Martha,
named in the Gospels of St. Luke and St. John, was the sister of
Lazarus, the friend of Jesus whom the Lord resurrected. She was also the
sister of Mary Magdalen, the repentant sinner whom the Lord converted
from a life of sin. They lived in Bethany, thought to be the town
al-Eizariya, two miles from Jerusalem.The Gospels speak of Martha as a
dutiful housekeeper, serving the Lord hospitably when He visited:"but
Martha was busy about much serving…" (Luke 10:40) Complaining that her
sister Mary was listening to Him instead of helping, Our Lord sweetly
rebuked : "Martha, Martha, thou art careful, and art troubled about many
things: But one thing is necessary. Mary hath chosen the best part,
which shall not be taken away her" (Luke 10:41-42) - words the Master
which established the priority of prayer for all time.When her brother,
Lazarus, fell ill, she sent for the Lord, but He delayed and when He
arrived, Lazarus had been four days in the tomb. She complained to Jesus
about His delay, but He assured her: "I am the resurrection and the
life: he that believeth in me, although he be dead, shall live." (John
11:25) And he proceeded to call Lazarus forth the tomb before a crowd of
astonished witnesses.After the martyrdom of St. James in Jerusalem, as
persecution intensified, tradition says that Lazarus and his two
sisters, along with others, were placed in a boat and set out to sea.
This boat landed on the southern shore of France. While Lazarus and
Martha went on to evangelize Provence, a fact recorded in French
history, Mary retired to a cave in a mountain, to do penance for the
rest of her life.Martha is said to have died about the year 84. Her tomb
is located in the crypt of the Collegiate Church of Tarrascon, France.
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