(Audio Version)
Introduction
One of the
by-products of growing older is often dealing with the consequences of bad
choices I’ve made in my life to this point. Some of those consequences I’ve
paid for along the way and some have been dormant and building gradually for
decades. I have no doubt I’ll be paying for those one day too. Sometimes, a
person can’t help but think about how they would do things differently if given
A Second Chance to do it over. I’m not
at all an advocate of dwelling on past mistakes unless they can help us avoid
making the same mistakes in the future. The other benefit, for parents anyway,
is being able to help our children not make the same mistakes we did.
Unfortunately, while recalling our mistakes might serve as lesson material, it
does nothing to change the fact that mistakes were made. In this way, mistakes
are like toothpaste—once you squeeze toothpaste out of the tube, you can’t put
it back in! This can describe our life in relation to God as well if you think
about it. Whenever we sin, it’s like squeezing all the toothpaste out of a
tube. For years, people have desperately tried to deal with their own sins
through their own efforts either in the way they live or by meticulously keeping
a set of rules or by engaging in some complex religious rituals. However,
trying to manage or deal with our own sins is like trying to stuff the
toothpaste we have squeezed out back into the tube. What we really need is
another tube of toothpaste. What we really need is a clean slate; A Second Chance. In reality though, no
matter what we do, we can’t undo our mistakes regardless of how sorry we may
be. All we can do is accept the punishment and/or consequences for those
mistakes—no second chances. That can be difficult and painful when we have
sinned against another person but it can be devastating and catastrophic when
we sin against God. And here’s the bad news, every sin we commit is first and
foremost committed against God and the punishment for our sins, any of our
sins, is death. But what if there’s another option? What if God Himself gives
us another option? What would you do; how would you react if God offered you A Second Chance for dealing with your
sins? Luke tells the story of a woman who washes Jesus’ feet with her tears and
then dries them with her hair. Many of you are quite familiar with this story
and if you’re like me, you’ve always assumed that her tears must have something
to do with the fact that she’s identified as a “sinful woman” and is seeking
some favor from Jesus. Well let’s reserve our judgment of that until after
we’ve had an opportunity to take a closer look at the story. Perhaps there is
another explanation for her tears.
Subject Text
Luke 7:36-50
36
Now one of the Pharisees invited Jesus to have dinner with him, so he went to
the Pharisee's house and reclined at the table. 37 When a woman who
had lived a sinful life in that town learned that Jesus was eating at the
Pharisee's house, she brought an alabaster jar of perfume, 38 and as
she stood behind him at his feet weeping, she began to wet his feet with her
tears. Then she wiped them with her hair, kissed them and poured perfume on
them.
39
When the Pharisee who had invited him saw this, he said to himself, “If this
man were a prophet, he would know who is touching him and what kind of woman
she is–that she is a sinner.” 40 Jesus answered him, “Simon, I have
something to tell you.” “Tell me, teacher,” he said.
41
“Two men owed money to a certain moneylender. One owed him five hundred
denarii, and the other fifty. 42 Neither of them had the money to
pay him back, so he canceled the debts of both. Now which of them will love him
more?” 43 Simon replied, “I suppose the one who had the bigger debt
canceled.” “You have judged correctly,” Jesus said.
44
Then he turned toward the woman and said to Simon, “Do you see this woman? I
came into your house. You did not give me any water for my feet, but she wet my
feet with her tears and wiped them with her hair. 45 You did not
give me a kiss, but this woman, from the time I entered, has not stopped
kissing my feet. 46 You did not put oil on my head, but she has
poured perfume on my feet. 47 Therefore, I tell you, her many sins
have been forgiven–for she loved much. But he who has been forgiven little
loves little.” 48 Then Jesus said to her, “Your sins are forgiven.” 49
The other guests began to say among themselves, “Who is this who even forgives
sins?” 50 Jesus said to the woman, “Your faith has saved you; go in
peace.”
Context
This is one of my
favorite stories in the Bible. It has so many teaching elements and intricacies
that it has the potential of applying to all of us in some respect. Before we begin
the analysis of our Subject Text,
it’s important, as usual, to understand the context. At the beginning of Chapter
7, we learn that Jesus has entered the city of Capernaum where he heals the
servant of a Roman Centurian. Thereafter, Jesus travels south about twenty
miles to the town of Nain. In Nain, Jesus encounters a funeral procession and
proceeds to raise the dead son of a widow. While in Nain, something very
important happened, John the Baptist sent two of his disciples to Jesus to ask
him if He was the One, the long-awaited Messiah, or should they be expecting
someone else. 7:22 records Jesus’ now famous response to John when he says: “The
blind receive sight, the lame walk, those who have leprosy are cured, the deaf
hear, the dead are raised and the good news is preached to the poor.” These
words will have special meaning for us as we dig deeper into our Subject Text.
Text Analysis
V. 36 sets the
stage for our story. Jesus is invited to dinner at a Pharisee’s house. If you
could only read this first verse and nothing else, what do you picture that
dinner would have been like? Can you think of one time when an encounter
between Jesus and the Pharisees ended well? You don’t have to go very far back
in Luke’s text for an object lesson in what happens when you mix Jesus and the
Pharisees (cf. Luke 5:21-26, 5:30-39,
6:6-11). But we’ll soon see that this encounter turns out to be far less
contentious; perhaps even an opportunity for transformation for this Pharisee. In
this middle-eastern setting, dinner guests lounged on the floor around a “U”
shaped table with their feet away from the table. It is important to remember
that people traveled by foot along the same travel routes as animals.
Consequently, sandaled feet could be quite disgusting at times. This provides
the opportunity for devotion to Jesus that follows.
The first thing
that should pique your curiosity about vv. 37-38 is how a woman, identified as
one who “lived a sinful life,” shows up in the Pharisee’s house along with
Jesus. Not so curious, however, when we understand the custom of their day. “At
special meals the door was left open, so uninvited guests could enter, sit by
the walls, and hear the conversation...That the woman’s action is rebuked and
her presence is not suggests a special, public meal.”[1]
However, her presence in the home could pose a difficult problem for the
Pharisee committed to “holiness and purity laws attached to Pharisaic meal
practices.”[2]
The woman is only identified as one
who “lived a sinful life.” Historically, it has been assumed that she is either
a prostitute or an adulteress of some sort since her sin is obviously quite
public. More important is the scene that unfolds before us as this woman washes
Jesus’ feet with her tears. The English translation does not do justice to the
scene. The woman is not quietly crying. Instead, “The weeping is obviously
significant, because the term used to describe it, is also used to describe rain
showers.”[3]
The woman goes on to dry Jesus’ feet with her hair, kissed them and then
anointed them with expensive perfume. Contrast this with the how the Pharisee
greeted Jesus when he entered his home; he did nothing for Jesus. Although it
was not specifically required, guests, especially honored guests, would have
their feet washed by a house servant or at least given fresh water to wash
their own feet, would be greeted with a kiss on the cheek or hand and then
would be anointed by having a small amount of common olive oil poured on their
heads. The Pharisee did none of this while the woman went far beyond what was
required.
The Pharisee calls
into question Jesus’ credentials in v. 39 as a “prophet” because he believes
Jesus is unknowingly being defiled by a “sinner” and a “true prophet” would
know she is a sinner and distance himself from her. Keep in mind that the text
is clear that the Pharisee thought these things “to himself.” In vv. 40-43,
Jesus tells a parable in response to the Pharisee’s thoughts. We often breeze right
over this part to get to Jesus’ parable and neglect the divine significance of
this point. Imagine for a moment what it would be like to sit across from
someone who knows everything you are thinking! It is unlikely that this
particular Pharisee ever questioned Jesus’ prophetic credentials again.
The parable in vv.
40-43 tells the story of two debtors; one owing 500 denarii and the other owing
50 denarii and that neither could pay back their debt. It is difficult to
contextualize this part of the story because we are unfamiliar with the value
of a denarii. Historically, 25 denarii would be approximately one month’s wage
for the average person. However, this does not begin to explain the extremity
of these two numbers. In modern terms, the sense of disparity would be
analogous to the difference between an average car loan and an average house
loan. In other words, there is a monumental difference between the two debts.
There is an important
characteristic to note in the interaction between Jesus and this Pharisee that
we do not find anywhere else in Scripture; Jesus addresses him by his first
name, Simon. This is intensely personal and should not be overlooked. In most
cases, Jesus is very harsh with Pharisees because he knows they are usually
being disingenuous in their words and actions. But with Simon, Jesus takes a
much softer approach by addressing him personally.
Jesus goes on to
tell the story that the debt of each man is forgiven and asks Simon which man
would love more as a result. Simon answers correctly yet his answer is
nevertheless prefixed with the words “I suppose.” Simon is obviously being very
careful with his answers but it’s too late, he’s answered it correctly and
unknowingly indicted himself in the process. Jesus’ point of the parable is
that God is the creditor and the two debtors represent the woman who owes much
and Simon who owes little (even if that’s only in his mind) and that the level
of love and gratitude is directly related to the magnitude of the grace and forgiveness
received.
Jesus justifies
the woman's actions in vv. 44-49 as those of one who has received forgiveness
for her many sins. Some mistakenly take this text to mean that Jesus has
forgiven her because of her actions toward him. However, it is clear from the
text that she has had an encounter with Jesus prior to them having arrived at
the dinner. The force of the parable makes clear that love is generated after
the debt is cancelled and not as a means to receive the favor to cancel a debt.
“In fact, the reference to forgiveness in the [Greek] perfect tense [v. 47]
stresses that she is in a state of forgiveness.”[4]
Instead, Jesus’ public pronouncement of the woman’s previous forgiveness is a
means of restoring her to the community. “His words are unnecessary as far as
she as an individual was concerned; she has already been forgiven and has acted
in accordance with her new-found freedom. Others, however, are unaware of her
new state and, like Simon, will continue to regard her as “a woman known in the
city as a sinner.’ She does not need forgiveness from God, but she does need
recognition of her new life and forgiveness among God’s people.”[5]
Unfortunately, as is often the case, some people completely ignore what just
happened and focus on Jesus’ act of forgiveness as something that only God has
the authority to do without considering the possibility that Jesus does, in
fact, have that authority because he is “the One” that John was referring to in
7:19.
Remember earlier I
said that Jesus told John the good news was being preached to the poor? Well
this woman would have been considered one of the poor in Jesus’ mind. She was
poor spiritually, physically and socially. Jesus pronouncement in v. 50 “cannot
be limited to ‘spiritual’ well-being or even, in other co-texts, to ‘physical’
vitality, but speaks of a restoration to wholeness, including (even if not
limited to) restoration to the full social intercourse from which she has been
excluded.”[6]
Application
Some people glean
from this text that there is a hierarchy of sin either in quality or in
quantity. Although this may be true culturally, it is not necessarily true
theologically or more specifically soteriologically. In other words, all sin
requires forgiveness and reconciliation. The force of this teaching revolves
around the perception of our own sin. Specifically, most of us believe we are
quite good at objectifying and categorizing someone else's sin as being either
egregious or benign in nature. However, we are rarely harsh about our own sin
as we compare them to the sins of others. In fact, when we think about it, it’s
actually difficult to list the people who have sinned less than we have! God is
probably thankful that he has people like us since the scale is already so heavily
tipped toward those awful “sinners.” I'm being cynical of course (sort of). But
at various times in my life, I have played the role of both debtors from Jesus’
parable. I can speak from personal experience that during the times in my life
when I played the role of Simon, my relationship with Jesus was distant and
cold. However, during the times of my life when I played the role of the “sinner,”
I was desperately in love with Jesus and my relationship with Him flourished.
There is a two-fold lesson to be learned from our Subject Text. The first is our attitude toward sinners. “It is so
easy to wall people off subtly from God and give the impression they are beyond
God’s reach, rather than trying sincerely to bring them into the sphere of God’s
forgiveness.”[7]
We must make a conscious effort to continuously reach out to sinners with our
words and in our actions to demonstrate “the love of God expressed in the offer
of forgiveness.”[8]
The second lesson is the constant and honest assessment of our own sin; not in
comparison to the sins of others but in terms of what our sin cost Jesus.
Specifically, “sin” cost Jesus his life-any sin, all sin, every sin-just to
make it clear. There is no sin that would not have cost Jesus his life. This means
that when we kneel before Christ at the foot of the cross, we are all equal—first
sinners then forgiven. Armed with that knowledge, how will it affect your life?
Have you experienced spiritual, physical, emotional, and/or relational restoration?
If you have, then you have received A
Second Chance.
[1]
Darrell L. Bock, Luke 1:1-9:50 Exegetical
Commentary on the New Testament, (Grand Rapids, MI: Baker Books, 1994), pp.
694-695.
[2]
Joel Green, The Gospel of Luke, The New
International Commentary on the New Testament, (Grand Rapids, MI: William
B. Eerdmans Publishing Co., 1997), p. 308.
[3]
Bock, ECNT, p. 696.
[4]
Bock, ECNT, p. 703.
[5]
Green, NICNT, p. 314.
[6]
Ibid.
[7]
Darrell Bock, Luke, The NIV Application
Commentary, (Grand Rapids, MI: Zondervan Publishing House, 1996), p. 224.
[8]
Ibid.
Dear Anonymous,
ReplyDeleteThank you for you comments. I appreciate that you take the time to read my lessons. With respect to whether or not I can recommend similar sites, I don't know of anything specifically but there are countless teaching sites out there. Just Google a subject or topic. Also, you can go the denverseminary.edu. They have some great resources there as well. I hope that helps. Blessings to you!