Luke 13:10-17 · A Crippled Woman Healed on the Sabbath
Stand Up Straight
Luke 13:10-17
Sermon
by Bill Bouknight
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One weekend in one of our contemporary services, we invited the worshippers in a time of prayer to say out loud what they were grateful for. There happened to be two young mothers sitting on the front row. One said, "For my healthy children." The other mother said, "For God's provision." I happened to know that that second mother has a child who has suffered recurring seizures throughout his young life. Both of these mothers offered legitimate praise to God. But somehow I feel the second mother had seen a greater work of God. It's one thing to be thankful for health; it is quite another to discover God's wonderful provision even in the face of illness. An anonymous woman discovered God's healing grace long ago.

NOTICE IN VERSE 11 THAT JESUS INTERRUPTED HIS TEACHING TO DEAL WITH A WOMAN WHO HAD HAD A BAD BACK FOR EIGHTEEN YEARS.

The bones of her spine were fused into a rigid mass. She was permanently stooped over. Can you imagine what life was like for her? She recognized people by their feet, the style of their sandals. She knew houses by their doorsteps. She recognized streets by the ditches alongside them. Now God is gracious. He put some wonderful things down low where she could see them...like little children and daffodils and birddogs. But this woman was never able to look into adult faces or gaze at the stars or glory in a blue sky.

Jesus regarded this woman's paralyzed back as a terrible wrong. He called it the work of Satan. In the Methodist tradition we refer to this as the legacy of original sin; it's the baggage we bring into this world. You may not have a bad back, but you've got some sign of brokenness. It could be a distorted appetite for alcohol or pornography; it could be a tendency to depression or an inability to get along with people. You could be Dale carnegie- challenged, so to speak. You could have a genetic predisposition to cancer. You could have a sick spirit. Perhaps you have a spirit of resentment, a pessimistic attitude, a selfish streak, or a manipulative manner with other people. In our natural state, all of us have a bent-over condition of some sort.

LOOK AT VERSE 12. "AND WHEN JESUS SAW HER..."

Lots of people saw her, but not as Jesus did. They would step aside so as not to bump into her on the street, but because of her condition they didn't even have to speak to her. She became for them like an object, like a tree, rather than a person. Have you ever been "treed" by another person? That is, treated like an object? Have you ever been at a reception, talking with someone, and you become aware that he is glancing over your shoulder, scanning the crowd, not really giving his attention to you? In such a situation, you have been "treed." It hurts to be "treed," to be treated as second-class. "She's just a waitress, so I can tree her." "He is just a parking lot attendant, so I can tree him." "He is of a different race, so I don't even have to acknowledge him...I can "tree" him. But Jesus really saw her. In a flash, he identified with her; he empathized with her pain, her downcast disposition. He said to himself, "Ah, here is my sister, utterly precious in God's sight. What a shame it would be if she suffers even one additional moment if a cure can be had."

Jesus really saw her. How many people do we really see in the course of a day? How many do we just "tree"?

NOTICE JESUS' ACTIONS IN VERSES 12 AND 13: FIRST, HE ANNOUNCED HER LIBERATION. THEN HE TOUCHED HER. THEN SHE STOOD UP STRAIGHT.

Jesus first liberated her from the power of Satan. He is still doing that. Now, on the Easter side of Calvary, that liberation is available to any believer. How can one be liberated from Satan's control? By making this sincere, simple affirmation: "Lord, I am a sinner who needs a Savior. I believe you died on a cross for my sin. In gratitude I invite you to dominate my life as Lord." From the moment you make that affirmation, Satan cannot harm you in any eternal way. It's that simple. You can do it today at the table of Holy Communion.

Notice next that Jesus touched the woman. He is still doing that through the Holy Spirit who takes up residence in every person who claims Jesus as Savior and Lord. That Holy spirit can heal any hurt, change any disposition, and bestow any needed gift. When the Holy Spirit touches you, He will change you, according to His will and wisdom. He may fix your bad back. Or, he may change your spirit so that even your bad back brings him glory. St. Paul begged the Lord three times to remove the thorn in his flesh, whatever it was. The Lord's response was, "No, your thorn will not be taken away, but my grace will be sufficient for you... My power will shine forth even more brightly through your weakness."

God wants you to stand up straight! Jesus Christ came into this world so that we might have life and have it more abundantly. Bring your bad back to the table of Holy communion today, whatever it is in your life. It could be your whining, your complaining, your fault-finding, your tendency to count problems instead of blessings, your habit of manipulating family members rather than just loving them. God can even cure your fixation with your rear-view mirror; that is, always looking back on some dream that got derailed rather than keeping your eyes open for a new dream God wants to show you. Whatever your bad back, bring it to the altar and commit it to God. He wants to liberate you from the power of the Evil One. He wants to touch you with his Holy spirit, so that even your bad back gives him glory. He wants you to leave this place praising him.

Listen to a modern woman who has been healed by Jesus, though she still walks with the aid of crutches. One day at the grocery store she had an encounter with a little girl. It went like this:

"A little girl looked at me with dresden blue eyes. And she asked in childish innocence, 'Are you crippled?' I replied, 'No dear, I only need crutches to help me walk.' For to me, being crippled is a state of mind, not a state of health. You are crippled if you have lost your enthusiasm for tomorrow and live only in yesterdays; if self-pity becomes a way of life instead of counting blessings; if adversity makes you want to give up instead of bravely persevering. You are crippled if your own preoccupation with self blinds you to your brother's burden. You are crippled if cynicism causes your faith to waver instead of remembering that his eye is on the sparrow.

"'Are you crippled'? the little girl asked. 'No dear, I only need crutches to help me walk.'" Come to the table of Holy Communion, bringing your crippling conditions and your bad backs. Jesus wants to liberate you, to touch you, and to send you forth from this place praising his name. God wants you to stand up straight!

ChristianGlobe Networks, Inc., Collected Sermons, by Bill Bouknight