Tag Archives: Luke 7

The Great Omission

The Great Omission (CaD Lk 7) Wayfarer

When [John’s disciples] came to Jesus, they said, “John the Baptist sent us to you to ask, ‘Are you the one who is to come, or should we expect someone else?’”
Luke 7:20 (NIV)

John the Baptist languishes in prison. The passionate preacher in the wilderness had, not long before, commanded vast crowds who gathered to hear his fire-and-brimstone messages. He railed against the evils of his day, spoke against the powerful and corrupt, and called people to repent of their sinful ways. People flocked to be baptized by him. The religious establishment scorned him. His voice carried weight and his rhetoric swayed multitudes. Then he crossed Herod.

Part of the secret of the Roman Empire’s success was that when they conquered and occupied a foreign land, they allowed the local rulers to reign and the local religions to remain. The local rulers of Judea were three sons of Herod the Great. Theirs was a powerful, violent, and corrupt dynasty. Herod Antipas had a political marriage to the daughter of Arabia’s ruler, but he had a lusty thing for his niece, Herodias. The only problem was that Herodias was already married to Herod’s brother. This didn’t stop Antipas from scheming, conniving, and bullying until he had what he wanted.

John the Baptist called him out, and that wild man preacher could sway multitudes. It was a PR nightmare for Antipas, who like all good politicians, tried to pass himself off as a good, God-fearing Jew. So, he did what politicians do to this day. He censored and silenced his critics. He threw John into prison. Nothing to see here.

John, meanwhile, is waiting for Jesus to do His thing. The thing he told the crowds about. The fire from heaven! The ax of judgment cutting down the corrupt! The victorious messiah who will wipe out the likes of Herod and establish an eternal earthly kingdom of justice and righteousness!

Oh, and yes, get me out of this stinking prison.

But, it wasn’t happening.

“I’m still here. This is not what I expected. This was not what I had envisioned for how things would play out.”

Impatience sets in.

“Maybe I was wrong about Jesus. Maybe Jesus isn’t the ‘Marvel Messiah.'”

So, John tells his disciples to go find Jesus and get an update. When are you going to take down the Herod Administration? When are you going to set up your Kingdom? When are you pushing these Romans back across the Med?

“When can I expect you to get me out of prison?”

Jesus responds to John’s question:

“Go back and report to John what you have seen and heard: The blind receive sight, the lame walk, those who have leprosy are cleansed, the deaf hear, the dead are raised, and the good news is proclaimed to the poor.”

It’s a paraphrase of the same prophecy of Isaiah that Jesus quoted in the synagogue back in Nazareth:

“The Spirit of the Lord is on me,
    because he has anointed me
    to proclaim good news to the poor.
He has sent me to proclaim freedom for the prisoners
    and recovery of sight for the blind,
to set the oppressed free,
    to proclaim the year of the Lord’s favor.”

Yet, in Jesus’ paraphrase, He omits the part about “proclaiming freedom for the prisoners” and “setting the oppressed free.”

Ouch. That’s quite an omission, cuz.

Along my life journey, I have found myself languishing at certain waypoints on life’s road. This wasn’t what I had planned. Things aren’t working out as I envisioned them. What’s worse: nothing is happening. I feel stuck. God, don’t seem to be doing anything. What about those promises? How long? How long will I be stuck here? God? Hello?! I. don’t. want. to. be. in. this. place. any. longer!!

Here’s what I’ve learned from those seasons. There were reasons I could never see in the moment that I can now see in the review mirror. Circumstances that needed to change. I needed to change. Situations needed to be set up for the next stage of the journey. People needed to be moved. Life has a lot of moving parts.

I have also learned from those seasons the hard lesson that John learned in today’s chapter. If I have faith that “all things work together for good for those who love God and are called according to His purpose” (Rom 8:28), then I surrender the right to define what “good” looks like.

John the Baptist will be beheaded.

So will Paul.

Peter will be crucified upside down.

Jesus’ Kingdom is not a kingdom of this world. That’s what He told Pilate. As a disciple of Jesus, I must embrace that my life journey through this world may not always be as I had envisioned because it’s not about me and an earthly kingdom. It’s about me channeling God’s kingdom while I’m here. Sometimes, that means being patient, surrendering, and having faith to persevere when I’m languishing in my present circumstances.

If you know anyone who might be encouraged by today’s post, please share.

Finding God Inside and Outside the Box

Jesus went on to say, “To what, then, can I compare the people of this generation? What are they like? They are like children sitting in the marketplace and calling out to each other:
“‘We played the pipe for you,
    and you did not dance;
we sang a dirge,
    and you did not cry.’

Luke 7:31-32 (NIV)

Recently I was having a conversation with a leader in my local gathering of Jesus’ followers. He shared with me that it is quite common for locals to come to him, give witness to immoral, hypocritical, and evil words and actions done by members of our gathering, and then proceed to state that if this is the way followers of Jesus behave, then they want nothing to do with it.

Welcome to humanity.

Along my life journey, I have encountered individuals who would in no way fit inside the box of the particular brand of Christianity in which I find myself. In fact, they would eschew any notion of wearing that label. That said, I can see in these individuals’ lives and actions that they understand and embrace the things of God far more than many who live and operate inside the box and proudly advertise our brand on the bumpers of their cars.

In today’s chapter, Dr. Luke shares two stories that highlight the reality of non-religious people who “get” the things of God and religious people who don’t. It has always been a part of humanity, and Jesus encountered it regularly.

In the first encounter, Jesus is blown away by the faith of an ungodly, foreign leader whom most (if not all) of His followers would label their enemy. Jesus never even sees or meets this Roman Centurion in person. His exchange is completely done by intermediaries. First, Jesus is petitioned by leaders of his own religious box to heal a Roman Centurion’s servant. This, in and of itself, was way out of the ordinary. The Jews hated the Romans who militarily occupied their homeland, and the average Roman soldier treated the local Jewish population with natural distrust and contempt. The Jews and Romans were bitter enemies. When the Jewish leaders to speak highly of this Centurion’s kindness and generosity to Jesus’ people, it captured Jesus’ attention.

On the way to meet with the Centurion, Jesus is met by servants of the Centurion. In the Jewish tradition of the day, it would be unlawful for Jesus to enter the Centurion’s house. The Centurion knew this and humbly sends his servants to give a message to Jesus. The Roman’s message was to tell Jesus that He doesn’t have to take the risk religiously “dirtying” Himself by entering the Centurion’s home and the social criticism Jesus would receive from His own people by doing so. He trusted that if Jesus simply gave the word, his servant would be healed.

In the second story, Jesus is having dinner with one of the good, upstanding leaders of his own religious box. A woman enters and approaches Jesus. In that town, this was that woman. Everyone knew who she was by her reputation. It doesn’t take much imagination to fill in the blanks: wanton, loose, used, cheap, pitiful, tragic. Not only did she not belong inside any kind of religious box, but no one inside the box wanted her there. But, like the foreign Centurion, this local social skank gets who Jesus is, and what God is doing through Him. She falls at Jesus’ feet blesses Him with all that she has: her contrite tears, her loving kisses, and some perfume.

Jesus immediately perceives the religious contempt of his host toward the local woman. This upstanding church elder had likely known who this woman was for her entire life and had probably ignored her and held her in self-righteous contempt. Jesus makes it clear to His host that she gets the things of God more than he.

In the midst of these stories, Jesus describes religious people:

They are like children sitting in the marketplace and calling out to each other:
“‘We played the pipe for you,
    and you did not dance;
we sang a dirge,
    and you did not cry.’

In other words, we who are religious tend to expect everyone to fit inside our religious boxes and do what we prescribe. Inside of our religious boxes, we expect people to look like us, speak our lingo fluently, know our traditions, and behave in a way we deem acceptable.

Of course, the look, the lingo, the traditions, and the expected behaviors may have little or nothing to do with truly getting the things that God actually cares about.

I am reminded this morning that Jesus faithfully lived and operated inside the religious box of His people. He went to the Temple. He taught in the synagogues. He dined, socialized, and befriended the religious leaders. He followed the religious customs and traditions. Jesus’ example tells me that the things of God can be surely found, learned, and embraced inside of my religious box.

But Jesus’ example in today’s chapter also reminds me of this truth: There will always be individuals inside my religious box who don’t get the things of God, and there will always be individuals outside of my religious box who do.

The Pious Host and “That Woman”

Detail from The St. John's Bible
Detail from The St. John’s Bible

Therefore, I tell you, her many sins have been forgiven—as her great love has shown. But whoever has been forgiven little loves little.” Luke 7:47 (NIV)

The further I get in life’s journey, the more I appreciate certain stories from God’s Message. I love this story from today’s chapter. Jesus is invited to dine with one of the pious, upstanding elders of the local church. Respectable, he is; Keeping his house in order the way he self-righteously keeps his life. He’s intrigued by this young rabbi everyone has been talking about, and figures he’ll ask the new celebrity to dinner. It will look good for this religious elder to be seen reaching out to the young man creating all the stir.

In the same town is this woman. She’s that woman. Everyone in town knows about her. To the thinking of good religious men of that day, the men like Jesus’ host, all women were on a societal level lower than dogs. This woman, however, sets a new standard for the definition of low-life. The entire town knew how she survived.

Wink, wink, nudge, nudge.

Guess who I saw coming out of her place last night?” one asks as the crowd outside parts, not wanting to touch the dirty woman as she shockingly makes her way into the church elder’s home.

No surprise,” says another disdainfully, wondering what the wayward woman is carrying. “Half the men in town have been in her bed.

Only half?” mocks the first.

Okay, it’s more like three quarters,” answers the other, “but let’s face it: there are some men in town it’s best you just turn a blind eye and forget you saw them with her. You don’t want to be on his bad side.”

What an amazing contrast. The self-righteously, spic-and-span household of the church elder and the dirty town slut makes her way in to where Jesus sits next to His pious host. Weeping, she washes Jesus’ feet with her tears. She dries them with her hair, anoints them with expensive perfume, and kisses them.

In the societal culture of that day it was appalling. Jesus could read the subtext in his host’s face: “We don’t associate with such filth, Rabbi. Keep away from women like that. She will contaminate you. Haven’t you read Proverbs, Jesus? Stay far away from her. That’s the wise thing to do! I know you’re riding a wave of popularity at the moment, but I can’t continue to support you if you’re going to associate with people like this. It’s bad for your image. Trust me, I know. You’ve got to brand yourself differently.

In the culture of God’s Kingdom, however, it was a holy moment.

Whoever is forgiven little – loves little.

In the economics of God’s Kingdom there is a relationship between our willingness to know, acknowledge and accept the depth of our flaws and our knowledge of what a precious gift we’ve been given through Jesus’ sacrifice, grace and forgiveness. The more readily we accept the former, the more grateful we are for the latter. The more we deny the former, the more the latter eludes us. Without an increasing knowledge of the latter, we cannot progress far in our spiritual journey.