Today,
the Gospel summarizes two attitudes about God: Jesus Christ and life,
in itself. Judas criticizes Mary for anointing Jesus' feet: «Judas,
son of Simon Iscariot —the disciple who was to betray Jesus—
remarked, ‘This perfume could have been sold for three hundred
silver coins and turned over to the poor’» (Jn
12:4-5). What Judas said did make sense, and it ties in with Jesus'
doctrine. But it is much too easy to criticize what others may do,
even when they had no hidden intentions, as it was the case with
Judas.
Whatever our protest it
must be an act of responsibility: with our protest we have to ask
ourselves how would we do it instead, what are we willing to do, to
do it better. Otherwise, our protest may just be —as it is
actually the case here— the complaint, those who normally do
it, wrongly use to make before those who try to do it the best they
can.
Mary
anoints Jesus' feet and she wipes them with her hair, because she
truly believes this is what she must do. Her behavior can be
qualified of splendid magnanimity: «Mary took a pound of costly
perfume made from genuine nard» (Jn 12:3). It is an act
of love, and like any act of love, difficult to understand by those
who do not share it. I think that, as of that moment, Mary realized
what, centuries later would write saint Augustine: «Maybe in
this world the feet of our Lord are still in need. For, of whom,
other than his members, said He: ‘Whatever you do unto the
least of these, you do unto me. You spend that which you do not need,
but you have done that which is good for my feet’».
Judas' complaint has no
utility whatsoever, and it only led him to treachery. Mary's act led
her to love her Lord even more and, as a consequence, to love more
all the “feet” of Christ there are on this world.