Sermon 6-16-13 Luke 7:36-8:3
Some
weeks it seems as if there is an embarrassment of riches in our
lectionary. Today we get not only one of
the great (and intrigue filled) Old Testament stories, but also one of my
favorite of Jesus’ teachings in the New Testament. We also have Paul strongly stating his
theology on justification by faith vs. the law – something a Lutheran preacher usually
loves to dig into!
And
then we have men behaving badly, specifically David, as well as stories of both
Old and New Testament women just begging to be told: Bathsheba, who get wedged into the background
during the story of David’s lying, cheating, murdering, and scheming; and then Mary
Magdalene, Joanna, and Suzanna, whose mention just get pasted into our Gospel
almost as an afterthought. (and ironic perhaps to have all these women on
Father’s Day!)
Each
one of these readings deserves an entire sermon devoted to them: The full story of King David’s many sins and
how they affected his victims needs its own focus.
And
Paul’s sweeping indictment of the notion “God helps those who help themselves”
could cover a sermon series; and a sermon on the other disciples of Jesus
– the women who supported Jesus’ ministry - sometimes financially – also should
stand alone.
But
since I am pretty sure you don’t want me to talk for the next several hours, we
are left instead with two disparate characters – a proud Pharisee named Simon
and the woman whose behavior can be described kindly as embarrassing.
And
of course, the preacher, healer, teacher, savior, who connects them.
When
I was a kid I remember feeling a tiny hint of the embarrassment that the woman in
our Gospel causes today. Every time in
worship my mom would sing just a little too loudly, or pray just a bit too
long, or God forbid, cry during a prayer or sermon or hymn, I’d cringe. As a twelve year old I am pretty sure I
thought my mom was a religious nut.
What
on earth, I wondered, could drive a person to act so crazy in a dignified place
like church?
Something
also meant to be dignified are symposiums or salons – that’s the kind of dinner
Jesus was taking part in at Simon the Pharisee’s home. A dinner for conversation and teaching and
discussion. A place for great minds to
debate the ideas of the day.
Now
it isn’t clear why Simon invited Jesus.
To test him? To mock him? Because he was really interested in him?
It’s
unlikely that it was the latter, since we know from Jesus that Simon broke
several rules of hospitality: he did not greet his guest with a kiss or water
to wash his feet or anoint his head with oil – all things a proper first century
host would do for a respected guest.
But
Jesus was as least a guest that Simon expected, and far more welcome than the
woman who barged into the middle of his dinner to create a mortifying scene for
the host – far more mortifying than my mom’s religious fervor was to me!
As
with the case of many characters in the Gospels, this woman has no name. She is sometimes referred to as the “Sinful”
Woman, and sometimes the “Anointing” Woman.
Because this story is similar in some ways to ones from Matthew, Mark,
and John, she often gets confused as Lazarus’ sister, Mary of Bethany, who
anointed Jesus’ feet in the Gospel of John.
And
sometimes she is thought to be Mary Magdalene or the adulterous woman who was
nearly stoned to death but saved when Jesus says “Let anyone among you who is
without sin be the first to throw a stone.”
Whoever
she is, we know very little about her.
We don’t know what her “sin” is – though I am sure that many of us
(myself included) assumed off the bat that it was prostitution. But we don’t
know that’s what it was. We do know however the one thing that matters.
That
she is shamelessly, embarrassingly, flagrantly full of unsparing, unwavering,
unlimited love for Jesus.
There
is a key difference between this the story of this anointing woman and those
found in Matthew, Mark, and John. In
each of those gospels, whether the woman is unnamed or is Mary of Bethany, the
reason for the anointing has to do with Jesus’ impending death. Each
of those stories happens near the end of the gospels, and the womens’ devotion
is seen as a preparation for Jesus’ burial.
But
our woman today has a different purpose.
Jesus death is still a ways off.
For this woman, it is all about gratitude for the incredible gift of
forgiveness she’s been already given.
Already
given. When we meet this woman, she’s
already met Jesus before. He’s forgiven
her already. Jesus tells Simon near the
end of the story:
Her sins, which were many, have been
forgiven; hence she has shown great love.
Jesus
hasn’t forgiven her because she’s come prostrate at his feet and bathed his
feet with her tears. She’s not coming
begging to be forgiven. She’s already been forgiven, and her response
embarrasses everyone in the room except the person who has forgiven her.
So
Jesus tells another of his parables.
“A
certain creditor had two debtors; one owed five hundred denarii, and the
other fifty. When they could not pay, he canceled the debts for
both of them. Now which of them will love him more?”
Simon answered, “I suppose the one for
whom he canceled the greater debt.”
He
supposes? Really?
This
woman has shown great love because she knows the value of forgiveness. She’s
had five hundred denarii hanging over her head for ages. “But the one to whom little is forgiven, loves little.” Jesus says.
“The one to whom little is forgiven, loves
little.”
Jesus
isn’t judging Simon here or saying he isn’t forgiven. He’s describing the situation. And, like all
great teachers, he is telling a profound truth, and this truth is about the
value of forgiveness.
In
other words, what Jesus is saying is this: Those who don’t think they need
forgiveness, love little. If we can’t
admit what we need, then we aren’t going to notice when we get the remedy that
we are missing. That’s not an
indictment. It’s a description.
On
the other hand: if your whole life is spent with a daily reminder of your
faults, your failings, and your sins; if you are referred to as the Sinful Woman,
The Drunk, The Jerk, The Drug Addict, The Racist, The Loser, The Loner, The
Womanizer, as if that were your name; if the reality of your sinfulness has
come to define you and has taken so strong a hold of you that you don’t know
another part of yourself, then yes, you know the value of forgiveness.
The value of forgiveness is
freedom. The woman in our gospel today
wasn’t even seen as an individual by those around Simon’s table except by
Jesus.
Instead for them she is simply a
sinner. She’s “that kind of woman.” Have you ever felt like that? Felt as if you weren’t seen for who you truly
were, but instead by the label you’d been given?
How valuable is freedom from that?
Forgiveness can either be a blessing or
it can be a curse. It’s a blessing if
like the woman, we feel the weight of our sin removed by the sheer words of
absolution each time we hear them.
It’s a curse, however, if we, like
Simon, don’t see that we need it. Simon
was righteous. He followed the law. He minded his Ps and Qs and did what he was
supposed to.
He couldn’t see forgiveness as a
gift. Instead it was a threat.
Again, as a kid, I remember having
fights with my best friend and when I really wanted to goad her I’d simply say
“I forgive you” before she’d even had a chance to apologize for whatever minor
infraction she’d made.
There is both sadness and joy in this
story today. It’s profoundly sad that
Simon is so trapped by his pride that rather than share in the outpouring of
love from this woman, he judges both her and Jesus and is thus prevented from
seeing the true freedom that forgiveness brings.
“A
proud man,” said CS
Lewis, “is always looking down on things
and people; and of course, as long as you’re looking down, you can’t see
something that’s above you.”
God knows that Lewis is talking about
me more times than I wish to count in my life.
As much as I want to identify with the woman in this story, I know that I’ve
been Simon as well. I’ve been too
confident of my own “right-ness” whether it’s in an argument with my husband or
daughter, or when I was embarrassed by the faith my mother showed when I was a
kid.
But fortunately the woman in our story
today shows us that when we just look up to see; when we let those words of
forgiveness sink into our hearts the joy is boundless.
As theologian, teacher and preacher
David Lose says this woman shows us “the
joyful truth that those who recognize their need receive their heart’s desire
and live out of gratitude and love.”
What’s the value of forgiveness? Is opening ourselves up to the possibility of
abundant love worth the price of admission?
Is letting go of soul crushing labels that falsely define us worth it? The anointing woman in us reminds us of the
gift we receive and helps temper the Simon in us when he forgets that value.
“Your sins are forgiven,” says
Jesus. He’s forgiven the woman already
but says the words again so they can sink in.
“Your sins are forgiven,” says Pastor Mark every single week at St. Paul's after our
Confession of Sins. Some things are just
so good we need to hear them again and again.
May that knowledge bring you boundless joy and hope.
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