Yesterday, July 23, was Mary Magdalene day. A lady 
                important to the gospel of Jesus Christ was honored. How do I 
                know? The Church Calendar showed me. 
                
                I trust you know about the Church Calendar. It’s a marvelous 
                  document for people like me, who see the church as a family, 
                  a community, and a lovely body for the Lord. I yearn for all 
                  of Christ’s people all over the world to recognize one 
                  another, literally, as brothers and sisters, closer in bond 
                  than our flesh and blood family, as important as that family 
                  is or should be. We and the faithful in heaven are the Communion 
                  of Saints, now and forever.
                I desire with all my being for the beautiful Body of Christ 
                  to be close beyond the natural, because it is supernatural. 
                  Jesus died to bring it into reality and visibility. I want the 
                  Holy Spirit, the Lord and giver of life (2 Corinthians 2:17 
                  and Romans 8:11, RSV), to rest upon the church as it meets and 
                  to appear as flames springing from our meeting houses everywhere 
                  so that strangers will be breaking the doors down to get in 
                  where God is. I mean that. It has happened before (read about 
                  the Great Awakening as it took hold of the streets of New York, 
                  especially on Fulton Street. John McCandlish Phillips, the best 
                  reporter I’ve known, gave me a copy of "The Second Evangelical 
                  Awakening" by the great and modest J. Edwin Orr, published by 
                  the Christian Literature Crusade, 1955. Get it!).
                Back to Mary Magdalene. Scripture describes her as the lady 
                  out of whom seven demons were cast and the one who witnessed 
                  most of the events during Christ’s suffering: the mock 
                  trial in which she heard Pilate pronounce the death sentence; 
                  the beating of Christ and His humiliation by the crowd. Also, 
                  she stood by the cross with Christ’s mother during the 
                  crucifixion itself. I have remembered her well for many years 
                  as the one to whom Jesus first revealed Himself after rising 
                  from the dead (John 20:11-18). I wrote about it this way:
                instantly the earth reeled in merriment
                and events raced with hymnal accompaniment
                as nature’s lover named sun
                splashed his caresses
                upon that moment
                and history’s cymbals clashed
                nevertheless the soft footsteps
                pierced Mary’s consciousness
                and she turned to speak
                "if you have carried my Lord
                away please"
                the silence of one second stopped time
                until Jesus spoke for eternity "Mary"
                At least one scholar I read noted that Magdalene had often 
                  been associated with women of shady reputation, most of whom 
                  were named Mary. This may have accounted for a prominent study 
                  of the Bible’s comment that Jesus may have revealed Himself 
                  as Lord to her first in the Tomb Garden on resurrection morning 
                  because she needed Him so badly. The account noted that the 
                  word translated "weeping" by Mary was better rendered "wailing" 
                  and loud crying. However, there is no Biblical evidence to link 
                  Mary Magdalene to those other women. She simply was close to 
                  Jesus and His mother, also named Mary.
                As I studied the calendar, I noted that the Magdalene Day is 
                  followed immediately by a day honoring James the Apostle, as 
                  opposed to James, the brother of Jesus who was the head of the 
                  Jerusalem Church and the author of the Book of James in the 
                  Bible. The apostle, the brother of John, was killed by Herod 
                  following an explosion of the persecution of Christians after 
                  Stephen’s martyrdom. Jesus early on named James and John 
                  the "Sons of Thunder" (Mark 3:17); they were ambitious, craved 
                  to be great, and to sit at Christ’s right and left in 
                  His Kingdom (Mark 10:37, 43), the subject of a famous teaching 
                  by Jesus. 
                It seemed noteworthy to me that Mary Magdalene, like the Virgin 
                  Mary and several others, received significant places in the 
                  gospels for their work to fill the needs of the Lord and presumably 
                  the Twelve as they traveled and ministered. They were hard working 
                  and deep-loving women of ministry, which means service. It seems 
                  to me that we need to learn from their work and their place 
                  with the Lord, and stop dilly-dallying over the role of women 
                  in church ministry. Mary Magdalene was apparently an outstanding 
                  servant, and she was movingly rewarded by being the one to whom 
                  He first revealed Himself that first Easter morning.
                Also, consider the honor given to the Lord’s mother. 
                  Let’s stop fretting about sainthood, miracles, and lavish 
                  honor and at least recognize her as a major figure in history 
                  and a major teacher of the Christian faith. Nothing exceeds 
                  the Magnificat for beauty and wisdom. Does Mary heal and do 
                  other miracles today? I have no idea; I hope so. I also am uninformed 
                  about what she did at Ephesus in those early years, but do not 
                  doubt a bit that she and certainly others were invaluable. I 
                  think of Mary and Martha; maybe the woman taken in adultery 
                  who was forgiven and sent on her way; possibly the woman who 
                  anointed Jesus’ feet and head at a meal; perhaps Peter’s 
                  mother-in-law who fed Christ’s cohort and accommodated 
                  an unusual healing service; and who knows, even Priscilla of 
                  "Priscilla and Aquila, the tentmakers," friends of Paul who 
                  moved about the Mediterranean and ministered wherever they were. 
                  It seems a lot of Bible characters were in and out of Ephesus, 
                  which grew an important church.
                I’ve told many of you that I met Mother Teresa at a gathering 
                  in Washington a few years ago. I say unequivocally that she 
                  was a woman of God upon whom the presence of God rested in a 
                  manifest way. She is a minister if ever there was one.
                Happy Mary Magdalene’s Day, everybody!
               A caring friend will be there to pray with you in your time of need.