A Study of the Book of Luke
Sermon # 18
"A Sacrificial Faith"
Luke 7:36-50
We have before us this morning a record of the worship of woman who falls at the feet of Jesus in worship. We are never told her name. Luke does not record a single word spoken by the woman in her sacrificial act of worship. Wordless worship now there is a thought. But her worship was so profound that Jesus uses her as an example to a very proud religious leader.
Let me say by way of introduction that each of the gospels has an account of the washing of Jesus feet by a woman (Matthew 26:6-13, Mark 14: 3-9, John 12:1-8 and in todays text in Luke). The accounts of Matthew, Mark and John all deal with the same incident, but the one recorded in Luke is a unique incident, recorded only in his gospel. Turn in your Bible to Luke chapter seven and verse thirty-six as we look at this remarkable story of sacrificial faith.
Then one of the Pharisees asked Him to eat with him. And He went
to the Pharisee's house, and sat down to eat. (37) And behold, a woman in the city who was
a sinner, when she knew that Jesus sat at the table in the Pharisee's house, brought an
alabaster flask of fragrant oil,
Jesus is invited for a meal into the home of a religious leader (a Pharisee) by the
name of Simon (v. 40, 43-44). We really dont know what prompted this invitation. It does not seem that Simon believed in Jesus or
loved Jesus because he did not extend to him the normal hospitality. Common courtesy for
the day would have been that as soon as Jesus entered the house of Simon, he would have
been greeted with a kiss, His feet would have been washed and His head anointed with oil.
The absence of such normal hospitality suggest an underlaying animosity on the part of
Simon which Jesus will address in verses 44-46. Simon seems to have purposefully omitted
the common courtesies accorded to any honored guest. Simon treated Jesus with practiced
cool contempt. He carefully avoided every custom that would have made Jesus feel welcome.
And you cannot help but think that all the guest noticed it as well.
In sharp contrast to Simon, a woman enters the room because she wants to find
Jesus, who she had undoubtedly heard was a friend of sinners. And she was well qualified
in that department.
Our English translation does not
convey the shock that the entrance of this woman made, when it
says when a woman it is literally And look a woman! The
shock was primarily because of this womans reputation. The text tells us that she
was a sinner (a person of bad reputation and character, it is suggested that she was a
prostitute) but whatever her sin, she was a woman of considerable notoriety. Her desire is
to find Jesus and when her eyes finally rest on Him, the other guest fade into a mist of
tears; it suddenly doesnt matter what these respectable people think about her. All
that she sees is Jesus.
According to verse thirty-eight, and stood at His feet
behind Him weeping; and she began to wash His feet with her tears, and wiped them with the
hair of her head; and she kissed His feet and anointed them with the fragrant oil. She knelt at the feet of Jesus with the perfume she had brought with
the purpose of anointing his feet. Then an unexpected complication arose, she was weeping
so uncontrollably that her tears began to fall on Jesus dusty feet.
No doubt embarrassed she searches desperately from something to wipe
the feet of Jesus, but had no come prepared for this eventually. Mortified that her tears
had fallen on the feet of Jesus, she takes the one thing available to her, she lets down
her long hair and begins to dry his feet. But the more she wipes with her hair, the more
tears that fall. She uses the water of her tears to wash His feet, something that could
hardly have been planned in advance. She then began to kiss his feet. In fact the text
uses a verb form which means to kiss again and again, she repeatedly kissed
his feet. There is nothing erotic in what she
is doing.
This woman is self-forgetting mess crying unashamedly, her nose running with
weeping, her hair wet with a muddy mixture of tears and dirt.
As the sweet fragrance of her sacrifice
fills the room anyone who was not aware of this womans actions, became so. All eyes
are on Jesus what will he do. He doesnt appear to be either embarrassed or upset at
the extravagance of this display of love and devotion. What she did she did remarkably
well she worshiped. This womans worship was at great personal cost. It cost here the
expensive vial of perfume, it cost her the humility to kiss, wash and dry with her hair
the dirty feet of the Lord. Perhaps the greatest cost she faced was the scorn and
rejection of the self-righteous Pharisee and his dinner guest. No one had invited her. She
was not wanted here. She probably would be scorned and she might be thrown out. But none
of those things mattered, her desire to see and worship Jesus were greater than her fear.
The price that she had to pay may be high, but to her it was worth it.
Simons reaction, given in verse
thirty-nine reveals much about the condition of his heart. Now when the Pharisee
who had invited Him saw this, he spoke to himself, saying, "This Man, if He were a
prophet, would know who and what manner of woman this is who is touching Him, for she is a
sinner."
In
Simons mind he was passing judgment. Simons reasoning went something like
this.
· If Jesus were a prophet, he would know peoples character.
· If Jesus knew this woman was a sinner, He would have nothing to do
with her.
· If Jesus were a true teacher he would not allow her to touch him
this way. The word that Simon uses in this verse to say that she is touching
him is a word used to describe sexual activity. The word that he used suggests that this
was a very improper action.
The problem with logic is the same as the problem with
computers;
your output is only as reliable as your input. Because Simon logic was based on false
assumptions it lead him to false conclusions.
First he believes that if Jesus were a prophet, He would be able to discern the
character of the woman who was touching him which was correct. Jesus was not only
able to discern the character of this woman, but he was capable of knowing what Simon was
thinking. The conclusion that Simon reached
was entirely wrong. Since Jesus did not shun this woman, he did not know this womans
character, and thus was not a prophet at all. By telling Simon those things that he had
only thought and not spoken he proved that he was indeed more than a prophet.
I dont want you to miss this, in verse forty, Jesus
turns to Simon and says, Simon I have something that I want to say to you. I
wonder if Jesus comes week by week and taps you on the shoulder and whispers in your ear, You
and I have something to talk about! There only two kinds of sinners in the world and
everyone here fits into one of the two categories. There are sinners who know they are
sinners and there are sinners who do not know that they are sinners.
What he has to say are some very important principles that are as meaningful today
as they were when they were spoken.
So he said, "Teacher, say it." (41)
"There was a certain creditor who had two debtors. One owed five hundred denarii, and
the other fifty. (42) And when they had nothing with which to repay, he freely forgave
them both.
Jesus used a story to explain what he meant,
there were two men who had borrowed money. Since a denarius was equal to about a
days wages; 50 denarii equaled nearly 2 months pay; and 500, about 2
years wages (22 months). These were incredible debts considering that the average
wages were barely sufficient for survival. And although there is considerable difference
in what each man owed, what is important is that neither man was able to pay. But the creditor in a supreme show of mercy and
compassion canceled each mans debt. Jesus question recorded in verse
forty-two was, Tell Me, therefore, which of them will love him
more?"
Simon may
have hesitated to answer the question fearing that he would be trapped. Yet there was only
one correct answer and even Simon could see it as he reveals in verse forty three, "I suppose the one whom he
forgave more." Certainly the one that was
forgiven ten times as much would have the greater gratitude. The higher the debt the more
the forgiveness cost the creditor. Some people that we would not touch with a ten foot
pole, if they truly met Christ, would put us to shame in their displays of love and
devotion to Jesus. Such people love much because they have been forgiven
much.
The
good news is that forgiveness is available to everyone. But forgiveness is not free;
forgiveness always cost something. For the lender it cost 550 denarii to forgive those
that were indebted to him. Forgiveness always cost something. When God said, I
will forgive you. It cost the life of his only son Jesus on the cross of
Calvary. The sin debt had to be paid. Jesus paid the debt so that you would not have to.
The conclusion is clear Simon as a high class sinner had the same
problem as the low class prostitute; it is only a matter of degrees. The woman
owed the greater debt but they both owed a debt that they could not pay. Sometimes it is harder for those who have been
saved young in life, who have grown up in the church, and saved from a life of prolific
sin to realize the magnitude of what Christ has done for us.
Jesus reply in verse forty-three, "You have rightly
judged" suggest that Simon is beginning to see
the spiritual implications.
Jesus now does something interesting; he shifts his position so that he faces the
woman, giving her his attention and acceptance as he continues to talk to Simon, the proud
Pharisee.
In verse forty-four we are
told, Then He
turned to the woman and said to Simon. All through the meal, Jesus
back was to the woman, who was anointing and kissing his feet. He was at the same time,
facing his host, Simon. Now, that Simons rejection of Jesus has been revealed, in
contrast to the repentance and worship of the woman, Jesus now turns his back on his host
and faces the woman even though he is still addressing Simon. Simon had turned his back on
this woman because of who she was and now Jesus uses her as an example to show Simon who
he really was. Jesus is by his very body
language showing his acceptance of this woman. Jesus says to Simon, "Do you see this woman? I
entered your house; you gave Me no water for My feet, but she has washed My feet with her
tears and wiped them with the hair of her head. (45) You gave Me no kiss, but this woman
has not ceased to kiss My feet since the time I came in. (46) You did not anoint My head
with oil, but this woman has anointed My feet with fragrant oil.
Jesus tells Simon that this woman has done for Jesus what he had refused to do. He
had purposefully omitted the common courtesies accorded to any honored guest. Jesus chose
to overlook Simons intended insult because his purpose for being there was not to
judge manners but to forgive sin.
What the woman does for Jesus though was not mere social niceties; they were acts
of repentance and worship. She came to Jesus in faith expecting him to forgive her and she
was not disappointed. As she wept in repentance, I believe she could sense the Lords
forgiveness. The greater her relief from sin, the more abundantly and extravagant her
expression of adoration and worship became. We are
never more happy than when we feel forgiven, free of debt, free of guilt, free of shame.
Jesus tells Simon in verse forty-seven, Therefore I say to you, her sins, which are many, are
forgiven, for she loved much. But to whom little is forgiven, the same loves little."
Some have wrongly concluded on the basis of this
verse that the woman had earned her salvation or forgiveness by her great act of love. To love because you are forgiven is a natural responds
to such an undeserved action. To be forgiven because you have expressed love is works.
The Jerusalem Bible brings out the meaning
of Jesus words, For this reason I tell
you that her sins, her many sins, must have been forgiven, or she would not have shown
such great love.
Then Jesus in verse forty-eight spoke the words that she had been searching
for, waiting to hear, all of her life; "Your sins are forgiven," in so doing he openly declared that all of her
past sins were forgiven. The truly exciting part is that what was true then is still true
today. Jesus forgives all those who come to him in faith and repentance.
Those that heard the statement your sins are
forgiven were amazed. The reaction of the guest in verse forty-nine
is that they began to say to themselves, "Who is this who even forgives sins?" They had
rightful concluded that only God can forgive sins, they realized that Jesus was making a
claim that no man could rightfully make, that is unless He is God.
Jesus will makes it crystal clear in verse
fifty, what has brought about her salvation when he said, "Your faith has saved you. Go in peace." Jesus distinctly says that it is her faith that
has saved her. What was it that the woman believed by faith? What
was the substance of her faith? What did the woman believe that saved her? The answer is
strongly implied in the text: THE WOMAN BELIEVED
THAT IF SHE CAME TO JESUS AS A REPENTANT SINNER, THAT JESUS WOULD NOT SEND HER AWAY, HE
COULD AND WOULD SAVE HER. That what
she believed and she was right. But the question remains, What about you?
Do you want to come to Jesus for forgiveness or restoration or
strength? Listen to what Jesus said in Matthew 11:28-29; "Come
to me, all you who are weary and burdened, and I will give you rest. (29) Take my yoke
upon you and learn from me, for I am gentle and humble in heart, and you will find rest
for your souls.
A mother once approached Napoleon seeking a pardon for her son. The emperor replied that the young man had committed the same crime twice and justice demanded death. But I dont ask for justice, the mother explained, I plead for mercy. But your son does not deserve mercy, Napoleon replied. Sir, the woman cried, it would not be mercy if he deserved it, and mercy is all that I ask for. Well then, the emperor said, I will have mercy. And he spared the womans son.
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