Right-Side Up Part 4: What is Sunday For? When the Bent Over Stand Tall | Luke 13:10-17 | August 24, 2025
Todd Weir
August 24, 2025

Luke 13:10-17

10 On a Sabbath Jesus was teaching in one of the synagogues, 11 and a woman was there who had been crippled by a spirit for eighteen years. She was bent over and could not straighten up at all. 12 When Jesus saw her, he called her forward and said to her, “Woman, you are set free from your infirmity.” 13 Then he put his hands on her, and immediately she straightened up and praised God.

14 Indignant because Jesus had healed on the Sabbath, the synagogue leader said to the people, “There are six days for work. So come and be healed on those days, not on the Sabbath.”

15 The Lord answered him, “You hypocrites! Doesn’t each of you on the Sabbath untie your ox or donkey from the stall and lead it out to give it water? 16 Then should not this woman, a daughter of Abraham, whom Satan has kept bound for eighteen long years, be set free on the Sabbath day from what bound her?”

17 When he said this, all his opponents were humiliated, but the people were delighted with all the wonderful things he was doing.


People come to church for all kinds of reasons. We had a paid choir in my first church, and a tenor would read his novel in the balcony when he wasn’t singing. I would joke with him afterwards, “I saw you listening to the sermon today. Be careful, a little Jesus might rub off on you.” A state legislator belonged to my home church in Iowa, and he had a big car dealership. That guy could sell a Chevy at the passing of the peace, plus a Ford at coffee hour. Some people come out of obligation, someone dragged them through the door, or it’s been the family church for four generations.


In our more secular time, there is less social pressure, and I think most people come with good intent. You want community and to see friends. A little uplift and hope wouldn’t hurt. Music to stir the soul, ideas to guide wisdom, stories for the journey, finished by a good cup of coffee. Sometimes we come more needy, grieving, and hurting; other times it just feels like a good thing to do.


We can come for all the right reasons and best intentions, but stumble into bad habits. Sunday morning can be very ordinary. Pass the peace to the same four people. Sing three hymns (if you are lucky, you like two of them). Glean a nugget from the sermon, pray, check in with Gary and Grace at coffee. It's just an hour or so out of the week. A decent hour, but ordinary. We could even start to critique the service, much like a movie. “Jesus is a good leading actor, but the supporting cast was a little weak. More character development would help, and more snappy hymns. Two stars out of four this week.”


Sometimes we like church precisely because it is ordinary, even if it is predictable. We need just one place in our lives that isn’t out of control, making big demands of us, or edging us out of our comfort zones. But then it happens. A song reminds us of our mother or another loss. A tear forms, and grief surprises us. Someone shares a concern that breaks our heart, hits close to home. A phrase in the sermon shakes us up and challenges us. Sometimes it is an irritation, and other times it is the Spirit breaking in, and we can’t decide if we like it or not. What if it isn’t just another Sabbath in the synagogue, and God’s Spirit actually moves in among us and sits down?


Since Luke doesn’t name where Jesus is in chapter 13, it could be any synagogue, or sabbath day, any time and place. On the third Sunday in August, a woman slowly walks to her usual seat, stooped as she has been for nearly two decades—nothing to see here, so far. When we read about someone with an infirmity entering the scene with Jesus, we expect them to get healed. But in real life, we hardly notice them.


The text is a little strange, saying that a spirit cripples her, almost like she has a demon. The Message Bible inserts that perhaps she has arthritis. Our modern mind likes to diagnose, so we can suggest a medication to help, or an ointment or vitamins. We would rather fix and cure than care. The King James was translated into English before modern medicine, and it gets the Greek more precisely. She had a spirit of infirmity or weakness. The word is commonly used for physical weakness and also for being downtrodden or vulnerable. Luke could mean both physical infirmity and a spiritual vulnerability.


Let’s think about this woman for a moment. Somehow, she walked to the synagogue despite being bent over. How far did she have to walk? Since there was no Uber, I assume this was a hardship. The text doesn’t mention that anyone was with her. How did she get through her days? Did anyone care for her? She had been like this for 18 years. That is a very precise number. Not many years, not as long as anyone could remember, but 18 years. That means she was familiar to the people of the synagogue. She didn’t suddenly come that day. So why did she walk in alone? Why isn’t she even named in the passage? Perhaps she shuffling to Sabbath, with great effort, possibly pain, faithfully coming every week, and while people recognized her by sight, they didn’t know her name or how she lived.


But Jesus notices her. This quality of attention that Jesus has for the people around him always impresses me more than any miracle performed. I’m not a miracle worker, but I would think if you had the power, miracles would be easy. I’m more impressed by how Jesus noticed people who others overlook. Many biblical accounts begin with Jesus’ focused attention. He sees Zacchaeus up in the tree and asks him to come down. He sees a widow put two pennies in the offering and sees her faith and dignity. He hears Bartimaeus calling out when others are trying to silence him. Jesus considers the children wanting to come to him being held back by the disciples. Noticing what is happening with people in the moment is the beginning of creating sacred opportunity. I can’t work miracles, but I can see people. If you don’t notice, everything just stays ordinary.


Sometimes the Sunday rituals themselves get in the way of noticing people. I have a lot on my head on Sunday. Did I get all the announcements? Are the nuances of the sermon right? Who is visiting and who is missing? I forgot to return a call. Did the Deacons put grape juice in the pitcher? Why did we pick this hymn? I don’t really like it. You might have your own inner dialog. Joan is wearing a pretty shawl. Did she knit that one? Joe has put on some weight. I hate the passing of the peace. Or, I can’t wait till the passing of the peace! I wish we clapped more. I wish we had never clapped. I wonder what the new renovation will look like.


It takes some focus to be present to why we are here, to be together in the presence of God. Showing up is generally better than not showing up. We get some benefit by being here. A little osmosis occurs. But Sabbath is a much thicker concept than just doing what is expected of us at the right time. We are meant to stop so we can be in God’s presence and truly be renewed for the rest of the week. That takes focus.


I try to stay mindfully present, so that I am worshiping with you, not just performing, not just thinking ahead to remember to announce the following hymn. But Jesus takes this presence to the next level. He notices the bent-over woman, the one everyone recognizes, but can’t come up with her name. “Woman, you are free from your infirmity.”

True to form, something out of character happens in the middle of church, and some people love it and, as always, someone doesn’t.


I don’t blame the synagogue leader, really. He wanted things to go as planned. That’s how he kept order, how he kept the community functioning, how he managed his own expectations. Maybe that’s even how he kept his own fear and weariness at bay—by sticking to the script. We all do it. We build routines to feel safe. We lean on familiar rituals to give life some structure. But sometimes that structure starts to matter more than the people it’s supposed to serve. Sometimes the way we’ve always done things becomes a shield that keeps us from seeing what’s actually happening around us—or from letting God interrupt us.


But Jesus didn’t come to keep things running smoothly. He came to set people free.


That’s what the Sabbath is for.


So today, I want to leave you with a simple invitation. You may not be able to work miracles, but you can notice someone. Just one person. Someone who’s always here but easy to overlook. Someone who may be bent over with something you can’t see.


And maybe that someone is also you.


Because we all carry something, we all have weeks where we shuffle in with a weight we don’t know how to name. And most of us would give anything—not necessarily to be fixed, but simply to be seen. To have someone notice. To hear that gentle voice say, “You are not invisible. You are not forgotten. You are set free.”



That, too, is holy work. And maybe that’s what Sunday is really for.