Learning worship from a forgiven prostitute
Luke 7:36–50 36A certain one of the Pharisees asked Jesus to eat with
him. Jesus entered the Pharisee’s house and reclined at the table. 37Just
then a sinful woman from that town learned that he was reclining in the
Pharisee’s house. She brought an alabaster jar of perfume, 38stood
behind him near his feet weeping, and began to wet his feet with her tears.
Then she began to wipe them with her hair while also kissing his feet and
anointing them with the perfume. 39When the Pharisee who had invited
him saw this, he said to himself, “If this man were a prophet, he would realize
who is touching him and what kind of woman she is, because she is a sinner.”
40Jesus answered him, “Simon, I have something to tell
you.”
He said, “Teacher,
say it.”
41“A certain moneylender had two debtors. The one owed
five hundred denarii, and the other fifty. 42When they could not
pay, he forgave them both. So, which of them
will love him more?”
43Simon answered, “I suppose the one who had the larger
debt forgiven.”
Then he told him,
“You have judged correctly.” 44Turning toward the woman, he said to
Simon, “Do you see this woman? I entered your house, but you did not give me
water for my feet. Yet she has wet my feet with her tears and wiped them with
her hair. 45You did not give me a kiss, but she, from the time I
entered, has not stopped kissing my feet. 46You did not anoint my
head with oil, but she has anointed my feet with perfume. 47Therefore
I tell you, her many sins have been forgiven; that is why she loved so much.
But the one who is forgiven little loves little.” 48Then Jesus said
to her, “Your sins have been forgiven.”
49Those reclining at the table with him began to say
among themselves, “Who is this who even forgives sins?”
50He said to the woman, “Your faith has saved you. Go in
peace.”
13Now may the God of hope fill you with complete joy and
peace as you continue to believe, so that you overflow with hope by the power
of the Holy Spirit. (Romans 15:13, EHV)
The evening has been
carefully planned. All the religious bigwigs are coming to Simon the Pharisee’s
home. Jesus has been invited over. He is a rabbi, but he is new to the
religious scene. He has been making waves among the Jews by doing and saying
some pretty “unkosher” things. He cannot be ignored any longer. So Jesus is
invited over so an investigation can take place. Is Jesus a prophet or isn’t he?
Simon has not invited
Jesus as an equal. Rather, Simon has invited Jesus to insult him. To provoke him.
To let him know they are not in the same class as religious teachers.
The evening begins with
Simon ignoring all the common courtesies that should have been given to Jesus
as a guest in his home. No kiss as he enters the house. No water for washing his
dusty feet. No sweet oil as a perfume to cover any body odor. It is clear to
everyone at the party what is going on here. Simon is in control. He is the
superior. Jesus is the lesser.
Somehow a prostitute sneaks into
Simon’s house. Crashes his party. There is no way a self-respecting Pharisee
would have welcomed that kind of woman under his roof. She ignores the hard stares from the men at the table.
These are respectable, religious men who see clearly the sinful specks in the
eyes of others, but fail to see the beam protruding from their own eyes. She
knows what they think of her. She is a sinner – OK for a little after-party
fun, but judged unworthy to actually attend the party.
She knows that it’s like to be shamed.
She knows what it’s like to be insulted and demeaned. So she takes matters into
her own hands. She makes sure Jesus receives the honor due Him.
Jesus is reclining at the dinner table, as Jews did to
eat their meals. He is lying on his side with his feet outstretched beside him.
She has come to anoint Jesus’ head and hands with oil, as was Jewish custom.
But his head and hands are not available to her at the table. What can she do?
The only thing she can do. She starts crying. These
are tears of sorrow. Tears born from her many sins upon her bed with the men of
the town. These are tears of sadness. Tears shed for Jesus because that evening
he is enduring the same kinds of insults she has endured for years. And these
are tears of joy. Tears poured forth from a heart and life that has been
forgiven.
She does what should have already been done. She
washes Jesus’ feet, using her tears as water. She dries his feet, not with a
towel or her clothing, but with her hair. She pours oil on Jesus’ feet, as a
sweet fragrance fills the room. She kisses his feet … and keeps on kissing
them.
Everything that should have been done by Simon was
done by her. That’s why Jesus pointedly tells Simon, “Do you see this woman? I
entered your house, but you did not give me water for my feet. Yet she has wet
my feet with her tears and wiped them with her hair. You did not give me a
kiss, but she, from the time I entered, has not stopped kissing my feet. You
did not anoint my head with oil, but she has anointed my feet with perfume. Therefore
I tell you, her many sins have been forgiven; that is why she loved so much.
But the one who is forgiven little loves little.”
Then Jesus said to the
woman, “Your sins have been forgiven.” Those
reclining at the table with him began to say among themselves, “Who is this who
even forgives sins?” Jesus said to the woman, “Your faith has saved you. Go in
peace.”
Why did this woman come? Why was she so bold as to
crash the respectable party of Simon the Pharisee? Why did she take such a
chance? Luke tells us, “She learned that Jesus was eating at the Pharisee’s
house that day.” She came to see her God –- her God who came down to earth in
the person of this man, Jesus of Nazareth. She came to spend time with the
Christ. She came to have her greater debt cancelled. She came with perfume,
kisses and tears because she loved more.
In the home, sitting at the dinner table is the one
Man who understands her, who accepts her as she is, who loves her as no other
man in her life. Here is a Man who will not hurt her or use her or abuse her.
Here is the Man who would not judge her or reject her, but who had actually
come specifically for her. He came to seek and save the lost. To redeem
sinners. To be the Great Physician of body and soul. To be the Canceller of
debts, both great and small.
She has come to know who Jesus is.
Jesus has been proclaiming his message that God loves sinners. This is quite
different than the message she was hearing from the Pharisees – that God cares
for the righteous who keep the Law. But Jesus is different. Jesus is not a
prophet who avoids sinners, but who searches them out, and cares for them, and
even eats with them. She hears from Jesus that God not only loves sinners, but
that his grace and forgiveness is available for them - for her! - even though she could not make
compensation for her sins. She believes this! The Word of God from the mouth of
Jesus had worked faith in her heart. Yes, she is forgiven! Thanks be to God!
She is now at peace!
She comes to Jesus with nothing he
needs, but needing everything from him. If she brings anything, it is
faith — faith which itself is a gift of God. She is defiled and unclean, with
her heart’s closet full of skeletons, yet still she comes. She is a pariah in
polite society, shunned by the religious do-gooders, yet still she comes. She
has no good works to place upon the altar of God, yet still she comes.
We can learn a lot about our worship from this
forgiven prostitute. She comes with nothing. All she has to offer are tears,
kisses, and perfume. She who wept upon, dried, and anointed the feet of Jesus –
we sit at her feet to learn what true worship is.
Just as important a question as “why did this woman
come” is … “why do you come?” Why do you come to sit in these pews instead of a
deer stand or a shopping mall? Why do you come with tears trickling from your
eyes and guilt pouring from your pores? Why do you empty your hard-earned money
over Jesus and into the offering plates? Why do you serve Him in humility and
kiss His feet in reverence?
We are not here because we have anything to offer God;
any service; anything of worth. God does not need us. No, we are here because
we need God. We are the guilty who need forgiveness. The weak who need
strength. The low who need lifting up. The dirty who need cleansing. The broken
who need to be restored. The prodigal who need a Father. The poisoned who need
to be rescued. The lost who need to be found. The dead who need to be raised.
The debtors who need cancellation.
We come with nothing. Nothing except our sins. We come
to hear the message portrayed in two of our stained glass windows. It is a
message that Simon the Pharisee needed to hear, that the prostitute at the
table needed to hear, and that we need to hear – every day at home, every week
in worship. It is the message of Law and Gospel. Sin and grace. Hell and
heaven. The commandments and the cross.
We come to meet Jesus because unlike Simon, we realize
that we are just like this sinful woman. Our debts of sin are huge. The Law has
done its damage. It is has shocked our system. It has rocked our lives of
complacency. It has awoken us from our slumber of sin.
The Law with its commands and lightning bolts
illuminates just how badly we need to come to Jesus. Our lives are in shambles.
Our children are messed up. Our marriages broken. Our guilt unbearable. Our
anger unmanageable. Our lust insatiable. Our greed unmerciful.
We come here because we have learned that Jesus has
come here. We come as lost and straying sheep. Our Good Shepherd calls and
cares for us. We come because we have dwelt all week in the dominion of
darkness, but here Jesus brings us into the kingdom of light. We come because
we have spent the last few days squirming in Satan’s clutches, but Jesus has
released us to live a new life as a child of God.
The Gospel with its manger, cross, and tomb proclaims
the forgiveness we receive from Jesus. He puts our lives back together. He
mends our families with his divine love. He binds two people together with his
commitment of love. He removes our guilt. He replaces our anger. He satiates
our lust. He extends grace to cover our greed.
We can learn a lot about our worship from this
forgiven prostitute. We learn that the highest way of worshiping Jesus is to
repent of our sins and receive his forgiveness.
Of all the acts of worship in which
she could engage, none was greater than coming to Jesus with faith, knowing and
believing that he loved her, accepted her, forgave her, and sent her on her way
in peace. Her weeping, drying, anointing — all of those were beautiful,
meaningful acts of worship, but they were not the greatest.
The highest act of worship is not even an act we do,
but a gift we receive.
Worship is about responding to God. We
pray, sing, praise, confess. But our response – a loving and
grateful response – is nothing compared to what Jesus does for us. Worship is
also about receiving from God. He forgives. He gives. He floods us with gifts
beyond telling, all of which flow from His cross and Bible, onto our heads, into
our mouths, into our open hands, and upon our thirsty souls.
We learn how to worship from this
forgiven prostitute. We learn to come to Jesus. For this is where Law is heard.
Where Gospel is proclaimed. Where sins are confessed. Where sins are forgiven.
We come to worship Jesus. And then he sends us home with his peace. Amen.
“To
him who loves us and has freed us from our sins by his own blood and made us a
kingdom and priests to God his Father—to him be the glory and the power
forever.” (Revelation 1:5–7, EHV)
Comments
Post a Comment