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Xchange
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Discussion Notes
Mealtimes
in Luke's Gospel (2)
Jesus Wearing a Prostitute’s Perfume
Luke
7.36-50
“You want forgiveness? Get religion.”
So says Spiderman! And in so doing he represents a popular
but non-biblical sentiment expressed by many if not most Christians.
Forgiveness in the Gospels did not mean the same as forgiveness
has come to mean for modern Christians. For us, we have a
mechanical notion of transactions: I sin against God, I need
God to forgive me, then all will be well and I will be on
my way to heaven. The reality of personal forgiveness is an
important consequence of the ministry of Jesus, but it is
not the central point!
In Jesus’ day, the people of God were
living under pagan rule. Six centuries earlier, as a result
of Israel’s disobedience, the nation had been defeated
by the Babylonian Empire and many of its people led away into
captivity – what we call ‘the exile’. After
seventy years, the Babylonians were defeated by the Persians,
whose benevolent emperor allowed the Jews to return to their
home-land: the ‘return from exile’. During those
seventy years, the people mourned their rebellion, and longed
to be forgiven that they might return to Jerusalem. The Forgiveness
of sins for them, meant the return from exile. The two belong
together in first century Judaism (see Lam 4:22; Jer 31:31-34;
Jer 33:4-11; Ezek 36:24-6, 33; Ezek 37:21-3; Isa 40:1-2 etc,
etc). To Jesus’ contemporaries, living under pagan rule,
although they had long since returned from Exile, they still
felt as though their hearts remained captive. They longed
for the age when the nation as a whole would enjoy full restoration,
and the forgiveness of sins was one major way of expressing
this hope. Sure, there is an important personal dimension,
but for a Jew in Jesus’ day it was a matter for the
state of the nation as a whole.
The controversy surrounding the prostitute
(the text only refers to her as a sinner, but her prostitution
is certainly implied), has nothing to do with Jesus mixing
with the wrong crowd. It is rather that the forgiveness of
sins as a present reality, is a claim that the Kingdom of
God has come – but, horror of horrors, it contains the
wrong people! The authority to forgive sins, is the authority
of the Messiah, who is bringing in the kingdom. And the return
from exile is experienced by this sinful woman – her
faith in Jesus has saved her – it has made her whole,
and she is sent away in peace.
The parable then, draws attention to the
reality that the very people who need this forgiveness of
sins, are … sinners. It may seem blatantly obvious to
those of us for whom forgiveness is primarily individual.
But for Jesus’ first listeners, forgiveness of sins
was about the restoration of the nation in the first place,
and the restored and whole nation of God was hardly going
to be made up of sinners! The thrust of this story, as of
the meal considered last week, is that it is not the healthy
that need a doctor but the sick.
Jesus has replaced the two main pillars of
Jewish faith – the law and the temple – with himself.
It is devotion to him that defines who is in and who is out
of the Kingdom. Those who were offended were upset not because
sinners were finding forgiveness (this was a current part
of the religious practices – they were not without compassion).
They were upset because Jesus was displacing the temple and
the law! In the home of a Pharisee (who is obviously not downright
hostile to Jesus), the significance of the meal is that Jesus
is shown the devotion of one who has understood who he is,
what the Kingdom of God is, and what forgiveness means.
Questions for discussion
1: If the traditional view of ‘forgiveness
of sins’ is the heart of Christianity – as it
usually is in the modern west – in what ways does this
lead us towards individualistic faith?
2: Some Christians with nasty backgrounds
are often thought to have more powerful ‘testimonies’
because they have been forgiven more. What do you think?
3: What are the consequences of being forgiven?
For Israel? For us?
> Questions? Comments? Let us know
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