Sermon
Sermon for the Eleventh Sunday after Pentecost
August 24, 2025 Yr C
St. Mary’s Episcopal Church
The Rev’d Michael J. Horvath
Gospel: Luke 13:10-17
When we meet her in Luke’s gospel, this woman has been bent over for eighteen long years. Think about that. Eighteen years of looking at the ground. Eighteen years of perhaps watching the world only through the shuffle of people’s feet. Eighteen years of straining to see the sky but being unable to lift her gaze.
What’s even more striking is this: when she appears in the synagogue she doesn’t ask Jesus for anything. She doesn’t cry out like Bartimaeus. She doesn’t push through a crowd like the bleeding woman. She doesn’t get lowered through a roof by friends. She’s just there – bent, silent, almost invisible.
And Jesus sees her.
That’s the beginning of the good news in this story: God sees us. God sees you. Not just the parts you polish for Sunday mornings, not just your strongest self, not just the version of you that can keep your head up. God sees you in the moments you’re bent down, worn down, weighed down. Maybe by grief, maybe by shame, maybe by exhaustion. Jesus sees the woman that others had learned not to notice, maybe even learned to avoid.
And he doesn’t just notice her. He calls her forward, in front of everybody and suddenly she is center stage in the synagogue. Jesus doesn’t wait for her to ask. He doesn’t require a confession of faith or a statement of belief. He calls her. And then he lays his hands on her and says, “Woman, you are set free.”
Set free. That’s different from “you are healed.” It carries with it the idea that healing is wonderful, but this is bigger. Healing fixes a body. Freedom restores a life.
And when she stands tall, when her spine uncoils, when her eyes meet the horizon again, she praises God. Her first act of freedom is worship. She doesn’t say thank you to Jesus, not right away. She praises God, because she knows what’s happening here is not just a lucky break or a medical miracle. It is liberation. It is Sabbath. It is God at work.
But not everyone is rejoicing. There’s always somebody who wants to police when and how God shows up. The synagogue leader is indignant. He doesn’t scold Jesus directly. He scolds the crowd: “There are six other days to be healed, come then, not on the Sabbath.”
In other words: Stay in your lane. Stay in your place. Keep things orderly.
But Jesus isn’t having it. He calls them hypocrites. He says, “You’ll untie your donkey on the Sabbath. You’ll give your ox water. And you’re telling me this daughter of Abraham should stay bound one more day, when she’s been bound for eighteen years?”
This is where the story shifts from a private and personal interaction to a public clash. This isn’t just about a woman standing up straight. This is about a whole system being bent out of shape.
Because Sabbath isn’t just about rest. The Sabbath is political state of mind. The Sabbath is about freedom. It’s about remembering that you are not a slave anymore. You are not defined by Pharaoh’s quotas. You are not a beast of burden. You belong to God. As the theologian Walter Brueggemann says in his book Sabbath as Resistance, “Sabbath is not simply the pause that refreshes. It is the pause that transforms.” And so when Jesus heals on the Sabbath, he is not breaking the law—he is fulfilling it. He is enacting what Sabbath was always meant to be: release, restoration, liberation.
In other words: real worship is not about ritual precision. It’s about letting loose the bonds of injustice. It’s about untying what is bound. It’s about seeing the people we’d rather not see.
Do you see the thread? Isaiah says, “If you stop pointing the finger and speaking evil… if you honor the Sabbath, not going your own way… then you shall take delight in the Lord.” Jesus is showing what honoring the Sabbath looks like. It looks like a woman who has been doubled over for eighteen years standing up tall, standing in her full dignity as a daughter of Abraham.
And that’s why the religious leaders are furious. Because Jesus is not just healing a body. He is disrupting a system. He is challenging a way of life
that keeps certain people bent down so others can feel righteous about themselves. He is unmasking hypocrisy that protects animals but leaves women in chains.
The clash of kingdoms is right here in the synagogue: the kingdom of human rules, and the kingdom of God’s freedom.
Now, we know this isn’t just an ancient problem. We know what it is to live in a world where people are bent down and bound, not just physically but spiritually, economically, socially.
And maybe that’s where this gospel hits home for us. Because sometimes we are the woman, bent down, unseen, waiting to be called into the light. And sometimes we are the crowd, watching,
amazed, rejoicing in what God can do. But sometimes – let’s admit it – we are the synagogue leader. We are the ones clinging to control, anxious about change, worried that if people really start standing up straight, if chains really start falling off, then the order of things will be disrupted.
But that disruption is exactly what the Gospel, and Isaiah, demand. Isaiah says, “If you remove the yoke from among you… if you satisfy the needs of the afflicted, then your light shall rise in the darkness.” That means the plight of immigrants living bent under fear of deportation is not just their burden, it is our yoke to break. The attempt to erase the existence of our trans siblings is not someone else’s issue, it is our collective call to untying the
bonds of injustice. The denial that American slavery was evil is not just a distortion of history, it is a sin that still bends all of us down, generation after generation. And when leaders threaten to undo same-sex marriage, it is not simply about politics, it is about whether the church will honor the dignity and love of people made in God’s image. It is about setting people free. Because the truth is, none of us stands tall until all of us stand tall.
What is particularly beautiful in this gospel passage is that Jesus doesn’t just set the woman free. He sets the whole community free. Luke says the woman stood tall and praised God, and all the people rejoiced. Not just her. All the people. Because when one person is unbound, everyone gets a taste of freedom. When the bent are helped to stand upright, all of us can breathe a little easier.
The God we worship is the God who sees us in our bent places. The God who calls us into the center, not to shame us but to set us free. The God who unbends our bodies, our souls, our systems.
And every time we gather on a Saturday night or Sunday, we are not just keeping tradition. We are stepping into Sabbath freedom. We are proclaiming to the world: Pharaoh doesn’t own us. Rome doesn’t own us. Capitalism doesn’t own us. Shame doesn’t own us. Illness doesn’t own us. We belong to God.
This is not about “go out and fix yourself.” It’s not even about “go out and fix the world.” It’s simply this: trust that the God who sees you will also set you free. And when you do, stand tall. Praise God. And join the rejoicing of a community that yearns to understand and to live into what it means to be unbent.
Because the world says, “Not today.” Jesus says, “Today.”
The world says, “Stay bent.” Jesus says, “Stand tall.”
The world says, “Keep order.” Jesus says, “Be free.”
And that, beloved, is Sabbath. That is liberation. That is the kingdom of God.
Amen.