment I give you: love one another.”

And just in case the disciples are tempted to interpret that commandment in a purely theoretical manner, Jesus demonstrates exactly what he means.

He washes their feet.

Including Judas’s.

Which may be the most astonishing detail of the entire evening.

Jesus serves the one who will betray him, the one who will deny him, the ones who will scatter in fear before sunrise.

Love kneels anyway.

Then, as if that were not enough for one night, Jesus takes bread.

“This is my body.”

He takes the cup.

“This is my blood.”

The ordinary meal becomes something holy — a sacrament that will be repeated around tables and altars for centuries to come.

And the message is unmistakable.

The heart of the Christian life is not prestige.

It is not success.

It is not even religious expertise.

It is love expressed in humble service.

The King does the washing.
The Teacher pours the wine.
The Lord gives himself away.

Which means that if we want to understand Maundy Thursday properly, we should probably keep an eye on the towel.

Because in the kingdom of God, greatness is measured not by how many people serve you…

…but by how willingly you serve them.

Companion Prayer

Servant Lord,
You kneel before your friends
with towel and basin.

Teach us the humility
that does not seek applause,
the love that serves quietly,
and the courage to care for others
even when it costs us.

Wash our hearts
of pride and fear.

And send us into the world
ready to love one another
as you have loved us.

Amen.

When Betrayal Slips In Quietly

Spy Wednesday is one of the strangest days in Holy Week.

Not strange in the dramatic sense — there are no palms waving, no crowds shouting, no temple furniture flying through the air. Compared with the rest of the week, it is remarkably quiet.

But beneath that quiet surface, something deeply unsettling is happening.

Somewhere in Jerusalem, Judas is having a conversation.

Now, Scripture does not give us the full transcript of this meeting. We are told only that he goes to the chief priests and asks, with a kind of dreadful practicality, “What will you give me if I hand him over to you?”

They settle on thirty pieces of silver.

Thirty.

Not an enormous fortune. Not a spectacular sum. Just enough to make betrayal seem… reasonable.

And that is perhaps what makes Spy Wednesday so uncomfortable. Betrayal in the Gospel does not arrive wearing a dramatic villain’s cloak. It does not announce itself with thunder or ominous music.

It slips in quietly.

One conversation. One decision. One moment when loyalty loosens and something colder takes its place.

The Church has called this day “Spy Wednesday” because Judas begins quietly watching for the right moment to hand Jesus over.

He becomes, in effect, an informant within the inner circle.

Now it is tempting — and quite emotionally satisfying — to treat Judas as a uniquely terrible figure. The villain of the story. The cautionary tale.

But Holy Week is rarely interested in simple villains.

The uncomfortable truth is that betrayal often grows from smaller seeds: disappointment, misunderstanding, wounded expectations, quiet resentment that is never quite brought into the light.

Judas had followed Jesus. He had listened to the teaching. He had witnessed miracles that would make most parish newsletters extremely enthusiastic.

And yet something in him hardened.

The Gospel never tells us exactly when the turning point came. Perhaps that is intentional.

Because the danger is rarely a single catastrophic decision.

More often it is a slow drifting of the heart.

This is why Spy Wednesday belongs in Holy Week. It reminds us that the greatest threat to love is not always open hostility.

Sometimes it is quiet disloyalty.

The good news — and Holy Week always contains good news even in its darkest corners — is that betrayal does not derail God’s purpose.

Even Judas’s decision becomes woven into the strange tapestry of redemption.

God’s grace, it turns out, is larger than human treachery.

That does not excuse betrayal. But it does remind us that God is never surprised by it.

Spy Wednesday invites us into a very honest prayer: not “Lord, show me who the Judas is,” but “Lord, keep my heart from drifting.”

Because loyalty to Christ is not sustained by enthusiasm alone.

It is sustained by humility, honesty, and the courage to return when we notice ourselves wandering.

And if Holy Week reveals the depths of human failure, it also reveals the deeper patience of divine love.

Even now.

Companion Prayer

Faithful Lord,
You know the places
where our loyalty wavers.

Guard our hearts
from quiet betrayal.
Keep us honest
when disappointment grows.

When we drift,
draw us back.

And in the shadow of this Holy Week,
anchor us again
in the steadfast love
that never abandons us.

Amen.

When Jesus Starts Saying the Quiet Parts Out Loud

By the time Tuesday of Holy Week arrives, the polite phase of the story is largely over.

Palm branches have been waved. The donkey has completed its historic ride into Jerusalem. The crowds have shouted their enthusiastic Hosannas, though some of them may already be reconsidering the long-term implications of that decision.

And now Jesus begins speaking with a clarity that makes everyone in the room slightly uncomfortable.

This is the day when the questions fly. Religious leaders approach with their carefully constructed traps. Political concerns hover in the background. The temple has already been thoroughly rearranged the day before.

And Jesus, rather than calming things down, proceeds to say the quiet parts out loud.

You know the sort of moment.

It is the moment in a meeting when someone finally names the issue everyone has been politely circling for forty-five minutes. There is usually a brief silence, followed by several people studying their notes with great concentration.

Tuesday in Holy Week is that moment.

Jesus tells parables that leave the authorities looking slightly exposed. He speaks about tenants who reject the owner’s son. He challenges hypocrisy with the calm precision of someone who knows exactly what he is doing.

This is not accidental.

The closer we move toward the cross, the more truth rises to the surface.

Lent has already been doing this quietly. It has asked us about repentance, forgiveness, patience, generosity, and the occasional spiritual grave cloth.

But Holy Week removes the polite filters.

Jesus is not interested in maintaining appearances. He is interested in revealing hearts.

And that can feel rather uncomfortable.

The remarkable thing is that Jesus does all of this without anger, without theatrics, without raising his voice to the point where the temple security team becomes nervous.

He simply speaks truth.

There is a certain courage in that — the courage to name what is real even when it unsettles the room.

Of course, most of us prefer gentler conversations.

We like encouragement. We like reassurance. We are quite fond of sermons that conclude with the comforting reminder that everything will probably work out nicely.

Tuesday of Holy Week is less interested in comfort.

It is interested in clarity.

Because the kingdom Jesus brings cannot be built on polite illusions. It requires honesty. It requires transformation. It requires a willingness to let God name the truth about our lives.

Which, fortunately, Jesus does with mercy as well as authority.

He exposes hypocrisy not to shame people but to invite them into something better.

Truth, in the hands of Christ, is not a weapon.

It is a doorway.

And if Tuesday of Holy Week feels a little sharp — if the Gospel presses closer than expected — take heart.

Sometimes love must speak plainly in order to heal deeply.

Companion Prayer

Lord of truth,
You see our hearts
more clearly than we do.

When your words challenge us,
give us humility.
When your truth unsettles us,
give us courage.

Remove the illusions
that keep us comfortable
but distant from you.

And lead us
through honesty
into deeper grace.

Amen.

When Love Becomes Extravagant

Holy Week begins not with thunder, but with perfume.

Which is not, if we are being honest, how most of us would organize the week that will change the history of the world.

The Gospel often gives us the scene in Bethany on this Monday. Jesus is at supper. Lazarus — recently returned from the dead and still probably adjusting to the experience — is at the table. Martha is serving, which will surprise absolutely no one familiar with Martha.

And Mary does something startling.

She takes a jar of perfume — expensive perfume — and pours it over Jesus’ feet.

Not a modest amount. Not a polite symbolic dab. The Gospel makes it clear: the whole jar.

The house fills with the fragrance.

Now, if you have ever watched someone open a very expensive bottle of anything and pour it out all at once, you will understand the reaction that follows.

Judas, representing the department of practical concerns, raises a perfectly sensible objection: “Why was this perfume not sold and the money given to the poor?”

It is the sort of comment that sounds extremely responsible.

Which makes it slightly awkward that Jesus immediately defends Mary.

Because what Mary does is not efficient.

It is extravagant.

Holy Week begins with this strange reminder: love does not always operate on a spreadsheet.

Mary sees something others do not yet fully grasp. She senses what is coming. The cross is near. The time for quiet gratitude is almost gone.

So she does something beautiful while there is still time.

There is a particular courage in that.

We often postpone acts of love until circumstances become clearer. Until we feel ready. Until the calendar settles down. Until the moment seems perfectly appropriate.

But Mary understands something we frequently forget: the moment for love is always now.

Her act is not wasteful. It is prophetic.

She anoints Jesus before the burial that will soon come.

The fragrance fills the house.

It is a beautiful image for Holy Week. One act of devotion altering the entire atmosphere.

And perhaps that is where this Monday speaks gently to us.

What fragrance does our life leave behind?

Not the scent of expensive perfume, perhaps — though the altar guild might appreciate the suggestion — but the fragrance of kindness. Generosity. Courage. Gratitude.

Extravagant love may not be efficient, but it is unforgettable.

Mary does not give a speech. She does not organize a campaign. She pours out what she has.

And the house is changed.

Holy Week begins with that invitation: do not wait for the perfect moment to love well.

Pour out the jar.

Companion Prayer

Lord Jesus,
You receive our offerings
not by their size
but by the love within them.

Teach us Mary’s courage —
to give generously,
to love freely,
and to recognize your presence
before the moment passes.

Let the fragrance of grace
fill the spaces where we live.

And help us pour out our lives
in devotion to you.

Amen.

The Most Confusing Parade in History

Palm Sunday may be the only parade in history where almost everyone misunderstands what they are celebrating.

The crowd is enthusiastic. Palms are waving. Cloaks are being thrown on the road with impressive spontaneity. People are shouting Hosanna! with the kind of volume usually reserved for playoff hockey.

And at the center of it all rides Jesus.

On a donkey.

Now, if one were designing a royal entrance into a major city, one might choose something slightly more imposing — perhaps a war horse, a chariot, or at the very least a well-polished camel. But Jesus arrives on what can only be described as the most humble form of transportation available.

This is not accidental.

Palm Sunday is the Gospel’s way of telling us that the kingdom of God rarely arrives the way we expect.

The crowd believes they are welcoming a political hero. A liberator. Someone who will finally straighten out the Romans, reorganize the religious establishment, and generally make everything run more efficiently.

It is the sort of expectation that would make most parish councils nod approvingly.

But Jesus is not entering Jerusalem to seize power.

He is entering Jerusalem to give himself away.

The palms wave for victory. The people cheer for triumph. The disciples may well be imagining cabinet positions.

And all the while, Jesus is riding calmly toward a cross.

It is, when you think about it, the most astonishing misunderstanding in the entire Gospel story.

Palm Sunday asks a question that is still very relevant: what kind of king are we hoping for?

We tend to prefer a Messiah who solves problems quickly, protects our interests, and confirms that we were correct all along. A Messiah who improves our circumstances while leaving our assumptions largely intact.

But the King who rides into Jerusalem does something far stranger.

He chooses humility over spectacle.
Sacrifice over domination.
Love over victory.

And here is the remarkable part: the same crowd that shouts Hosanna on Sunday will soon shout something quite different.

Human enthusiasm can be remarkably flexible.

Which is why Palm Sunday always carries a note of gentle warning for us. It reminds us that it is possible to celebrate Jesus without fully understanding him.

We wave palms. We sing hymns. We shout our praises.

But the real question is whether we are willing to follow him past the parade.

Because Palm Sunday is not the end of the story. It is the doorway to Holy Week — a week that will reveal what this strange kingship truly looks like.

The donkey walks forward.

The crowd cheers.

And somewhere beneath the celebration, the quiet courage of Christ continues its steady path toward love’s most difficult work.

It may not look like the kingdom we expected.

But it is the kingdom we need.

Companion Prayer

Lord Jesus,
You enter our world
not with power
but with humility.

When we seek glory,
teach us your gentleness.
When we expect triumph,
show us the strength of love.

Give us hearts
that follow you
not only in celebration
but through the whole journey of faith.

And lead us faithfully
through the days ahead
toward the victory of your grace.

Amen.

The Calm Before the Donkey

By the Saturday after the Fifth Sunday of Lent, the Church finds itself standing in a curious place.

The tension has been building all week.
Tombs have opened.
Perfume has filled the house.
Councils have gathered in uneasy whispers.
Silence has settled over difficult conversations.

And now, quite suddenly, the story pauses.

Tomorrow — as most parish bulletins will remind us in large enthusiastic fonts — involves palms, crowds, and a donkey with a very important scheduling appointment.

But today is quieter.

This Saturday sits in the Gospel like the deep breath before the choir begins the first hymn on Palm Sunday.

Something is coming.

Everyone senses it.

Jesus certainly does.

The authorities are nervous. The crowds are curious. The disciples, as usual, are somewhere between hopeful and slightly confused about the itinerary.

It is the calm before the donkey.

Now, calm is an interesting spiritual condition. We are not always comfortable with it. When things grow quiet, we assume something must be wrong. We begin checking emotional dashboards and spiritual gauges.

“Surely,” we think, “something dramatic should be happening.”

But the Gospel often moves through these quiet thresholds.

Saturday invites us to notice that God’s work is not always loud. Sometimes the most important movements of grace happen just before the visible action begins.

Jesus knows where he is going.

He knows the road to Jerusalem will involve cheers that turn to accusations, palms that give way to thorns, and a crowd whose enthusiasm will prove… flexible.

Yet he walks toward it calmly.

That calm is not denial. It is resolve.

The Christian life has many Palm Sunday moments — times when everything seems full of momentum and visible excitement. But there are also these Saturdays. Days when we stand at the edge of something important without quite stepping into it yet.

Perhaps you know that feeling.

You sense that change is coming. A decision. A shift. A challenge. A new calling. Something is gathering on the horizon.

And yet today remains still.

This Saturday reminds us that stillness is not wasted time. It is preparation. It is space where courage gathers quietly.

Even donkeys need time to be saddled.

So if your life feels slightly suspended today — not quite where you were, not yet where you are going — take heart.

You are in good company.

The Gospel often pauses before it moves.

And tomorrow, the road into Jerusalem begins.

Companion Prayer

Lord of the quiet threshold,
You lead us through stillness
as well as through action.

When the road ahead feels near
but not yet begun,
give us patience.

In the calm before change,
steady our hearts.
In the silence before the crowd,
anchor us in trust.

Prepare us
for whatever road lies ahead.

And help us walk it
with the same calm courage
we see in Christ.

Amen.

When Silence Says More Than Words

By Friday of the Fifth Week of Lent, the noise in the Gospel has grown intense.

There have been whispers. Meetings. Calculations. Fragrance filling the house. Tombs opening. Decisions hardening.

And then, almost unexpectedly, Jesus grows quiet.

The readings around this point often move us closer to confrontation. Questions sharpen. Accusations surface. Tension mounts. And yet Christ does not match anxiety with anxiety.

He does not panic.

He does not defend himself with frantic speeches.

He does not assemble a crisis management team, though one suspects the disciples would have formed a subcommittee had they been given half a chance.

Instead, there is a steadiness.

And sometimes, there is silence.

Silence, of course, makes us uncomfortable. We prefer resolution. Explanation. Clear messaging. We are suspicious of anything that does not immediately clarify itself.

But silence in Scripture is rarely absence. It is depth.

By Friday of Lent 5, we are standing at the edge of Holy Week. The machinery of betrayal is beginning to turn. The cross is no longer a distant possibility; it is a gathering certainty.

And Jesus does not rush to fill the air with reassurance.

He trusts the Father.

That may be one of the most challenging disciplines of Lent.

We have repented. We have forgiven (to the best of our slightly reluctant abilities). We have examined thirst and practiced patience. We have admired Mary’s yes and Joseph’s steadiness.

Now we are invited into something quieter: trust without constant explanation.

There are moments in the Christian life when words run out. When prayer feels less articulate and more like waiting. When clarity has not yet arrived.

In such moments, we are tempted to manufacture noise — to fill the silence with worry, speculation, or enthusiastic theological commentary.

But Jesus walks toward the cross with composure.

He does not deny the coming pain. He does not romanticize it. He simply continues.

The Friday before Holy Week reminds us that faith is not sustained by constant emotional intensity. It is sustained by trust.

Silence does not mean God is absent.

Sometimes it means God is at work beyond our comprehension.

If this Lent has brought you to a place where answers are fewer and questions sharper, take heart.

The Lord who speaks life into tombs also knows how to stand quietly before opposition.

And in that quiet, redemption unfolds.

Perhaps this Friday invites you not to strive for eloquence, but to rest in steady confidence.

You do not need to solve the story.

You need only remain faithful in it.

Companion Prayer

Faithful Christ,
When words fail
and answers seem distant,
hold us steady.

Teach us trust
that does not depend on noise.
Give us courage
to walk quietly
when clarity has not yet come.

In silence,
keep us near you.
In uncertainty,
anchor us in your love.

And lead us
toward the cross
with calm hearts.

Amen.

When the Crowd Begins to Whisper

By Thursday of the Fifth Week of Lent, the air in the Gospel story has shifted.

The perfume has been poured.
Lazarus has walked out of the tomb.
The authorities have begun to panic.

And somewhere in the background, a meeting is called.

There is something almost comical about it — in the driest possible biblical way. Lazarus is raised from the dead, and instead of applause, there is strategy. Instead of celebration, there is calculation.

“What are we to do?” they ask.

It is a fair question.

Because resurrection is inconvenient.

It disrupts tidy systems. It unsettles established arrangements. It makes people reconsider assumptions. It draws crowds. It threatens control.

The chief priests and Pharisees are not caricatures of villainy. They are anxious leaders trying to manage a situation spiralling beyond their influence.

Which, if we are honest, is a fairly universal human experience.

By Thursday of Lent 5, the cross is no longer theoretical. The tension is building. Jesus is no longer merely teaching; he is unsettling.

And here is the uncomfortable truth: we prefer a manageable Messiah.

We like our faith inspiring but not destabilizing. Encouraging but not disruptive. Devotional but not world-altering.

But when death loses its grip — when tombs open — systems tremble.

The religious leaders worry about Rome. They worry about public reaction. They worry about losing their place and their nation.

Anxiety, it seems, can dress itself in very pious clothing.

And so they decide something must be done.

There is a peculiar irony here. In attempting to preserve stability, they set in motion the very events that will reveal God’s deepest purpose.

Human fear meets divine intention.

Lent often exposes our quieter anxieties. What feels threatened? What feels unstable? What are we trying to preserve at all costs?

The Gospel suggests that sometimes what we are trying to preserve is precisely what needs to be surrendered.

Caiaphas, with a certain grim efficiency, remarks that it is better for one man to die than for the nation to perish.

He speaks more truth than he realises.

God’s purposes often unfold through the very calculations meant to prevent them.

By Thursday of this week, the path to Jerusalem is unmistakable. The whispers have grown louder. Decisions are being made.

And yet Jesus continues walking.

There is something deeply reassuring about that.

The crowd may whisper. The leaders may scheme. The tension may rise.

But Christ is not hurried.

He is not surprised by opposition. He is not deterred by anxiety.

He walks steadily toward love’s completion.

If this Lent has stirred unease in you — if resurrection has unsettled something you thought stable — do not panic.

The Gospel does not promise comfort without cost.

It promises that even when fear gathers in council, grace remains sovereign.

And sometimes, when the crowd begins to whisper, God is already writing redemption into the margins.

Companion Prayer

Sovereign God,
When fear gathers
and anxiety whispers,
steady us.

Where we cling to control,
teach us trust.
Where we resist change,
open us to your purpose.

Give us courage
to follow Christ
even when the path is costly.

And remind us
that no scheme,
no fear,
no council of worry
can thwart your redeeming love.

Amen.

When God Interrupts Your Plans (Politely, But Firmly)

There is something delightfully inconvenient about March 25 landing in the middle of Lent.

Just when we are deep in tombs and perfume and rising tension toward Jerusalem, the Church quietly clears its throat and says, “Oh, and by the way — today we remember an angel interrupting a young woman’s life with news that will rearrange the universe.”

The Annunciation arrives in purple.

Which feels a bit like someone announcing a wedding during a particularly serious vestry meeting.

And yet, it belongs exactly here.

Because March 25 is about beginnings. About divine initiative. About grace entering ordinary life without first requesting a scheduling consultation.

Mary is minding her own business when Gabriel appears. There is no evidence she had been anticipating this. She is not filling out an application for “Mother of the Messiah.” She is not attending a workshop entitled How to Respond to Unexpected Archangelic Visitations.

She is simply living.

And then heaven interrupts.

If the Fifth Sunday of Lent placed us outside a tomb, March 25 places us inside a quiet room in Nazareth. A conversation unfolds. A promise is spoken. A future is announced that Mary did not draft.

Her response is both courageous and astonishingly calm.

“Let it be to me according to your word.”

Now, I do not know about you, but if an angel were to inform me that my entire life plan required immediate revision, I would likely request clarification, documentation, and possibly a short period of reflection.

Mary asks a question — sensibly — and then consents.

There is a steadiness in her that feels almost unsettling.

March 25 in Lent reminds us that salvation does not begin with our effort. It begins with God’s initiative. Before there is cross, before there is tomb, before there is resurrection, there is consent.

There is a young woman saying yes.

And her yes does not remove uncertainty. It does not eliminate risk. It does not come with a fully illustrated roadmap.

It is trust.

The Christian life, particularly deep in Lent, can start to feel like something we are managing. We are repenting. Forgiving. Being patient. Attempting devotion. Watching stones move.

And then March 25 gently reminds us: this story began with grace long before you organized it.

God enters quietly. Unexpectedly. Not through spectacle, but through availability.

Mary’s greatness lies not in dramatic heroics but in openness. She does not understand everything. She does not control the outcome. She simply yields.

Which, if we are honest, may be the most demanding form of faith.

It is one thing to strive. It is another to surrender.

Lent is drawing us toward the cross. March 25 reminds us that the cross itself began with incarnation — with God choosing to dwell in vulnerability.

And it began with a yes.

Perhaps today asks not whether we understand God’s plan, but whether we are willing to be interrupted by it.

Where is grace asking to take root in your ordinary life?

Where is God gently revising your expectations?

Where is a quiet yes waiting?

If an angel does appear, you may of course seek counsel.

But if God’s invitation comes in subtler form — through conscience, compassion, conviction — do not overlook it.

The kingdom of God has always begun in small rooms.

And sometimes, in the middle of Lent, heaven whispers:

Begin again.

Companion Prayer

God of holy interruptions,

You enter our ordinary days

with extraordinary grace.

When your call unsettles us,

steady us.

When your invitation surprises us,

give us courage.

Teach us Mary’s trust —

to ask honestly,

to listen carefully,

and to say yes

when love requires it.

May Christ be formed in us

as we walk this Lenten road.

Amen.

When the Fragrance Fills the House

By Tuesday of the Fifth Week of Lent, we are well past polite spirituality.

The tomb has been opened. Lazarus has shuffled out. Grave clothes are being removed at a respectable pace. The air is charged with the nearness of Jerusalem.

And then, in one of the most tender scenes in all of Scripture, Mary of Bethany does something entirely impractical.

She breaks open a jar of costly perfume and pours it over Jesus’ feet.

The house, we are told, is filled with the fragrance.

Now, if you have ever been responsible for parish finances, you may sympathize slightly with Judas at this point. “This could have been sold,” he mutters. “Funds allocated. Efficiency maintained.”

Which is to say, the treasurer has entered the chat.

But Mary is not operating on efficiency.

She is responding to love.

There is something extravagant about this moment. The perfume is costly. The gesture is public. The timing is inconvenient. The cross is looming. The air itself is changed.

By Wednesday of Lent 5, the season grows more intimate. We are no longer simply considering repentance or patience. We are being drawn toward devotion.

Mary does not calculate return on investment. She does not wait for a more sensible moment. She pours out what she has because she knows who stands before her.

Love, when it recognizes love, does not negotiate.

And yet, we are such reasonable people.

We prefer devotion in measured portions. A dignified hymn. A well-structured prayer. A charitable act that fits comfortably into our calendar. We are less comfortable with anything that looks… excessive.

But the Gospel seems unconcerned with moderation at this point.

The fragrance fills the house.

It is a beautiful image — the idea that one act of love can alter the atmosphere of an entire room.

And here is where Lent gently presses us.

What fills the house of our lives?

Efficiency?
Worry?
Careful spiritual accounting?

Or something fragrant?

Mary’s act is not sentimental. It is prophetic. She anoints Jesus for burial before anyone else dares to name what is coming. Her devotion is not naïve; it is courageous.

She gives now because she knows time is short.

Perhaps this Wednesday asks us not for grand gestures, but for honesty about love.

Have we grown cautious in our devotion?
Measured in our generosity?
Afraid of appearing foolish for Christ?

The Gospel suggests that love which risks embarrassment may be closer to holiness than love that stays tidy.

And if the fragrance lingers long after the jar is empty, perhaps that is the point.

A life poured out in love may seem extravagant in the moment.

But it changes the air for everyone.

Companion Prayer

Lord of costly love,
You receive what we pour out
without calculation.

Where we have grown cautious,
soften us.
Where we have measured devotion,
free us.

Teach us the courage
to love extravagantly,
to give generously,
and to fill the spaces around us
with the fragrance of grace.

May our lives be poured out
for you,
without fear
and without reserve.

Amen.