10 One Sabbath day as Jesus was teaching in a synagogue, 11 he saw a woman who had been crippled by an evil spirit. She had been bent double for eighteen years and was unable to stand up straight. 12 When Jesus saw her, he called her over and said, “Dear woman, you are healed of your sickness!” 13 Then he touched her, and instantly she could stand straight. How she praised God!
14 But the leader in charge of the synagogue was indignant that Jesus had healed her on the Sabbath day. “There are six days of the week for working,” he said to the crowd. “Come on those days to be healed, not on the Sabbath.”
15 But the Lord replied, “You hypocrites! Each of you works on the Sabbath day! Don’t you untie your ox or your donkey from its stall on the Sabbath and lead it out for water? 16 This dear woman, a daughter of Abraham, has been held in bondage by Satan for eighteen years. Isn’t it right that she be released, even on the Sabbath?”
17 This shamed his enemies, but all the people rejoiced at the wonderful things he did.
18 Then Jesus said, “What is the Kingdom of God like? How can I illustrate it? 19 It is like a tiny mustard seed that a man planted in a garden; it grows and becomes a tree, and the birds make nests in its branches.”
20 He also asked, “What else is the Kingdom of God like? 21 It is like the yeast a woman used in making bread. Even though she put only a little yeast in three measures of flour, it permeated every part of the dough.”
Luke 13:10-21
Dear God, the daily Gospel reading for today was just verse 18-21, but that would be taking them out of context. They are actually linked to this story about the healing of someone on the Sabbath. So the part about how the “Kingdom of God,” your Kingdom, grows like a tiny seed into a tree or yeast working through flower is tied to the shame of those who were leading your church at the time. So Jesus wasn’t only talking about your growing within and influencing the world, but he was also talking about Kingdom growing within and influencing the established church. In Jesus’s context, that would ultimately mean Christianity transforming Judaism. It didn’t abolish it, obviously. But it grew. It also grew into the world, but it started with transforming the established church itself.
Of course, your seeds and yeast also grow in our individual hearts. The roots of the seeds break through the clay of my heart to find some soil. And then they grow. The yeast breaks through the dense dough of my heart and helps it so spread out and be free to grow. But I have to let it. I have to put myself in a position to receive the seeds and the nourishment. I have to try to weed my soil and clear out the rocks. I have to tend my heart so that your Kingdom might grow within it.
Father, Laity Lodge had a philosophy of the world being influence by the church and the church being influenced by the individual, and the individual being influenced by you. It starts with this basic relationship. Our individual relationships with you. How do we put ourselves close to you? How do we make sure our hearts are fertile soil for you? Show me if there is anything I need to be doing today that will prepare the way of the Lord in my own heart. And then show me how to share that with others.
I pray this in Jesus and with your Holy Spirit,
Amen