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Summary: We talk about worship all the time. But do we really know what worship is? If we’ve never had a breathtaking experience with worshipping Jesus, then we probably don’t. In our passage, Mary had a breathtaking experience with Jesus that is a great exampl

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1. The first attribute of urgent adoration is that urgent adoration is unrestrained.

2. The second attribute of urgent adoration is that urgent adoration is impractical.

3. The third attribute of urgent adoration is that urgent adoration is irreproachable.

4. The fourth attribute of urgent adoration is that urgent adoration is unsurpassed.

MATTHEW 26:6-13

When was the last time you had your breath taken away? I’m not talking about the last time you got the wind knocked out of you. I’m talking about the last time you saw something so wonderful that it took your breath away. When was the last time? It seems that those times are very few and far between in our lives, doesn’t it? The first time I remember feeling that way was when I was in high school. A group of us guys went backpacking in the Rocky Mountains. I remember feeling that way when I saw the awesomeness of the night sky from our campsite at 13,000 feet elevation. I have still never seen a night sky like that one. A few years later, I got that same feeling when the wedding march sounded and my bride-to-be came around the corner from the hallway of our church and walked into the sanctuary. She absolutely took my breath away. The other times I remember are each time I held one of our babies for the first time. Breathtaking moments. Each of us have had them. You can’t script them. You can’t prepare for them. You can’t make them up. They are virtually indescribable. But they are unmistakably real. As real as those encounters people in the Bible have had with entering the presence of the Lord. You remember what happened when Isaiah saw the Lord in Isaiah 6. When he saw the Lord, he was completely undone. Being in the presence of the Lord made him cry out, “Woe is me! For I am undone. Because I am a man of unclean lips and I dwell in the midst of a people of unclean lips. For mine eyes have seen the King—the Lord of hosts.” When Ezekiel saw only the “appearance of the likeness of the glory of the Lord,” What happened to him? He immediately fell on his face. In the book of Revelation, when John saw the risen Jesus in all His heavenly glory, what did he do? He said, “I fell at His feet as dead.” I guess it would be an understatement to say that those were breathtaking moments. Moments of pure, unhindered worship. Moments of adoration of God in all of His Trinitarian glory. But do we have to wait until we see Jesus face to face to have breathtaking moments with Him? Do we have to wait for some time in the future to adore Him? To worship Him? No—as a matter of fact, that is the kind of relationship we are supposed to have with Jesus right now. We talk about worship all the time. But do we really know what worship is? If we’ve never had a breathtaking experience with worshipping Jesus, then we probably don’t. In our passage, Mary had a breathtaking experience with Jesus. From the parallel passage in John 12, we know that the woman in our passage was Mary, the sister of Martha and Lazarus. This is the same Mary that hung on Jesus’ every word while her sister Martha was busy doing the housework. Mary urgently adored Jesus as her teacher. The housework could wait. She was going to give her full, undivided attention to the Living Word of God. And in our passage, Mary urgently adores Jesus as her Lord and Savior. Nothing was going to stand in the way of Mary whole-heartedly worshipping Jesus. How is our worship this morning? What do we let get in the way of our whole-heartedly worshipping Jesus this morning? What do we have in our lives that is more urgent that adoring the One who created us and bought us with His blood this morning? I want each of us to urgently adore Jesus this morning. But not just this morning. I want us to quit seeing worship as just another thing we casually do in our lives. I want us to see worship for what it is. Urgent, abandoned, whole-hearted, committed adoration of our Lord Jesus Christ. And Mary is a great example of that. So, from her example, we’re going to see four attributes of urgent adoration. The first attribute is found in verse 7:

MATTHEW 26:7

The first attribute of urgent adoration is that urgent adoration is unrestrained. Picture the scene with me. It’s Saturday night. The night before Palm Sunday. Remember that Matthew doesn’t always list things in chronological order. Many times, he organizes things according to a theme rather than according to time. So, here we are on the Saturday night prior to Palm Sunday. Jesus is with His dear friends, Lazarus, Martha and Mary. It was only days prior to this that Jesus called Lazarus forth from the grave. And here they were sharing a meal together. They were having that meal in the house of another friend. A friend who is only identified as Simon the Leper. Since the man was in his house and preparing a meal, he had obviously been healed of his leprosy. And since there was no cure, it is obvious that Jesus is the one who had healed him. So Jesus was sharing food and fellowship with two men he had brought back from the dead. Lazarus back from physical death, and Simon back from social and emotional death. Imagine the joy! Imagine the wonderful, intimate friendship and fellowship! And walking up behind Jesus is Lazarus’ and Martha’s sister Mary. She’s not involved in the conversation. She’s not laughing and talking with the others. She’s not concerned with the meal. Her focus is only on One. Her focus is only on Her Lord. In her hand, she held a bottle. But this was no ordinary bottle. It was an Alabaster bottle. Alabaster is a beautiful semi-transparent gemstone. It was used to make containers which would hold only the most expensive and precious contents. When the contents were extremely precious, the makers would work the stone in such a way that the only way to empty it would be to break the container. It was the ultimate example of extravagance. This particular bottle contained some of the most exclusive perfume of the day. When Scripture says that it was “very precious” in verse 7, that word carries a dual meaning. It means that the perfume was precious because it was extremely expensive. It cost over a year’s wages. The average annual income in Mercer county is somewhere around $35,000. Can you imagine a $35,000 bottle of perfume? That’s what Mary had. But not only was it precious because it was expensive. The word also carries the meaning of having sentimental value. It would have the same value to her of a priceless heirloom. Something that had been passed down for generations. To steal a line from a MasterCard commercial, it was priceless. Mary fully understood the value of the priceless bottle she held in her hand. But she also fully understood the eternal value of the Savior seated in front of her. So she broke the bottle. She broke the bottle and slowly poured the perfume over Jesus’ head. The powerfully fragrant oil ran down His hair, down His face, and into His beard. It soaked into His garments and dripped down onto His feet. According to John’s account of the same event, Mary then knelt down and wiped Jesus’ feet with her hair. The wonderfully powerful scent of spikenard perfume filled the house. It permeated the nostrils of all who were there. Mary’s act of adoration to her Savior was unrestrained. The financial cost didn’t restrain her. The emotional cost didn’t restrain her. Worrying about what other people would think didn’t restrain her. Adoring Jesus was her whole focus. Nothing would restrain her from offering Him her best, most costly act of adoration and worship. She didn’t wait. She didn’t think about it. She didn’t stall or put it off. She would not be restrained. She urgently did it. Gave her best. Gave her all. Extravagantly. Lavishly. Costly. Unrestrained. But her act of worship wasn’t appreciated by everybody there. There were those who saw what she did as impractical. And it was gloriously impractical. The first attribute of urgent adoration is that urgent adoration is unrestrained. It is also impractical. Look at verses 8-9

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Mike Shreve

commented on Aug 7, 2011

Love this sermon brother!

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