Luke 13:10-17 · A Crippled Woman Healed on the Sabbath
Straight Backs And Rekindled Dreams
Luke 13:10-17
Sermon
by King Duncan
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What's it like to live without hope? What's it like to finally decide that your dreams are beyond your abilities and to resign yourself to living without any prospect that things will get better?

The closest thing I could find to a picture of a person totally without hope comes from a book by Dr. David Jeremiah titled The Power of Encouragement. Dr. Jeremiah tells about an old Alfred Hitchcock show which featured the story of an evil woman jailed for committing a murder. The woman soon realizes that her only chance for escape is to befriend the old man who serves as the prison undertaker. He is the only inmate who is allowed outside the prison walls. After much bribing and begging, the woman finally convinces the old man to help her escape.

He tells her that next time she hears the bell toll to announce a death in the prison, she should slip down to the prison mortuary and hide in the coffin with the dead body. He would take the coffin out the next morning and bury it in a shallow grave. When no one was looking, he would slip back out and dig up the woman and release her. The perfect escape.

Everything went as planned. On the night the woman heard the death bell, she slipped down to the mortuary and hid in the waiting coffin with the dead body. The coffin was transported outside the prison walls and buried. The woman waited hopefully, anxiously, but no one came to dig her up. Finally, she decided to light a match and look around her. It was then she discovered that the dead body lying beneath her was that of the old undertaker. (1)

There is a picture of complete hopelessness. My admonition to you this day is that unless you are in a situation that is as hopeless as that woman's, it's time to begin looking at the positive side of life. It's time to look to Jesus. Jesus is a hope giver. Jesus is a dream restorer. Jesus takes people who are hanging on with clinched teeth and gives them a new, fresh beginning.

Jesus was teaching in one of the synagogues one Sabbath day and a woman was there who had been crippled for eighteen years. She was bent over and could not straighten up. The New International Version of the Bible says she was crippled "œby a spirit."

That's an interesting phrase. I've known lots of people who have been crippled by a spirit. Some of these people, too, are bent over and cannot straighten up.

I've seen girls about 12-years-old develop poor posture because they tower over their classmates--especially the boys. These girls don't realize how beautiful they are with their long legs and long arms. All they know is that they feel "œdifferent." And when you are 12-years-old, the last thing you want to be is different. And so this beautiful girl starts hunching her shoulders. She's crippled by a spirit of embarrassment.

I've seen people bent over with a sense of responsibility. Not that their responsibilities are greater than anyone else's. What weighs them down is a sense of inadequacy to meet those responsibilities. The sad thing is that they are not inadequate. But somewhere along the way they have been made to feel that way, and they go around with the weight of the world on their shoulders. And you can see it in the way they walk--and the way they talk.

"œHow're you doing?" [with gloom] "œOh, I'm surviving."

We have all seen motivational posters, greeting cards and such. I understand there is now a company called Despair, Inc. This company offers DE-motivational products. Despair, Inc. offers T-shirts (black only), note cards, prints, calendars, etc., promoting such feelings as stupidity, mediocrity, failure, pessimism, ineptitude, and, of course, despair. Despair, Inc. has its own web site, www.despair.com. (2)

The ridiculous thing is that their products are selling like hotcakes. And why not? There are many healthy, intelligent, well-educated people who go through life feeling like losers. They've got it all compared to most of the people in the world, but they sabotage themselves time and time again because their attitude is so bad. When you feel down on yourself, when you feel that there is no hope left, it causes you to act in irrational ways.

Those of you who are football fans may remember a football game years ago between Texas Christian University and the University of Oregon. The Horned Frogs and the Fighting Ducks. That's a colorful image, isn't it?

The Horned Frogs were getting beat up at home by the Ducks. For one offensive player on the bench, it was too much. As a fleet-footed Duck streaked down the sideline late in the game toward another sure touchdown, the frustrated Frog leaped off the bench and tackled him. (3)

It was a dumb move, a desperate move. When we have a spirit of inadequacy, when we have a senseless feeling of hopelessness and despair, we do dumb things. We sabotage ourselves at work, we sabotage ourselves in our relations with others and we sabotage the happiness that is our God-given right.

This woman had been crippled for eighteen years "œby a spirit." THEN JESUS SAW HER. What an exhilarating thought: Jesus saw her. Here is the answer to our feelings of helplessness and despair. JESUS KNOWS OUR SITUATION.

Many people are bent over. Not physically, perhaps. But emotionally and spiritually. Some are bent over with a spirit of inadequacy and defeat. Others are bent over because they have experienced genuine trauma in their lives.

One morning Janice Anthony and her husband were on their way to work when they unexpectedly came upon a cow in the road. Janice swerved to miss the cow and ended up crashing into a telephone pole. Both she and her husband were injured. The next day, Janice returned to work at the day care center, but she was self-conscious of the bruises on her face. She worried that her appearance would upset the children. The first child at the day care center that day was a bubbly four-year-old named Elizabeth. Elizabeth ran to give Janice a hug, but stopped short when she saw Janice's face. Then, Elizabeth announced with wonder, "œMs. Jan, you have a rainbow on your face!" Where Janice had seen the ugliness of bruises, little Elizabeth had seen the beauty of a rainbow. (4)

Some of us have a rainbow of hurt in our hearts. We live in fear of the future. Our health is uncertain. Our jobs are endangered. We are coping with family matters that are weighing us down more than people around us can possibly imagine. But here's the good news: Jesus knows! We have a friend who cares about our situation.

EVEN MORE IMPORTANT, JESUS HAS THE POWER TO LIFT BURDENS FROM OUR BACK. Jesus can set us free.

Author Max Lucado tells about his boyhood days of playing football out in the West Texas fields. The fields where Max and his friends played were full of grass burrs that stuck in their skin. Sometimes, after a big tackle, a player would have a leg or arm full of grass burrs. They stung horribly. The game came to a stop while the player pulled out each of the burrs. Some players wanted to keep on playing in spite of the burrs, but it was usually too painful. Lucado trusted no one but his father to pull out the burrs. So he would leave the game, go home, and get his father to pull out every last burr, then he would return to play. (5)

Friends, there are burrs that only our Father can remove. Fortunately God will remove them if we trust ourselves to Him.

Jesus knows our needs. And Jesus has the power to lift burdens from our back. Luke tells us that when Jesus saw this poor woman, he called her forward and said to her, "œWoman you are set free from your infirmity." Then he put his hands on her, and immediately she straightened up and praised God. Jesus can give us what we need to cope with our difficult situations.

Will Willimon tells of a small College Chapel in North Carolina that has one of the most unusual baptismal fonts in the world. It is made from a huge stone which has been hollowed out for a font. On that very stone, African slaves stood to be sold to the highest bidder. Today, the stone serves Belmont Abbey as its baptismal font. An inscription on the plaque tells all who enter those cleansing waters: "œOn this stone men were sold into slavery. From this stone men are now baptized into freedom." (6)

By the power of Jesus Christ, you and I can move from slavery to freedom, from despair to victory. He can lift our burdens and straighten our backs.

A few years ago, Lorne Adrain fell off his roof and hit his head, triggering an instant case of amnesia. Strangely, the amnesia had a positive effect on his marriage. Lorne could no longer hold grudges or nurse old resentments against his wife because he couldn't remember anything. It was almost as if they were starting their relationship over with a clean slate. Then, his memory returned. Lorne's marriage also returned to its previous state. He entered counseling to help him cope with his relationship problems. The counselor suggested that there was a way to return his marriage to its amnesia-induced bliss. Then she handed him a copy of I Corinthians 13 and told him to live by its teachings. Do you remember how St. Paul described love in that chapter? "œLove does not insist on its own way, it is not irritable or rude . . ." That's what it's like to live the Christ-life. And when we do that, all our relationships improve. In fact, all of life improves, and soon we walk with a livelier step and we stand straighter because of what Christ has done in our lives. Jesus can lift the burden from our back.

But there is one thing more we need to see: JESUS CALLS US TO LIFT ONE ANOTHER'S BURDENS. It is easy to see ourselves in this story as the woman whose back was straightened by Jesus. What we need to see, though, is that, as Christ's body in the world, we are to be lifting the burdens of other people in the world.

Some of you may remember an influential book written in the 1960s titled, The Ugly American. It is the story of an American engineer, Homer Atkins--a man with an ugly face--who was sent to Vietnam to build dams and roads for the military. But Homer refused to build the dams and roads until the government first solved some of the problems of their own people. At the suggestion of his wife, Homer designed a bicycle treadmill pump to get water up to the hillside paddies on which the people depended for food. For centuries this water had been carried laboriously by pails.

Homer's wife Emma was curious about the fact that every woman over sixty had a bent back. Then she noticed that after the monsoon season the sweeping of debris from the streets was inevitably done by older people who used a broom with a short handle. Since wood for longer handles cost too much and was in short supply, Emma found a long-stalked reed and planted shoots from this reed by her door. She tended these reeds carefully. One day when neighbors were in her house she cut a tall reed, bound coconut fronds to it and began to sweep with her back straight. When the people questioned her concerning the reed, she told them where they might find them growing. Four years later, when Emma and Homer were back in Pittsburgh, they received a letter from the headman of the village thanking them. The letter read: "œIn the village of Chang Dong today, the backs of our old people are straight and firm. No longer are their bodies painful and bent. You will be pleased to know that on the outskirts of the village we have constructed a small shrine in your memory . . . at the foot are these words: 'In memory of the woman who unbent the backs of our people.'" (8)

Those words could be inscribed on the cross, for Christ has unbent millions of backs--including that of the woman in our lesson for the day. But we cannot stop there. Like Homer and Emma, we need to consecrate our lives to straightening the back of others. Through words of encouragement and acts of compassion may we, like our Master, be those who unbend the back of others.


1. (Sisters, Oregon: Multnomah Books, 1997), pp. 48-50.

2. Danny Cox and John Hoover, Seize the Day (Hawthorne, N.J.: Career Press, 1994), p. 46.

3. Dr. Gary Rosberg, Guard Your Heart (Multinomah Books, 1994).

4. By Janice Anthony. Found in Joan Aho Ryan, Lessons from Our Children (Deerfield Beach, FL.: Health Communications, Inc., 1999), pp. 120-121.

5. “What Will You Leave At the Cross?" by Max Lucado Preaching Magazine Jan./ Feb. 2001, p. 19.

6. William Willimon, “Remember Who You Are," Upper Room, 1980, page

7. From a sermon by Eric Ritz.

8. Lorne A. Adrain, The Most Important Thing I Know About Love (New York: William Morrow, 2000), pp. xiii-xiv. Told in Lance Webb, God's Surprises (Nashville: Abingdon Press, 1976).

Dynamic Preaching, Collected Sermons, by King Duncan