Tomorrow, 29 July, Roman Catholics celebrate the Memorial of Sts Martha, Mary, and Lazarus. On 26 Jan 2021 Pope Francis expanded the memorial of St Martha to include Mary and Lazarus.
Anglicans in Aotearoa, New Zealand and Polynesia move the celebration to today and have expanded this to Mary and Martha of Bethany. There is a separate feast day for Mary Magdalene on 22 July.
The Church of England (29 July) has also expanded beyond Martha and Mary to include their brother, Lazarus. The celebration in the CofE’s Common Worship is “Mary, Martha and Lazarus, Companions of Our Lord”. Benedictine Daily Prayer celebrates “St. Martha, St. Mary, and St. Lazarus – Hosts of the Lord”. [Future revisers of the Calendar for Anglicans in Aotearoa, New Zealand and Polynesia take note!]
The Episcopal Church’s Holy Women Holy Men puts “[and Lazarus]” (29 July) in square brackets. But there’s no brackets in its collect:
Generous God, whose Son Jesus Christ enjoyed the friendship and hospitality of Mary, Martha and Lazarus of Bethany: Open our hearts to love you, our ears to hear you, and our hands to welcome and serve you in others, through Jesus Christ our risen Lord; who with you and the Holy Spirit lives and reigns, one God, for ever and ever. Amen.
Holy Women Holy Men, page 493
There’s so much worth reflecting on around this Bethany household, clearly so important in Jesus’ life. Did Lazarus have some form of disability? It is “Martha’s home” (Luke 10:38-42) in this patriarchal society; there are no conversations of Lazarus recorded… Is Lazarus (the one whom Jesus loves John 11:3) the “Beloved Disciple” who lies beneath the Fourth Gospel as its ‘author’? Might, in that theory, Lazarus’ being raised from the dead help account for the different and deeper approach to the Synoptics? Is there any relationship between the Lazarus death-and-resurrection story in John and the Lazarus parable in Luke?
There’s something about Martha and Mary?
Heavenly Father, your Son called Lazarus from the grave and sat at table in the house of Bethany. Like Martha, may we serve him faithfully in our brothers and sisters and with Mary ponder and feed upon his word. This we ask of you…
Benedictine Daily Prayer page 1,849