The Healing of the Woman with an Issue of Blood

 and the Raising of the Daughter of Jairus

















27th Sunday after Pentecost 



The Healing of the Woman 

with an 

Infirmity of Eighteen Years 

on the 

Sabbath Day





The Twenty Seventh Sunday after Pentecost 



The Healing of the Woman with an Infirmity of Eighteen Years on the
Sabbath Day



Page 12



Page 13 of 13



In the Name of the Father and the Son and the Holy Spirit, Amen This
homily was transcribed from one given On November 25, 1996 according to
the church calendar, being the Twenty Seventh Sunday after Pentecost,
and Apodosis of the Entry of the All Holy Theotokos into the Temple.



Apodosis means ?leave-taking¦, and is the day in which the major aspects
of a feast are revisited in the church-s hymnology, and is the third
?part¦ of the proper way in which a Great Feast is celebrated, these
being:

 T	Preparation  

 T	Hymns are sung sometimes weeks in advance of the feast, especially
the Katavasia at the canon.

 T	In the case of especially solemn and important feasts, fasting in
enjoined (such as before the Lord-s Nativity, Pascha, the Dormition of
the Theotokos, and the Feast of Saints Peter and Paul).

 T	There are often pre-festal services in  the immediate day or days
before the feast. An example of this would be the true Vespral liturgy
(this is NEVER substituted for Vigil and liturgy on the day of the feast
itself) that the Typicon directs to be served the day before Theophany
and Nativity. The entire week before Pascha, ?Holy Week¦ is considered a
?pre-festal¦ period! If you miss even one of those services without due
cause, you are cheating yourself out of a full understanding of the
feast, and a full measure of the outpouring of God-s grace upon you.

 T	The Day of the Feast

 T	The Feast itself is always served with Vigil with Divine Liturgy the
following day. If vigil is not served, great vespers with a FULL matins
(otherwise the essence of the feast is lost) and Divine liturgy is
served the next day. 

 T	The Post-festal period and Apodosis

 T	In the days following the feast, sometimes up to a week, or in the
case of Pascha, even until The Ascension, forty days later, the feast is
continually remembered with hymns. 

 T	On the last day of the feast, it is recalled again with many of the
hymns that were sung on the feast day itself.



The Orthodox way of celebrating a feast, unfortunately forgotten or
ignored in our day, is very ?Jewish¦. For example, Pentecost was a three
day feast for the Jews.



This day was also the  commemoration of Hieromartyr Clement, Pope of
Rome  The Epistle reading appointed is Ephesians  6:10-17, and the
Gospel is 13:10-17.  



There are some stylistic changes and minor corrections made and several
footnotes have been added, but otherwise, it is essentially in a
colloquial, ?spoken¦ style. It is hoped that something in these words
will help and edify the reader, but a sermon read from a page cannot
enlighten a soul as much as attendance and reverent worship at the Vigil
service, which prepares the soul for the Holy Liturgy, and the hearing
of the scriptures and the preaching of them in the context of the Holy
Divine Liturgy. In such circumstances the soul is enlightened much more
than when words are read on a page. 



Today is the Twenty Seventh Sunday after Pentecost and also the apodosis
of the Entry of the All Holy Theotokos into the temple.  The Apodosis is
the last day in which we sing hymns for the feast.  All feasts in the
Orthodox church have three parts to them.  The first part is
preparation.  We sometimes prepare by fasting as we are doing for the
Nativity.  And we always have preparatory hymns beforehand, especially
in the Katavasia of the canon, which are hymns that are said at the end
of each ode of the canon in the All Night Vigil for Matins.  There are
other hymns we also sing.  Sometimes we even have entire services that
are just before the great feast itself, like for instance we-ll have
vespral divine liturgy for the pre-festival of Holy Nativity of the Lord
the day before the Nativity.  So we prepare for the outpouring of grace
that God will give us on a particular feast day. Without this
preparation and expectation, we will surely not be able to accept and
understand much of what God wants to impart to us on the day of the
feast, and those days immediately following.



Then of course there is the feast day itself when we sing hymns and
commemorate that specific occurrence, that specific saint especially. 
After this there is the post-festal period, the time in which we still
sing hymns about the feast and we remember it and we, like the
Theotokos, ?treasure these things in our hearts¦ Cf. Luke 2:18-19 ?And
all they that heard it wondered at those things which were told them by
the shepherds.

But Mary kept all these things, and pondered them in her heart.¦, as is
said of her by the Evangelist concerning all the things that she saw in
her life that Christ did and said.   She treasured them all up in her
heart.  We should be like that, too.  We should not be so quick to let
go.  When God gives us grace don-t let go so fast.  Don-t immediately
forget and go out into the world and just forget what happened the past
week, the past Sunday, yesterday.  We must take time to think about
these things and muse over them and pray about them.  And then on the
last day, if it-s an especially great feast of the Lord or of the
Theotokos, we almost reprise the feast.  We sing the same hymns - not
all of them, but many of them that we sang on the feast day itself.  So
for instance today we had the troparion and kontakion for the Theotokos-
Entry.  We also sang the exact same Epistle and the exact same Gospel
that was said on Wednesday morning when we had the Divine Liturgy. 



We also commemorate the Hieromartyr Clement, Pope of Rome today.  And in
the primary reading for today we hear about the healing of the woman who
had an infirmity of eighteen years, and she was healed on the Sabbath
day.  As is usual, in the readings of the Gospel,  there is an inner and
an outer meaning.  The outer meaning is pretty clear to see, when Jesus
Christ rebukes this synagogue leader.  It is very clear how foolish his
words were.  So we know the outer meaning that there is no time
prescribed especially for mercy.  All time is for mercy.  God implants
in us understanding of things, and we have to be able to judge rightly. 
And we know when we should show mercy.  There is no time when man should
put some law ahead of showing mercy. There is an inner meaning, too,
because this woman was all bent together.  She could not straighten up. 
She could in no wise lift herself up.  There is a great meaning to that
infirmity that she had, and our Lord-s healing her on the Sabbath day.  



Our Lord was teaching in one of the synagogues on the Sabbath, and this
was a habit of His. This is a very Jewish habit to speak all day in the
synagogue on the Sabbath.  And  we try to emulate that in a poor way,
unfortunately like the apostles did it, because of our sins and
laziness.  Not like the early Christians did it, who had so much zeal. 
But we serve the All Night Vigil and we serve the Divine Liturgy and we
preach at the Liturgy and I preach at the Vigil as well because we need
to know as many holy things as we can.  We need to continually be
feeding ourselves with holiness, because we-re so continually,
unfortunately, imbibing the bitter dregs of the world.  So we must do
something to dilute that and to eventually cast it out.  And if you do
not meditate upon holy things, you won-t become holy.  It-s too bad that
we don-t spend all day speaking of holy things.  It would be good if we
did.  The purpose of our gathering together on Saturday and Sunday is to
worship, to expect God to do something to us by partaking of His
mysteries to be sure, to have enlightenment, the medicine of immortality
within us.  But also, to taste something of the sweetness of the
Church-s theology.  It-s God-breathed, you know.  The services are
inspired by the Holy Spirit and they breathe as the Holy Spirit
breathes.  And if you listen and if you pray, you can hear it.  You can
hear God in His services.  



Saturday and Sunday are consecrated to our remembrance of God. 
Unfortunately we do not Him remember every day.  Unfortunately, we fall
into grievous sin.  We get distracted.  But if we can struggle to pay
attention on Saturday and Sunday, whatever our position ( I struggle to
pay attention, too ) - God will enlighten us.  Of course, we will break
bread together, most of us, and be able to taste of the heavenly bread. 
But I tell you, if you don-t come here with an expectation that God will
teach you and enlighten you and make you straighten up, as one who
cannot lift yourself up, and if you do not struggle, then you will come
away today poor and wretched and unenlightened.  You might commune but
you won-t have received any benefit from this heavenly food because you
won-t have struggled.  So you must struggle.  Struggle by coming to the
vigil and having expectation that God will teach you, listening as well
as you can.  And when you fall away from listening, pull yourself back. 
I don-t know any other way to do it.  I don-t know any other way to
explain it.  You just struggle and struggle and struggle.  And
eventually God will indeed make us capable of those things that we are
struggling to do.  He will help us.  



?And, behold, there was a woman which had a spirit of infirmity eighteen
years, and was bowed together, and could in no wise lift up herself. And
when Jesus saw her, he called her to him, and said unto her, Woman, thou
art loosed from thine infirmity. And he laid his hands on her: and
immediately she was made straight, and glorified God.¦ Luke 13:11-13



The God-man can just say, ?Thou art loosed.¦, and she was loosed from
her infirmity of eighteen years, long standing pain and sadness over her
infirmity.  It was a long time, and the fathers say that this was
mentioned so that we could know, this was God-s work. This is in God-s
territory.  God can heal a man.  No man can heal another man.  And this
is a very simple miracle.  There is not much fanfare to it.  There is
not much of a lead up to it, such as in the miracle of Jairus- daughter
Cf. Mark 5:22-42 and Luke 8:41-56, where the raising of Jairus-
daughter, and the healing of the woman with an issue of blood is
recounted in powerful detail., where there is a whole procession that
occurs.  And that has something to each us.  But here, Jesus Christ,
matter of factly, as the God-man, as the one who created us, cast out
Satan with only a word.  ?Thou art loosed,¦ by the authority of the
God-man.  Now man cannot do this.  This woman was bent.  She was
crooked. Solomon says, ?I have seen all the works that are done under
the sun; and, behold, all is vanity and vexation of spirit.  That which
is crooked cannot be made straight: and that which is wanting cannot be
numbered.¦ Ecclesiastes 1:14-15 



?Thou art loosed.¦  Our Lord tells her, -Thou cannot help Thyself, but
I, the God-man can.  And I have come to help, and I will.  Thou art
loosed from thy sins, from thy passions.-  And why do I say that? 
Because crookedness is a metaphor for sin and for tempestuousness, for
being lost in the vanity of the world.  -I am the healer.  I came to
heal thee.  I came to make thee able to see me.  You  cannot see me when
you are bent down.  You can only see the ground.  But I will straighten
you up, and then you will see Me, as I am.-  



Why was this woman oppressed?  I told you before, again, I say it was
her sins that oppressed her.  This is a great mystery.  We don-t always
know why a person suffers.  Sometimes they suffer because of their sins,
sometimes not.  But that is God-s territory.  We cannot delve into these
matters.  We must only speak of them with fear and trembling, so as not
to offend the Divine Majesty.  Some people grow old and fat and they are
wicked.  Some people are young and they die in virtue.  Some people
struggle and never seem to be able to get around the problems of life. 
Other people have a relatively  easy time of it. God knows for each man
what his position in life should be for the best possibility for his
salvation, and we don-t know.,  But this woman was bent and crooked, so
the crookedness indicates that she was suffering because of her sins. 
And she suffered manfully.  She suffered for eighteen years.  And she
came to the temple, and she was hoping to be cured. 



There is another incident where Christ cures someone.  I can be so bold
and say that this woman had sins is because of this incident. ?And,
behold, they brought to him a man sick of the palsy, lying on a bed: and
Jesus seeing their faith said unto the sick of the palsy; Son, be of
good cheer; thy sins be forgiven thee. ? Matthew 9:2  What an odd thing
that must have been to hear.  Here a person comes laid out, unable to
move their limbs, and Jesus Christ says, ?Thy sins be forgiven thee.¦ 
Some of these people must have thought, ?Well, yes, but don-t you see
what-s wrong with the man?¦  And then others thought, ?He blasphemes.¦ 
But this man was sick because of his sins, and this woman was crippled
because of her sins.  And God enlightened both of them.  He healed them
of their sins first.  He loosed this woman of her infirmity so that she
could look up at the God-man, and then she could commence to live a
Christian life.  



Our Lord came indeed to straighten out crookedness.  The Baptizer says
-this is quoted from Isaiah, which is a prophecy about the Baptizer-
?The voice of him that crieth in the wilderness, Prepare ye the way of
the LORD, make straight in the desert a highway for our God.  Every
valley shall be exalted, and every mountain and hill shall be made low:
and the crooked shall be made straight, and the rough places plain:¦
Isaiah 39:3-4  The baptizer only announced that this would occur, and
the God-man made it so. Our Lord directly promises through the mouth of
the God-inspired Isaiah ?And I will bring the blind by a way that they
knew not; I will lead them in paths that they have not known: I will
make darkness light before them, and crooked things straight. These
things will I do unto them, and not forsake them.¦ Isaiah 42:16  Only
God can make that which is crooked straight.  And so what happened when
this woman was loosed from her infirmity?  You would think that everyone
would have been in awe before God and they would have fallen on their
faces saying, ?Lord have mercy.¦  But what happened? 



?And the ruler of the synagogue answered with indignation, because that
Jesus had healed on the sabbath day, and said unto the people, There are
six days in which men ought to work: in them therefore come and be
healed, and not on the sabbath day.¦ Luke 13:14  



What amazing words.  What amazing stupidity.  This man was filled with
envy and jealousy, and that-s what clouded his mind.  His anger made him
crazy to say such insane things.  What kind of beast would liken mercy
on the Sabbath day to common labor in the field?  Isn-t the Sabbath a
day of rest, though?  He-s right about that. The ruler of the synagogue
is saying a partial truth you know.  The Sabbath day is a day of rest
according to the Jewish law.  And our Sabbath, our day of rest, today,
is the same, where we should rest in Christ and meditate on holy things.
 But is not Christ giving this woman rest?  Is He not fulfilling the
Sabbath day?  Indeed.  This woman had eighteen years of no rest, of
sleeplessness, and of hunger, and of pain, and of despondency.  And our
Lord, on the Sabbath, the day of rest, gave this woman rest.  And this
synagogue leader was too stupid, too full of pride, too full of
arrogance to see this.  



Notice how he addresses this question that he brings up.  He does not
say anything to Christ directly.  He doesn-t have the guts to do it. 
But he is aiming for the glory of men, for the honor of men.  So what
does he do?  He says this out to the congregation, so as to get partners
in crime with him, so as to feel emboldened by other people being full
of sin.  But the Lord answered him very simply and plainly.  And he said
a word that does not occur very often in the scriptures, by the way. 
And when it occurs, you should be terrified, concerning what a hypocrite
is.   



?The Lord then answered him, and said, Thou hypocrite, doth not each one
of you on the sabbath loose his ox or his ass from the stall, and lead
him away to watering? And ought not this woman, being a daughter of
Abraham, whom Satan hath bound, lo, these eighteen years, be loosed from
this bond on the sabbath day? And when he had said these things, all his
adversaries were ashamed: and all the people rejoiced for all the
glorious things that were done by him.¦ Luke 13:14-17  



This man, this sinner, this prideful and arrogant person looking for the
glory of men, would not address the Lord directly, but our Lord indeed
directly talked to him and to all of the pharisees and the other fellow
sinners who wanted the glory of men, and gave up mercy for their pride. 
Why is this man a hypocrite?  He-s putting on airs.  He cares nothing
for mercy, but only for show. ?An hypocrite with his mouth destroyeth
his neighbor: but through knowledge shall the just be delivered.¦
Proverbs 11:9  So it says, the holy Solomon says, in his proverbs.  And
then, our Lord says, concerning the scribes, the pharisees, the
synagogue leaders, and all those others who are hypocrites, ?Ye
hypocrites, well did Esaias prophesy of you, saying, This people draweth
nigh unto me with their mouth, and honoureth me with their lips; but
their heart is far from me. But in vain they do worship me, teaching for
doctrines the commandments of men.  And he called the multitude, and
said unto them, Hear, and understand:  Not that which goeth into the
mouth defileth a man; but that which cometh out of the mouth, this
defileth a man.¦ Matthew:15:7-11  



This principle that Christ gives about food and about true defilement is
the same principle about whether or not one should heal on  the Sabbath
day.  Of course one should heal on the Sabbath day!.  One should heal on
any day.  One should show mercy on any day, in any circumstance.  And to
even ask the question shows the abysmal ignorance of the interrogator.
?But woe unto you, scribes and Pharisees, hypocrites!¦ , you people who
question in silly and obtuse ways the mercy of God, ?for ye shut up the
kingdom of heaven against men: for ye neither go in yourselves, neither
suffer ye them that are entering to go in.¦ Matthew 23:13  



To be called a hypocrite is indeed a terrible thing.  And hypocrisy is
something that is probably present in each one of us.  It is a sin.  We
must confess it.  We must root it out.  Our whole society is full of
hypocrisy.  Our whole society runs on hypocrisy.  It is a lie.  It is
trying to look like something we are not.  It is not being genuine. 
It-s making false promises.  It-s not showing mercy when we proclaim
ourselves to be Christians.  It-s not praying for our brother when we
see he has a need because we have some other task that troubles us. 
It-s not living the Christian life when we have made that promise in our
baptism.  Oh yes, hypocrisy is a great sin.  And if a man looks inside
himself, he should say, ?Thou hypocrite.¦  And the moment he says those
words he should think about what our Lord says about hypocrites and he
should fall on his face and be like the publican who said, ?God, be
merciful unto me a sinner.¦ Cf. Luke 18:13-14, ?And the publican,
standing afar off, would not lift up so much as his eyes unto heaven,
but smote upon his breast, saying, God be merciful to me a sinner. I
tell you, this man went down to his house justified rather than the
other: for every one that exalteth himself shall be abased; and he that
humbleth himself shall be exalted.¦  



Now this woman was called a daughter of Abraham.  And why?  On account
of her faith. ?I am the God of Abraham, and the God of Isaac, and the
God of Jacob? God is not the God of the dead, but of the living.¦
Matthew 22:32  This woman was not dead. This woman was alive in faith. 
She had faith, and therefore she was considered a daughter of Abraham. 
And Jesus said in another place to a man, who had also been healed of
his infirmity,  having nothing wrong with him physically but being
filled with the sin of lust for wealth, that is Zacchaeus: ? This day is
salvation come to this house, forsomuch as he also is a son of Abraham. 
For the Son of man is come to seek and to save that which was lost.¦
Luke 19:9-10 So indeed he is a son of Abraham, and this woman is a son
of Abraham,  and not because of her virtue but because of her belief,
and because of her desire to live virtuously.  



But He wouldn-t say such a thing about the ruler of the synagogue now,
would he?  He called him a hypocrite.  Here is what Jesus has to say
about the hypocrites. In another context, it was written that, ?They
answered and said unto him, Abraham is our father. Jesus saith unto
them, If ye were Abraham's children, ye would do the works of Abraham.¦
John 8:39  So this is why I tell you that this woman was a daughter of
Abraham on account of her faith.  You can see that to be called a son of
Abraham or a daughter of Abraham means that you believe and act
according to your belief.  And even though this woman had some sins that
had bound her, God released her.  And now she was able to live
virtuously.  



There is a practicality that I think we should inculcate in ourselves,
that we can learn from this particular passage of scripture.  It-s easy
to see that one should show mercy on any day. And yet this man, this
synagogue leader, this sinner, didn-t see that, because he was so
concerned about other extraneous details, and concerned about the
boastful pride of life, and the honor of men.  But if we-re guided by
the Holy Spirit, we can discern rightly.  We can discern truly.  We can
see what is right and what is false.  We can understand.  We can know
that the body is not for meat.  Meats are for the body Cf. ! Cor 6:13,
and if one has a need according to the body, one eats according to one-s
need.  We understand that principle in fasting.  It is because the Holy
Spirit inspires us, and makes us know.  Makes us understand that only if
we have humility, only if we expect and hope that God will fill us with
His grace.  And then of course we have to act upon His grace, and we
have to root out this sin of hypocrisy that is being shown.  



I tell you a hypocrite will not inherit the kingdom of heaven.  And I
also tell you that the vast majority of people in this life are
hypocrites.  It is true.  It is very true.  That is why there is so
little piety in our day - because people give lip service.  These
people, their heart is far from me. Cf. Matthew 15:8, ?This people
draweth nigh unto me with their mouth, and honoureth me with their lips;
but their heart is far from me.¦ and Mark 7:6, ?Well hath Esaias
prophesied of you hypocrites, as it is written, This people honoureth me
with their lips, but their heart is far from me.¦ See also Isaiah 29:13,
which the Lord quotes.   Their lips speak about me but their heart is
far from me, the Lord says.  And that is what our day is like.  Root out
from yourselves hypocrisy, brothers and sisters.  If there is anything
in you that puts on airs, if there is anything in you that forgets to
show mercy, if there is anything in you that looks for the honor of men,
if there is anything in you that is lazy and does not wish to worship
God at the appointed times, then you have something to repent from: your
hypocrisy.  Because you made promises, as I made as well.  It-s true, I
suppose on a small level, moment by moment we fall into moments of
hypocrisy.  That is why God will loose us - He is there to loose us
-from our infirmity.  If we struggle against such things, God will
indeed loose us.  But if we do not, then we will fall into the depths of
hell, maybe not even knowing it.  Maybe we-ll be very surprised on
Judgment Day when our Lord says, ?I don-t know you¦ Cf. Luke 13:25,
?When once the master of the house is risen up, and hath shut to the
door, and ye begin to stand without, and to knock at the door, saying,
Lord, Lord, open unto us; and he shall answer and say unto you, I know
you not whence ye are¦..  -I don-t know you because you are a hypocrite.
 And I have no concourse with hypocrites.  I told you everything you
needed to know.  I gave you everything you needed.  And I had children
that were suffering, lack of bread and  jail and derision for my sake
and they still prayed with fervor.  And you lived without care and
without thought.  You lived as a hypocrite.  You are no better than the
ruler of the synagogue, and you can go join him.-  



Let us not be hypocrites.  Let us ask God to enlighten us.  And in any
sin that we have, whether it be hypocrisy or any other sin, let us fall
down before Christ.  Let us ask Him to forgive us.  And then we have to
seal our part of the bargain.  We have to make an effort to live
according to His commandments.  May God help us in all things.  Amen.



The Twenty Seventh Sunday after Pentecost 

The Healing of the Woman with an Infirmity of Eighteen Years on the
Sabbath Day







Bibliography:

Old Believer Sermon for the 27th Sunday after Pentecost (unpublished)

?Drops From the Living Water¦, Bishop Augustinos

?Commentary on the Gospel of St. Luke¦, St. Cyril, Patriarch of
Alexandria.



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