Women of the Bible You Need to MeetSample
Mary and Martha
For further reading see Luke 10:38-42 and John 11:1-44
We often begin by contrasting the sisters Mary and Martha; but start a step back. What they have in common is welcoming Jesus. Martha opens her home to him. Mary sits at His feet. Both are faithful actions. Mary is accepted here in the posture of a disciple, unusual for a woman at that time. When their brother Lazarus dies, we again see the faith of both. While other disciples struggled to understand who Jesus is and what He would do, Martha shows great understanding, declaring Jesus to be the Messiah. Both sisters knew that Jesus could have saved Lazarus from death. We are told in John 11:5 that Jesus loved them and their brother, a personal statement showing the intimacy between Jesus and this family, and he weeps with them in their grief. This family shows the personal intimacy Jesus has with disciples, and that women were included within this.
Paul says disciples should rejoice with those who rejoice, and weep with those who weep (Rom 12:15). How can we develop close supportive friendship within the church, within and between the genders?
PRAYER
Jesus, help us to remember that you call us friend, and call us into friendship with each other. Please give us healthy intimacy with each other and with you. Amen.
Scripture
About this Plan
There are many women we know well from the Bible: Eve, Sarah, Mary. But there are others who are less known to us. This series will look at 22 biblical women. We see midwives, daughters, queens, prophets, disciples, teachers, mothers and grandmothers. Why have these women been included and named in the Bible? What do they have to tell us about God and about ourselves?
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We would like to thank Bible Society Australia for providing this plan. For more information, please visit: http://biblesociety.org.au