by Barrie Maguire |
Read Jeremiah 1:4-10 & Luke 13:10-17.
A young boy and
a bent over woman – not usually the people we would think of as chosen by God.
Yet young Jeremiah was claimed by God to be his messenger, and Jesus called the
bent over woman close to him that she might be set free. As seems to be the
biblical case, God works outside of the rules, outside of the expectations of
society to do God’s work.
Imagine spending
18 years bent over. Add to that, you’re a woman in a time where you really are
treated like an animal, like a piece of property. Who talks to you? Who would
marry you, much less give you children? Who takes care of you? Who runs into in
the street like they never even saw you? Who gets frustrated because you’re
moving too slow? Being bent over, the scenery rarely changes on those dusty
roads. And yet one morning, bent over, you hobble to church to hear this guy
Jesus say something profound.
No one really
wants to be near you at church – you’re too different, too unclean. You can’t
see what’s going on, but you’re guessing it’s something special – there’s an
unusual hush. Suddenly your name is called out by this Jesus! And before you
know it, you have been set free and are standing up straight, getting a new perspective,
taking in hundreds of shocked faces – shocked by your healing, shocked by the
work on the Sabbath, shocked by the humiliated look on the synagogue leader’s
face. All you can do is start praising the Lord.
If we’re honest, we’re all a little bent – maybe physically over our computers, or emotionally crippled from a hard relationship. We could all use a perspective shift – to see people more as God sees them, to look out beyond our own two feet. Maybe one reason we come to church on Sunday mornings is to hear God speak to us. Maybe we need this compassionate God to set us free once more from the ailment of internet addiction or crippling fear and doubt. Maybe we need to witness one more time someone else’s healing. Maybe we need to hear that God values life over rules, that God doesn’t care about cultural expectations.
God is calling
your name, calling you for a purpose beyond being bent over. So come, be set
free that you might rejoice in the power of our Lord Jesus Christ, and get a
new perspective.
Grace and peace,
Pastor Kate