Holy Rest in Our Bone-Weary World [OR Rest Well] Luke 13:10-17

Caitlin Trussell with Augustana Lutheran Church on August 24, 2025

Luke 13:10-17  Now [Jesus] was teaching in one of the synagogues on the Sabbath. 11 And just then there appeared a woman with a spirit that had crippled her for eighteen years. She was bent over and was quite unable to stand up straight. 12 When Jesus saw her, he called her over and said, “Woman, you are set free from your ailment.” 13 When he laid his hands on her, immediately she stood up straight and began praising God. 14 But the leader of the synagogue, indignant because Jesus had cured on the Sabbath, kept saying to the crowd, “There are six days on which work ought to be done; come on those days and be cured and not on the Sabbath day.” 15 But the Lord answered him and said, “You hypocrites! Does not each of you on the Sabbath untie his ox or his donkey from the manger and lead it to water? 16 And ought not this woman, a daughter of Abraham whom Satan bound for eighteen long years, be set free from this bondage on the Sabbath day?” 17 When he said this, all his opponents were put to shame, and the entire crowd was rejoicing at all the wonderful things being done by him.

Does anyone else think that it’s a little odd that we need to sleep? Hang with me on this for a second. There are 24 hours in a day, and the generally agreed upon amount of time for good sleep is eight hours. Eight hours that can play hard to get, so we bless each other before bedtime with a sincere, “Sleep well.” Eight hours of sleep so that our bodies can heal at the cellular level, make the helpful hormones, and integrate our brain functions including focus, memory, and mood. A good night’s sleep makes us feel more like ourselves. Dare we say that sleep draws us closer to God’s image in us, to the good that God created in the beginning, when even God rested?

“Remember the sabbath and keep it holy.”[1] Let’s geek out on that for a minute. It’s the third commandment of the big ten. In the Bible books of Exodus and Deuteronomy, this commandment is given with extra emphasis on who gets to rest. God commands rest for all the people – free people, enslaved people, and alien residents in the land. God commands rest for animals too – ox, donkey, and all livestock. In Exodus, the command is given to honor God’s rest on the seventh day after creating creation. In Deuteronomy, the command is given because the Hebrew people were once slaves without rest in Egypt, so rest is not to be taken for granted. In both books, the sabbath command is “to the Lord your God.” Resting to the Lord. Resting in the Lord. A holy day of rest. Breathe that in for a minute. Holy rest for everyone and everything. Holiness for everyone and everything.

Holy rest. Holiness. Sabbath. A thing of beauty but a different kind of beauty rest. When we put it this way, it’s easier to have compassion for the synagogue leader when Jesus heals the woman from a crippling spirit on the Sabbath. Holy rest is hard to come by. We all know it. We know it bone deep—deep in the weariness that cripples our own spirits. But unless we have a daily battle that’s physical or cultural, it’s tough to appreciate the woman’s moment in the story. And Jesus had a way of expanding commandments at inopportune times, disrupting the moment while freeing the person in pain. Perhaps we could say he blew apart holiness only to reform it into something even holier. Jesus is always one step ahead, isn’t he? At least one step ahead, disrupting what we think should be happening with what God thinks should be happening. Jesus taking action is sometimes called gospel, a churchy word that means “good news.” But in Lutheran Christian land, we often talk about law and gospel because law is often on the flipside of the gospel. We’re both freed by Jesus’ actions while at the same time convicted by Jesus’ actions.

Much like the synagogue leader whose reaction to Jesus’ action was angst and indignation, our reactions to law can be similar. Sabbath rest is a great example of law and gospel. Here we are this morning, Sabbath resting to God, listening to God’s word, reassured by God’s presence and promise in our lives. Sabbath rest for God to remind us who we are and align us with God’s will in the world. That’s gospel.

At the same time, there are people who can’t be here, people who can’t take a Sabbath rest because they’re working. So, is Sabbath rest optional? Is Sabbath rest just for some of us? That can’t be right. Deuteronomy includes the alien in your lands, not just people who follow God’s command. Do we assume that everyone is able to rest at other times? Have we constructed a society in which rest isn’t for everyone? Is it possible that there is no such thing as true Sabbath rest until even the most vulnerable among us may rest?

The discomfort grows as the questions smolder. Much like when Jesus asks questions in our reading and his opponents were put to shame. Shame is an unhelpful emotion. Regret is a more useful cousin of shame because we learn from regret what it is we don’t want to do again. Regret edges us towards being convicted by the law which provokes our discomfort. It helps us by shaking us free to see our neighbor’s situation differently and therefore our own situation differently. Last Sunday, Pastor Kent preached the ways that Jesus stirs the pot about who we’re paying attention to and the divides created by stirring the pot on behalf of our neighbors. This Sunday, Christ’s compassion stirs our conscience and pokes at our contentment.

In our Bible story this morning, Jesus healed the woman from a crippling spirit. For her, freedom from 18 years of being enslaved to that spirit freed her for a Sabbath rest like none in her recent past. There was nothing more holy than her freedom in merciful healing. As she stood straight, she was living and breathing pure gospel. For that moment in time, she embodied the good news of Jesus. But her vertical body made another body uncomfortable. Jesus’ approach didn’t make the synagogue leader feel comfortable. It did the other thing. It disturbed his conscience, and it disturbed the sense of contentment that he had. I would say that it disturbed his own ideas about the holy with a greater holiness.

When Jesus healed the woman, he changed at least two people’s perspectives. The unnamed woman saw the world around her at everyone else’s eye level for a change. Her perspective literally shifted from looking at the floor to looking people in the eye. The synagogue leader saw the woman’s healing as a disruption to Sabbath holiness rather than her healing as holiness. His perspective shifted when Jesus started asking him questions and he realized he wasn’t right. All of this to say that I wonder how greater holiness raises questions, stirs our conscience, and shifts our perspective. I wonder where the law convicts us, and the gospel heals us simultaneously through Jesus’ actions.

In this summer’s Eucharistic Prayer during communion, we praise God’s grace shown to God’s people in every age, including now the gift of Jesus Christ, who proclaimed the good news in word and deed, in his ministry on earth, and through the mystery of his death and resurrection. In our weekly communion celebration, our praise of God’s grace links to Jesus’ death on the cross. On the cross is where God in Jesus chooses vulnerability and refuses to raise a hand in violence against the world God loves. Jesus absorbed human violence into death, burying it in a tomb, and revealing a love so powerful that even death could not end it. A love that now lives in us as the body of Christ, the church.

Sometimes the church is called the Body of Christ because Christ’s death and resurrection promise lives in us through our baptisms which empowers us by the Holy Spirit to love God, and to love our neighbors as ourselves. But I wonder how we as the church more quickly react like the synagogue leader when our perspective of holiness is challenged rather than like the body of Christ from whom Christ’s love pours out to renew an exhausted world, deeply in need of rest and the reminder that God loves people, not power.

Jesus made himself vulnerable to power when he healed the woman in pain despite it being the Sabbath rest day. Embodying God’s love and grace was high risk for him. God’s grace is so radical that the world as it was, and as it is now, could not fathom a holier way. A holier way through which there is no time like the present to receive God’s love and grace. And there’s no time like the present to give away God’s love and grace. God’s grace-filled glory is revealed through Jesus, our healer, who pours out his love for us here in this place of Sabbath rest. Rest well.

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[1] Deuteronomy 5:12-15 and Exodus 20:8-10 – Remember the sabbath and keep it holy…

Hearts on the Move [OR World Building for the Good of All] Luke 12:32-40 and Genesis 15:1-6

Caitlin Trussell with Augustana Lutheran Church on August 10, 2025

[sermon begins after two Bible readings]

Genesis 15:1-6  After these things the word of the Lord came to Abram in a vision, “Do not be afraid, Abram, I am your shield; your reward shall be very great.” 2 But Abram said, “O Lord God, what will you give me, for I continue childless, and the heir of my house is Eliezer of Damascus?” 3 And Abram said, “You have given me no offspring, so a slave born in my house is to be my heir.” 4 But the word of the Lord came to him, “This man shall not be your heir; no one but your very own issue shall be your heir.” 5 He brought him outside and said, “Look toward heaven and count the stars, if you are able to count them.” Then he said to him, “So shall your descendants be.” 6 And he believed the Lord, and the Lord reckoned it to him as righteousness.

Luke 12:32-40 [Jesus said to the thousands:] 32 “Do not be afraid, little flock, for it is your Father’s good pleasure to give you the kingdom. 33 Sell your possessions and give alms. Make purses for yourselves that do not wear out, an unfailing treasure in heaven, where no thief comes near and no moth destroys. 34 For where your treasure is, there your heart will be also.
35 “Be dressed for action and have your lamps lit; 36 be like those who are waiting for their master to return from the wedding banquet, so that they may open the door for him as soon as he comes and knocks. 37 Blessed are those slaves whom the master finds alert when he comes; truly I tell you, he will fasten his belt and have them sit down to eat, and he will come and serve them. 38 If he comes during the middle of the night or near dawn and finds them so, blessed are those slaves.
39 “But know this: if the owner of the house had known at what hour the thief was coming, he would not have let his house be broken into. 40 You also must be ready, for the Son of Man is coming at an hour you do not expect.”

[sermon begins]

What do the stars see when they look towards our pale blue dot swirling through the Milky Way? Maybe cloud spirals and lightning flashes stand out. Or city lights that coalesce into radiant diamonds across the land. Or creatures of all kinds across earth and sea who are foraging, frolicking, and fighting. What could the stars tell us about ourselves that we can’t see for ourselves because we’re too close to the action, building incomprehensible worlds that we can’t seem to shift from the habits built over millennia. I’m into world building stories like Lord of the Rings where events shape the characters as much as the characters shape events. I just recently finished The Liveship Traders trilogy complete with dragons, sea serpents, pirates, and liveships who spoke because they were carved from the wizardwood of dragon cocoons.[1] Division and hierarchy were entrenched from the kings to the enslaved people. Hope was shaped by sinner-saint characters, including the liveships themselves, who say things like, “…life is to be lived, rather than hoarded against an unseen tomorrow.”[2] Small wonder to be compelled by stories that build worlds. Isn’t that what the Bible is, after all? A story of a people in a relationship with the God of the cosmos whose word created life in which God took delight and forms us as people of faith to usher in God’s vision for the world.

In the Genesis story, [the Lord] brought [Abram] outside and said, “Look toward heaven and count the stars, if you are able to count them—So shall your descendants be.” When Abram looked back at the stars’ gaze, he saw the promises of God. Not the worlds millions of miles away but a world of possibilities in his time through God’s reckless abundance given to him. Abram was a wayfarer on a journey from his homeland at God’s invitation to renew the earth by building a world in which God’s kingdom reigns for the good of everyone – the stranger, the poor, the widow, and the orphan. Unlimited goodness from a God of steadfast love and lovingkindness.[3]

You may have heard that the ELCA Churchwide Assembly just elected Presiding Bishop-elect Yehiel Curry to serve a six-year term beginning in October. Presiding Bishop-elect Curry was born on the South Side of Chicago, raised in the Catholic church, went to Catholic schools, and became a social worker, then a seventh-grade teacher.[4] One of his college friends invited him to a worship service at Shekinah (She-kine-uh) Chapel on the South Side that had a focus on mentoring young Black boys in a program called SIMBA – Safe in My Brother’s Arms. He went because he’d heard they’d also organized a SIMBA camp, and he wanted to take his students camping.[5] Bishop Curry went to this church not even knowing it was Lutheran. Started attending. Fell in love with the ministry. Two years later he learned it was Lutheran. Now he’s our ELCA Presiding Bishop-elect. Bishop Curry said, “I went into a church looking for ministry and found a Lutheran church – a church [centered] on grace, God’s word for all people, and loving each and every person.” Now that’s a good word about our church and the world God is building through it from our new Presiding Bishop to his ELCA flock.

Right after Jesus’ lovely speech to the flock about fearing not, Peter says, “Lord, are you telling this parable for us or for everyone?”[6] It’s a classic question. Is Jesus’ speech a general kind of “all y’all” or is Jesus talking to me? As if I’ll fly under the radar if I don’t make eye contact with Jesus on this one. We don’t get to hear Peter’s reply to Jesus in the Bible reading today although it comes as the very next verse in Luke. He is still talking to the crowd of thousands. In the verses just before ours today, preached last Sunday by Pastor Karen, Jesus warns the crowds. “Be on guard against all kinds of greed; for one’s life does not consist in the abundance of possessions.” He wraps up those verses telling them not to worry about their lives but to strive for the kingdom. A kingdom, we hear today, in which we need not worry about our treasure being taken by thieves or destroyed by moths because they are secured by God.[7]

Right away, though, Jesus says:

“Do not be afraid, little flock, for it is your Father’s good pleasure to give you the kingdom.”

This is one of the challenges in the way we read the Bible Sunday-to-Sunday.  If left with the striving of last week’s verses against greed, we could assume wrongly that striving is the whole plan. It’s too easy to leap from striving to earning. Earning God’s pleasure. Earning God’s salvation. On the heels of earning comes deserving. I deserve God’s pleasure. I deserve God’s salvation. Until, suddenly, I’m left wondering if I’ve strived enough, earned enough, and am deserving enough. I’ve left myself no room for grace.

Jesus says, “Do not be afraid, little flock, for it is your Father’s good pleasure to give you the kingdom.” God’s good pleasure to give the kingdom to Jesus’ followers is an antidote to their fear.[8] In scripture, “do not be afraid” is the clue that we’re going to hear about God’s power and promise; God’s mighty deeds.[9] We hear it multiple times in Luke’s gospel from angels and from Jesus. Abram hears it in the Genesis reading. These promises come from God to Abram, to Luke, and to us – unconditional promise and reckless grace.

This week, Jesus offers another way to be on guard against the greed he warns about in the earlier verses.

Jesus says:

“Do not be afraid, little flock, for it is your Father’s good pleasure to give you the kingdom. Sell your possessions and give alms. Make purses for yourselves that do not wear out, an unfailing treasure in heaven, where no thief comes near and no moth destroys. For where your treasure is, there your heart will be also.”[10]

It is God’s good pleasure to give us the kingdom! Through this kingdom promise, disciples can guard against all kinds of greed and resist the urge to worry 24/7. Jesus tells us to love our neighbor and then directs us to be generous with money.[11] Telling us that where our treasure, our money, goes then our hearts will follow. People assume that you give to where your heart is already. But Jesus says the opposite here, you can direct where your heart goes by what you do with your money.[12]

Jesus is interested in our hearts because of God’s heart for the cosmos, for the nations, for the people. God’s heart is revealed through God’s kingdom come through Jesus whose humility and self-sacrifice lead us to live as he did. Jesus who calls us to build a world on the subversive economy of the kingdom where generosity of treasure moves our hearts towards people and places loved by God, too.[13] People foraging, frolicking, and fighting under the vast expanse of stars gazing our way. Have no fear little flock, for it is God’s good pleasure to give you the kingdom. Today. Here. Now.

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[1] Robin Hobb. The Liveship Traders (Harper Voyager: 2010).

[2] Ibid., p. 2809.

[3] Psalm 33:18 and 22

[4] Bridgette Adu-Wadier interviews Presiding Bishop-elect Yehiel Curry. August 7, 2025. Evangelical Lutheran Church in America Elects First Black Presiding Bishop, a Chicago Native | Chicago News | WTTW.

[5] Lutheran World Federation. May 19, 2023. USA: from summer camp leader to Chicago bishop | The Lutheran World Federation.

[6] Luke 12:41

[7] E. Trey Clark, Professor of Preaching and Spiritual Formation, Fuller Theological Seminary, Pasadena, CA. Commentary on Luke 12:32-40. Commentary on Luke 12:32-40 – Working Preacher from Luther Seminary

[8] Matt Skinner, Professor of New Testament, Luther Seminary, St. Paul, MN. Sermon Brainwave Podcast #1037: Ninth Sunday after Pentecost (Ord. 19C) – August 10, 2025 – Working Preacher from Luther Seminary.

[9] David Lose, President of Lutheran Theological Seminary in Philadelphia. Commentary on Luke 12:32-40 for WorkingPreacher.org, August 8, 2010.  http://www.workingpreacher.org/preaching.aspx?commentary_id=729

[10] Luke 12:33-34

[11] Luke 10:25-37 Parable of the Good Samaritan: Love God and love your neighbor as yourself.

[12] Rolf Jacobson, Professor of Old Testament, Luther Seminary, St. Paul, MN. Sermon Brainwave Podcast. #1037: Ninth Sunday after Pentecost (Ord. 19C) – August 10, 2025 – Working Preacher from Luther Seminary

[13] Clark, ibid.