Grace to you and peace from God our Father and the Lord
Jesus Christ.
Amen.
She’s got no name, but boy, does she have a story.
Have you ever noticed how in the scripture
that there
are plenty of women - plenty of sinful women -
running
around without names?
Well, sure they have names.
To their
friends and neighbors and mothers and fathers and partners,
these women
are not unnamed sinners,
but
they are loved ones with whom they laughed and cried
and
suffered and rejoiced and shared their life and their love.
Nonetheless, in scripture they go about without a name,
perhaps
because it was forgotten by the author or, more likely,
it
was deemed not necessary to the story.
We have one such unnamed sinful woman in our gospel story
today.
And while it was a slight of justice
to
rob this woman of her name and her identity,
her
namelessness serves the purpose of highlighting not only her story,
but
that of thousands of others in her day and ours.
For when we look at her we are looking at the unnamed
thousands
who are
labeled as sinful outsiders,
who
are pushed aside,
and
whose presence makes many of us nervous.
Today’s unnamed sinful woman -
the unnamed
and outcast sinful woman whom we find
at
the feet of Jesus and whose presence makes the host nervous -
has a story to tell, a story that we need to hear, a story
that we need to tell.
This story begins in community,
in the home
community of our unnamed woman at her birth.
Although we hope that she was fully and completely loved by
her parents,
she was
surely a disappointment to some in her family,
and
perhaps to her parents,
by nature
of her gender,
for
after all, women were powerless in this ancient society,
and the
birth of a female represented a potential loss of
wealth
and prestige for her family.
Regardless of the attitude of her parents and family about
her gender,
as a young
girl she would grow into her role as a woman,
subservient
to any brothers or male cousins that she might have.
Furthermore, as she physically grew as a woman she would
find herself
ritually
unclean and ceremoniously ostracised by the community
on
a monthly basis because of her
biology.
As if this were not bad enough,
at
some point along the line she was labeled a sinner.
What was
her sin?
Theft? Prostitution? Picking grain on the sabbath?
Luke doesn’t share that with us. We don’t know.
Whatever
her unnamed sin was she was set apart,
separated
from the community because of her sin,
and her
name was replaced by the descriptive pronoun, “sinner.”
Not
just a sinner but an outsider,
our unnamed woman could no longer be a part of the community
of her birth,
and was
forced to occupy the margins of society,
and
denied community, except for the community of the outcast.
And it was there,
as a
resident in the community of the outcast,
where
Jesus found her.
For just one chapter prior to today’s gospel reading
we find
Jesus preaching on the plain to the outcast,
“Blessed
are you who are poor,
for
yours is the kingdom of God
Blessed are
you who are hungry now,
for
you will be filled.
Blessed are
you who weep now,
for
you will laugh.”
And as the text a chapter before tells us,
a great
multitude of people from all Judea Jerusalem
and
the coast of Tyre Sidon
They came
to hear him and to be healed of their diseases;
and
those who were troubled with unclean spirits were cured.
I can imagine that our unnamed sinful woman was among that
multitude
hearing
the Good News of the kingdom of God
that
the Kingdom of God
that
authentic community with God and her fellow sufferers is hers.
And perhaps, too, she was there to witness the healing
of the
Centurion’s slave,
a
fellow outsider,
or
the raising to life of a widow’s dead son.
Perhaps she not only heard the word but saw in these
miracles
the hope
for her own redemption,
that
this man of God who proclaims Good News
to
the marginalized,
who
heals the unclean and who raises the dead,
could heal
her uncleanliness and raise her from her social death.
Indeed, what she heard in his words and saw in his miracles
was the kingdom
of God
Out of gratitude for his message
she seeks
him out and offers him the ritual of hospitality -
washing
the feet and annointing -
for
he has come into her life.
But she does this not with clean water, but with tears of
pain,
for this is
where Jesus entered her life -
in
the pain, at the margins, as an outcast.
And it is precisely this interaction between Jesus and the
outcast
which makes
the host nervous,
for
it turns his world upside down.
“If this man were a prophet,” he says to himself, “he would
have known
who and
what kind of woman this is who is touching him -
that
she is a sinner.”
But the host has it all wrong,
for it is
precisely because Jesus is a prophet (and much more)
that he
touches and is touched by the outcast, the sinful, the unclean.
In our host’s understanding God comes into contact only with
those
who behave
in prescribed ways,
and
who follow certain rules.
Indeed, perhaps we think the same way.
How many
people have been denied the good news because it was
hidden
by church codes of behavior and dress and
de-facto
assigned seating?
How many
teens with alternative fashion taste
have
been turned off to church because we tell them
that
blue hair, male earrings or baggy pants are unacceptable?
How many
gay and lesbian people have been denied the good news
because
they have been told that God hates queers?
Yet Jesus himself tells us earlier in Luke that he has come
not for
those who follow the rules
but
for those who are cast out because of those rules -
for the
sinners and the poor and the outcast
and
all those rejected by a regulated society.
By reaching out to an outcast and a sinner,
Jesus
violates the host’s sense of propriety and justice,
and offends those for whom love and compassion take a
backseat
to
human reason, rules, order or tradition.
Jesus reaches out to the kid with blue hair,
to the
person who looks, acts or even smells different than us,
to the
person who has been told over and over again that
God
hates them because of their sexual orientation.
Jesus is on the other side of those lines that we draw,
forming
community out of those who are rejected by our communities.
And so as we begin our summer together,
and as we
begin to look at the Kingdom of God
our first
impression is one of a community of outcasts and sinners,
gathered
in opposition to and at the discomfort of many
who
find comfort in rules and regulations
that
clearly define who’s in and who’s out.
Yet we also see in this kingdom a guiding principle,
one of
forgiveness and mercy.
The act of
love that our unnamed woman has shown to Jesus
occurs
as a response to the good news of forgiveness,
the good
news of freedom from sin
and
restoration to community with God and others.
This unnamed woman’s story,
and thus
the story of so many other unnamed men and women,
is one of
death through sin and isolation and oppression,
and
new life through the love and mercy of Christ.
Brothers and sisters,
that is the
story of the Kingdom of God
It is our story,
for
in our baptism we have each died and been raised again,
restored
to God and to each other by the mercy of Christ.
The Good News is that the Kingdom
of God
the
community that God gathers us to be,
is one marked by the radical and irrational love of Christ,
and
which destroys all that would divide us.


