At RTS Charlotte, Jim Kallam preaches a chapel message on Luke 10:38-40 entitled "One Best Thing." So we all got up this morning. Guess what we did? We made a choice as to what we were going to wear because I notice you guys don’t have uniforms here at RTS. I’ve got grandkids who go to schools where there are uniforms, and they don’t have a choice. They’ve got to wear whatever the uniform is for that day. But we make choices. What we wore today is probably really an inconsequential choice. Other choices we make have huge consequences. You’ve chosen to come to school at RTS. There are consequences to that, and that’s not a bad thing, it’s just there are results that will take place. When I was growing up, my dad, who was in Christian education all of his life—I’ve got many endearing images of my dad; he went home to be with Lord two years ago. But one of those is as a young kid getting up and going to school was my dad teaching an 8:00 class at the college, and a pot of coffee being brewed. My dad would get his coffee and head off to his class. My dad drank his coffee black. I drink my coffee black. In those days you had two choices: regular or decaf. Starbucks now says they have 87,000 choices. It seems like whenever I get in line at Starbucks, I’m behind somebody who can’t decide which one of the 87,000 choices they want to make for their coffee that morning. When I was growing up as a kid, there were three television stations: NBC, CBS, and ABC. You had to adjust these funny things on top of your television to make sure that they came in the right perspective. Who knows how many channels there are now? There are more ESPN channels alone than there were TV channels. We make choices in life, and that’s our lives. So here’s what I would say to us: we need to choose wisely. On those things that matter, we need to choose wisely, and so I want to take you to a passage in the New Testament where choices had to be made. It’s in the gospel of Luke. It’s in the tenth chapter. I’m sure for all of you it’s a very familiar story about two sisters. I want to read the story, and I want you to be honest in your own heart with which way you’d land on this thing if you didn’t know what Jesus said. We all know what Jesus said, so we know what the right answer is, but let’s just listen to the story as it unfolds. It says in verse 38:
Now as they went on their way, Jesus entered a village. And a woman named Martha welcomed him into her house. And she had a sister called Mary, who sat at the Lord’s feet listening to his teaching. But Martha was distracted with much serving. And she went up to him [meaning Jesus] and said, “Lord, do you not care that my sister has left me to serve alone? Tell her then to help me.”And if the story stopped right there, here’s what I believe: most of us, if not all of us, would be on Martha’s side. Just envision in your home: you’ve got the most important person that you could possibly have walk through the door of your house to come to dinner. Just envision it. And it’s your home. And your sister or your brother or somebody in your household is not helping you get ready for that meal. We would be on Martha’s side. Here’s the reason why: because we all live in a Martha’s world. We do. We’re going to be busy with life. You take it into the Christian world, into the church world, and there’s an old spiritual that went, “I’m just going to be busy serving my Jesus.” That’s what we want to be. We’re Marthas. We love to do. I grew up in the church, and in our church every year two things happened: an annual missions conference for a week and an annual prophecy conference for a week. Those are the two things every year in my church you could count on. I remember one of the mission’s conferences—I was probably a young teenager at the time. Very powerful mission speaker, very passionate man who had the world at his heart said this, and it preaches so good: “I’d rather burn out for Jesus than rust out.” Wow. George Whitefield said something similar to that, he said, “I’d rather wear out for Jesus than rust out.” And I remember as a young teenager going, “Wow, that’s good. I’m going to burn out for Jesus rather than rust out.” You know what the two things have in common? In both of them, you’re out. I mean, think about it. You’re burned out? Great, you’re out. You’re going to rust out? You’re out. I ought to be in. I don’t want to be out. George Barna, in one of his recent surveys, said this, that every month 1,500 people leave church ministry either due to burnout or to conflict or to moral failure. Fifteen hundred a month who are busy doing things because that’s the way we live our lives. Don’t just sit there, do something. Well, in this passage, there are three words used to describe Martha, and I want to talk about those three words. One is a word that Luke uses and two are words that Jesus uses. Verse 40: But Martha was distracted [there’s Luke’s word] with much serving. And she went up to him and said, “Lord, do you not care that my sister has left me to serve alone? Tell her then to help me.” But the Lord answered her. “Martha, Martha, you are anxious [second word] and troubled [third word] about many things, but one thing is necessary. Mary has chosen the good portion, which will not be taken away from her.”