The article "Expository Thoughts on Luke 13:10-17" by J.C. Ryle addresses the power of Christ as both a healer and a defender of the Sabbath, emphasizing the importance of sincere worship despite physical limitations. Ryle presents the woman healed of her infirmity as a model of faithfulness, asserting that her presence in the synagogue amidst her suffering exemplifies true dedication to God. He reinforces this with references to the Psalms (Psalm 122:1; Psalm 84:1), highlighting how those who delight in God's house reflect a genuine heart for His service, in contrast to the complacency of many healthy individuals. Ryle argues that Jesus’s healing of the woman illustrates His authority and ability to transform lives, thus communicating hope to sinners and underscoring the proper observance of the Sabbath focused on mercy and necessity. The doctrinal significance of these points is that they call believers to prioritize worship and mercy, affirming that the Sabbath is for the benefit and well-being of humanity.
Key Quotes
“Sickness was no excuse with her for tarrying from God's house.”
“Happy are those who walk in the steps of her of whom we read today; they shall find Christ and a blessing while they live and Christ and glory when they die.”
“The principle here laid down by our Lord is the same that we find elsewhere in the Gospels... The Sabbath was made for man's benefit and not for his hurt.”
“Let us do no work which is not absolutely needful. For another let us keep the day holy and give it to God.”
What does the Bible say about the Sabbath?
The Bible teaches that the Sabbath is a day set aside by God for rest and worship, meant for man's benefit and to promote spiritual health.
Furthermore, when Jesus healed the crippled woman on the Sabbath, He highlighted that acts of necessity and mercy do not breach the commandment. His actions demonstrate that the Sabbath should not be viewed as merely a legalistic observation but rather as an opportunity to extend compassion and grace. Thus, establishing a rhythm of rest and worship is essential for Christians seeking to honor God on this day while fulfilling the spirit of the law concerning rest and renewal.
How do we know that Jesus can heal our infirmities?
The healing power of Jesus is affirmed in His miracles in the Gospels, showcasing His authority over sickness and sin.
Jesus' miracles affirm the hope offered to sinners as well, illustrating that He can transform lives that seem hopelessly broken. His capacity to heal extends beyond physical conditions, reaching into the spiritual realm where He can renew and cleanse even the most burdened souls. The consistent pattern of His miracles affirms a foundational belief in the sovereignty and compassion of Christ, offering assurance that He continues to heal and restore those who come to Him in faith.
Why is attending church on the Sabbath important for Christians?
Attending church on the Sabbath is vital as it fosters community, worship, and spiritual growth in the life of a believer.
Moreover, the Sabbath serves as a weekly opportunity to rest in God and recognize His sovereignty over creation and our lives. By gathering together in the house of God, Christians share mutual encouragement, engage in teaching, and participate in the sacraments. Those who regularly attend worship services cultivate a heart that delights in God and His commands, which is in direct contrast to those who may neglect corporate worship due to frivolous distractions. Thus, consistent attendance helps fulfill the commandment to keep the Sabbath holy, aligning oneself closer to God's will and purpose.
What does it mean to keep the Sabbath holy?
Keeping the Sabbath holy involves setting the day apart for worship, rest, and good works, in accordance with God's design.
This observance requires Christians to refrain from unnecessary work and instead focus on activities that nourish their spirit and relationship with God. The practice of putting aside worldly cares and distractions aids in cultivating an appreciation for God’s creation and His provision in our lives. Additionally, engaging in acts of mercy and kindness on the Sabbath, as demonstrated by Jesus, shows that helping others can and should be part of honoring this day. Consequently, keeping the Sabbath holy is about both personal reverence for God and the communal responsibility towards fellow believers.
A CRIPPLED WOMAN HEALED.
We see in these verses a striking example of diligence in the use of means of grace. We are told of a "woman which had a spirit of infirmity eighteen years, and was bowed together, and could not straiten up." We know not who this woman was. Our Lord's saying that she was "a daughter of Abraham," would lead us to infer that she was a true believer. But her name and history are hidden from us. This only we know, that when Jesus was "teaching in one of the synagogues on the Sabbath," this woman was there. Sickness was no excuse with her for tarrying from God's house. In spite of suffering and infirmity, she found her way to the place where the day and the word of God were honored, and where the people of God met together. And truly she was blessed in her deed! She found a rich reward for all her pains. She came sorrowing, and went home rejoicing.
The conduct of this suffering Jewess may well put to shame many a strong and healthy professing Christian. How many in the full enjoyment of bodily vigor, allow the most frivolous excuses to keep them away from the house of God! How many are constantly spending the whole Sunday in idleness, pleasure-seeking, or business, and scoffing and sneering at those who "keep the Sabbath holy!" How many think it a great matter if they attend the public worship of God once on Sunday, and regard a second attendance as a needless excess of zeal akin to fanaticism! How many find religious services a weariness while they attend them, and feel relieved when they are over! How few know anything of David's spirit, when he said, "I was glad when they said to me, Let us go into the house of the Lord." "How lovely are your tabernacles, O Lord of Hosts!" (Psalm 122:1; Psalm 84:1.)
Now what is the explanation of all this? What is the reason why so few are like the woman of whom we read this day? The answer to these questions is short and simple. The most have no heart for God's service. They have no delight in God's presence or God's day. "The carnal mind is enmity against God." The moment a man's heart is converted, these pretended difficulties about attending public worship vanish away. The new heart finds no trouble in keeping the Sabbath holy. Where there is a will there is always a way.
Let us never forget that our feelings about Sundays are sure tests of the state of our souls. The man who can find no pleasure in giving God one day in the week, is manifestly unfit for heaven. Heaven itself is nothing but an eternal Sabbath. If we cannot enjoy a few hours in God's service once a week in this world, it is plain that we could not enjoy an eternity in His service in the world to come. Happy are those who walk in the steps of her of whom we read today! They shall find Christ and a blessing while they live, and Christ and glory when they die.
We see, secondly, in these verses, the almighty power of our Lord Jesus Christ. We are told that when He saw the suffering woman of whom we are reading, "He called her to Him, and said unto her, Woman, you are loosed from your infirmity. And He laid His hands on her." That touch was accompanied by miraculous healing virtue. At once a disease of eighteen years' standing gave way before the Lord of Life. "Immediately she was made straight and glorified God."
We need not doubt that this mighty miracle was intended to supply hope and comfort to sin-diseased souls. With Christ nothing is impossible. He can soften hearts which seem hard as the nether mill-stone. He can bend stubborn wills which "for eighteen years" have been set on self-pleasing, on sin, and the world. He can enable sinners who have been long poring over earthly things, to look upward to heaven, and see the kingdom of God. Nothing is too hard for the Lord. He can create, and transform, and renew, and break down, and build, and quicken, with irresistible power. He lives, who formed the world out of nothing, and He never changes.
Let us hold fast this blessed truth, and never let it go. Let us never despair about our own salvation. Our sins may be countless. Our lives may have been long spent in worldliness and folly. Our youth may have been wasted in soul- defiling excesses, of which we are lamentably ashamed. But are we willing to come to Christ, and commit our souls to Him? If so, there is hope. He can heal us thoroughly, and say, "you are loosed from your infirmity."
Let us never despair about the salvation of others so long as they are alive. Let us name them before the Lord night and day, and cry to Him on their behalf. We may perhaps have relatives whose case seems desperate because of their wickedness. But it is not really so. There are no incurable cases with Christ. If He were to lay His healing hand on them, they would be "made straight, and glorify God." Let us pray on, and faint not. That saying of Job is worthy of all acceptation—"I know that you can do everything." (Job 42:2.) Jesus is "able to save to the uttermost."
We see, lastly, in these verses, the right observance of the Sabbath day asserted and defended by our Lord Jesus Christ. The ruler of the synagogue in which the infirm woman was healed, found fault with her as a breaker of the Sabbath. He drew down upon himself a stern but just rebuke—"You hypocrite, does not each one of you on the Sabbath loose his ox or his donkey from the stall, and lead him away to watering?" If it was allowable to attend to the needs of beasts on the Sabbath, how much more to human creatures! If it was no breach of the fourth commandment to show kindness to oxen and donkeys, much less to show kindness to a daughter of Abraham.
The principle here laid down by our Lord is the same that we find elsewhere in the Gospels. He teaches us that the command to "do no work" on the Sabbath, was not intended to prohibit works of necessity and mercy. The Sabbath was made for man's benefit, and not for his hurt. It was appointed to promote man's best and highest interests, and not to debar him of anything that is really for his good. It requires nothing but what is reasonable and wise. It forbids nothing that is really necessary to man's comfort.
Let us pray for a right understanding of the law of the Sabbath. Of all the commandments that God has given, none is more essential to the happiness of man, and none is so frequently misrepresented, abused, and trampled under foot. Let us lay down for ourselves two special rules for the observance of the Sabbath. For one thing let us do no work which is not absolutely needful. For another, let us keep the day "holy," and give it to God. From these two rules let us never swerve. Experience shows that there is the closest connection between Sabbath sanctification and healthy Christianity.
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