John 12:1-11 · Jesus Anointed at Bethany
Forgiven!
John 12:1-11
Sermon
by Lee Griess
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On a recent religious talk show the hostess was interviewing a young woman who had just recently come to know Christ and had been received into the church. Until her recent conversion, she had lived on the wrong side of the tracks, lived in the fast lane, and teetered on the brink of destruction. So overwhelming was the sense of forgiveness that this young woman practically gushed with joy as she spoke. "I can't express," she said, "the sense of gratitude that I feel that God has changed my life."

The talk show hostess knew where she was coming from -- for she, too, had walked on life's wild side before coming to Jesus. She said, "I know what you mean. Every day I thank God for saving me!" And then she added a very profound statement: "You know what I've noticed though? People who have always been in the church, people who always do what they ought, who have never really gotten into trouble, always been prim and proper, don't have the same sense of gratitude that I do. In fact, I've noticed that for most church people, it's not so much what God had done for them, but what they still want God to do!"

If you can identify with that statement, perhaps we can appreciate the story in today's Gospel reading from John 12. It's an unusual story -- this story of the anointing of Jesus' feet with oil. All four Gospel writers include it in their writing, but only John records it as happening in the house of Mary, Martha, and Lazarus. Matthew, Mark, and Luke tell essentially the same story (in fact, most Bible commentators agree that it is the same story). However, in the first three Gospels, the woman who anoints Jesus' feet is not identified as Mary, but simply identified as "a woman of the city, a sinner." The meal takes place not in Bethany, but at the home of a Pharisee. And instead of Judas objecting to the waste of the money for the perfume, it was a Pharisee who was scandalized by a sinful woman touching Jesus. But essentially the story is the same. Jesus sums it up when he concludes, "Therefore I tell you, her sins, which are many, are forgiven, for she loved much, but he who is forgiven little, loves little."

Forgiven -- that's the theme of today's Gospel reading -- good news for broken hearts -- God's forgiveness can cover us all. Theologian Karl Barth knew this. He once declared, "We live solely by forgiveness." He was but echoing the message of the apostle Paul. Paul knew what it was to struggle with forgiveness. He once wrote that he knew the law better than any and that he had struggled mightily to obey it, for he believed it to be the way of salvation. But instead of saving him, instead of soothing his hurting heart, it only condemned him. And Saint Paul was not alone in that conclusion. Many a person has felt that way. Martin Luther wrestled with the same difficulty until he came to discover a loving God, a God of forgiveness and love.

We are forgiven. We are made right not by our own efforts, but by One whose death pays the price for our sins. As Paul put it in Galatians 2:21: "I am not one of those who treats Christ's death as meaningless. For if we could be saved by keeping the Jewish laws, then there is no need for Christ to die" (Living Bible).

Forgiven! Can you grasp the full meaning of that word? In today's Gospel reading, Mary did and that's why she offered the burial perfume in loving service to Jesus. That's why the woman in the Gospels of Matthew, Mark, and Luke anointed Jesus' feet with oil and washed them with her hair. Such was the depth of her gratitude for the gift of forgiveness. Forgiven! Have you felt that power? Mark Twain once said that everyone is like the moon -- we each have a dark side which never shows and no one can see. But God knows the darkness within us. God knows the shameful thoughts, the hidden actions, the unkind words, and the careless deeds that are part of all of our lives. And yet because of what Jesus did on the cross, God accepts us just as we are, dark side and all!

All of our sins -- all of our transgressions, all of our sinful acts and thoughts -- are completely drowned in the sea of God's forgiveness. Some Christians pray, "Forgive us our trespasses." Others say, "Forgive us our debts." And still others say, "Forgive us our sins." Whatever the words, the meaning is the same. We come to God in need of forgiveness -- forgiveness for what we have done -- and the strength to forgive others.

All too many Christians operate with an Old Testament view of God. For them, God is a God of judgment, a God of vengeance and wrath. As far as these Christians are concerned, Jesus need never have come. For they do not need his forgiveness, they do not need God's grace.

In one of his books, Alan Paton, the great South African writer, tells a powerful story which takes place before the recent changes in South Africa. In the story a white police lieutenant falls in love with a black African woman. Not only was it against the laws of apartheid in that stern, racist society, but also it was an abominable sin, an unforgivable offense.

The lieutenant is confronted by his captain and initially denies the charge, but the evidence is so overwhelming that he is forced to confess his transgression. Then the captain does what appears to be a strange thing. He goes to visit the lieutenant's father and reports the situation to him. What follows is a moving and tragic scene.

The father asks the captain, "Is it true?" The captain replies, "I fear it is." The father insists, "Are you sure?" And the captain answers, "He confessed it to me. It must be true." The father stands unmoving, the silence broken only by his heavy breathing, like some creature in agonizing pain. In the room observing the scene are the father's wife and his sister. He turns to his sister and says to her, "Bring me the Book." She goes to the bookcase, pulls down the heavy family Bible and sets it on the table in front of him. As she puts it on the table, she wonders aloud what passage he is going to read.

But he doesn't read any passage at all. Instead he opens the front of the book where the family names have been recorded for 150 years. He takes the pen and ink and crosses out the name of his son, Peter van Vlaanderen, not once but many times as though to completely obliterate it from the page. Without any anger or despair (at least none that anyone sees), without any words, and without any emotion, he does away with his son. Then he turns to the captain and very calmly asks, "Is there anything more?" The captain knows this is his cue to leave and he does, offering to the mother and aunt any help he can give them. But the father turns abruptly to him and says, "No one in this house will ask for help!" So the captain leaves. The father, still sitting at the table, turns to his sister and says, "Lock the door and bolt it and bring me the key. The door of our house will never open again." That's the scene. The door is closed forever. The son can never return home.

That is NOT the picture of God that Jesus brings us. You are forgiven, Jesus tells us. You are forgiven and set free. And instead of our names being obliterated from the Book of Life, Jesus writes them with indelible ink! You are forgiven and given a new start in life. That's what the word "forgiveness" means. The word "repent" appears 46 times in the Old Testament. Did you know that in 37 of those instances it is God who is said to repent? Now "repent" must mean more than just to be sorry for our sins. For no one would say that God needs to be sorry for his sin. No -- repentance means to have a change of mind, a change of attitude, a change of direction. To know that the slate is wiped clean calls for a new start, and that's what God's forgiveness does for us. It offers us a new start.

A new start, knowing that we are forgiven, then gives us the power to offer forgiveness to others. If we know ourselves as sinners made acceptable to God only by the grace of Jesus Christ, how can we possibly refuse to forgive another? It is impossible. George Whitefield was one of the greatest evangelists that ever lived. He was a true man of God, and yet when he saw a condemned man going to the gallows he whispered the famous words, "There but for the grace of God go I." George knew the truth of Barth's words, "We all live by forgiveness." For forgiveness allows us to accept the love that God has for us.

Could that have been Judas' greatest downfall, the inability to see himself as a sinner and hence receive God's forgiveness? For without that sense of forgiveness, life holds little joy and the future is hopeless. Someone once said that the person who knows himself or herself to be a sinner and does not know God's forgiveness is like an overweight person who fears stepping on a scale. You are forgiven, Jesus tells us. My cross is for you.

I once read about a very bitter man who was sick in soul, mind, and body. He was in the hospital in wretched condition, not because his body had been invaded by a virus or infected with some germ, but because his anger and contempt had poisoned his soul. One day, when he was at his lowest, he said to his nurse, "Won't you give me something to end it all?" Much to the man's surprise, the nurse said, "All right. I will." She went to the nightstand and pulled out the Gideon Bible and began to read, "For God so loved the world that he gave his only begotten Son that whosoever believeth in him should not perish but have eternal life." When she finished she said, "There, if you will believe that, it will end it all. God loves you, forgives you and accepts you as his child."

Such a simple answer may not work for everyone. But it worked for that man. He realized after much soul-searching that she had spoken truly. And over a period of some time, he came to believe and accept God's love for him.

There is a way to God. Jesus died to provide it. We may not be Mary or that "woman of the city," but there are sins that weigh upon our hearts. There are scars and cuts that we have inflicted on others. There is a darkness within each of us that no one knows of but God. But that same One, our loving God, sees all and forgives all and calls us to God.

Remember, the one who is forgiven little loves little. But the one who is forgiven much loves with all the heart! May that be true of us. In Jesus' name. Amen.

CSS Publishing Company, Taking The Risk Out Of Dying, by Lee Griess