Nearly every moment of our lives, whenever we leave the house, until we come back home, we are forced to present a certain appearance.
It began when we were young. Kids in school learn very early to act a certain way, dress a certain way, to use certain vocabulary, to sound cool… Kids learn early on to hide those parts of themselves that are not cool.
Is it cool to still like Bluey when you are in 2nd grade? 3rd grade? 4th grade? I don’t know! At some point, I suspect, it’s not, at least for many children.
There are so many other rules: can boys wear pink? Can girls be confident? I don’t know about now, but when I was in school, boys didn’t wear pink. It wasn’t cool. Now, in my 50s, I sometimes do wear pink, and I feel like such a rebel!
Because there are so many unwritten rules, about how to behave, how to dress, how to act… You wear the mask. You try to fit in. To do otherwise is a lonely thing.
Many adults go to work, and only present a version of themselves. We don’t get too real or raw with our coworkers.
The deep stuff… the real you…the stuff that really matters…your struggles, your goals, your insecurities… you never talk about that.
We don’t want to be that person who makes a habit of oversharing. Not at work. Not among our coworkers… or classmates…
Among friends, there is a deeper level of sharing. But sometimes, even among friends, there is a limit.
Have you ever poured your heart out to a friend, only to have the friend say something like, “Hey, lighten up.” And you realize that your sharing is making them uncomfortable…and that you need to modify your behavior…
If you do have a friend or partner with whom you can share anything, who will listen to you and with whom you can fully reveal your true self, with all your insecurities and doubts and emotions and struggles…consider yourself fortunate, and blessed, for that is a special thing.
****** Today’s scripture makes me wonder about the kind of pressure the Pharisees faced, to act a certain way, to behave a certain way, to present a certain image… and to hide from view their questions, their fears, their insecurities…
A Pharisee needs to set an example. A Pharisee needs to always have everything together and figured out. A Pharisee needs to be holy and righteous.
In a recent church email, I talked about how we are all “works in progress.” Youth, and adults; we are all always learning, always growing, always journeying toward what we should be, what God calls us to be.
But a Pharisee felt the pressure to appear as a completed work. A finished product. Not a work in progress.
We are all works in progress. No person on earth is finished becoming who they are meant to be. And no one, aside from Jesus, is completely holy and righteous 100% of the time.
But a Pharisee was pressured to present an image of himself that was finished and complete. Those parts of himself that were not finished, that were still a work-in-progress, he had to keep hidden away.
Maybe, for the Pharisee, the hope was that if you keep it hidden away, maybe it will go away. If you ignore the parts of you that you don’t like, maybe they will disappear.
The Pharisees worked hard at this. And they expected everyone else to, as well. Conceal all those less-than-perfect parts of who you are.
Like Elsa in Frozen; she had to conceal part of who she was. And like whats-her-name from KPop Demon Hunters. She had to conceal part of who she was. And like so many others.
Conceal who you are. Don’t let your true self show. Be perfect.
That was the expectation placed upon a Pharisee. That was what they expected of themselves, and of others.
But not everyone got the memo.
***** The woman in today’s scripture couldn’t hide who she was. Apparently everyone already knew that she was “a sinner.”
What that meant, specifically, I’m not really sure. Lots of people throughout the centuries have speculated on the specific nature of her sin… But we don’t know.
It does seem weird that scripture refers to her as a “sinner,” when elsewhere in scripture, it says we are all sinners, every single one of us. We have all strayed from the path God calls us to follow.
Which means this woman is a sinner, but the Pharisees are also sinners.
So why does she get that label thrown at her, while others do not?
Maybe it’s because she didn’t (or couldn’t) hide her sin from view. Maybe it’s because she allowed others to see her whole self, her whole being, both the good and the bad. Her sin was not hidden or concealed…..
Pope Francis often referred to himself as a sinner. When he first became pope, those were the first words he said when he appeared in St. Peter’s square: “I am a sinner.”
And he often asked people to pray for him.
I wonder if it caught anyone by surprise the way it caught me by surprise, to hear the Pope publicly declare that he is a sinner, and in need of prayer.
It’s hard to imagine the Pharisees saying such a thing.
But the woman who the Pharisees did call a sinner… she did not deny the accusation. She did not try to defend herself against their accusation.
But she also knew that she could present herself, just as she was—sins and all—before Jesus. In his presence, she didn’t have to hide who she was. She didn’t have to conceal her true self. She didn’t have to pretend she was anything other than who she was.
That… is faith.
Faith isn’t necessarily having the confidence of the Pharisees. Faith isn’t having all the right answers. Faith isn’t memorizing the most Bible verses, or spending the most time sitting in the pew at church.
But faith is knowing that you can present yourself just as you are to Jesus, not hiding or concealing anything… and Jesus will accept you, and love you, and bestow upon you grace and mercy.
In meditating on this scripture, I began to think of this woman as presenting herself naked before Jesus. Not in a literal way, but in the sense that she truly had nothing to hide. Just like Adam and Eve before they ate of the forbidden fruit, when they were naked and not ashamed… when they had nothing to hide from God.
And I thought of Brian McLaren’s book Naked Spirituality, which he defines as a stripped-down spirituality, the opposite of a dressed-up spirituality.
And I also thought of the young man in Mark’s gospel, who is identified as a disciple, and who witnessed the arrest of Jesus. Mark’s gospel says that this young man was wearing only a linen cloth; and when the disciples fled, he, too, started to run, but someone grabbed him by the linen cloth he was wearing, and the linen cloth came off, and the young man ran away naked.
I always wondered why Mark thought this was an important detail to include in his gospel…
Maybe there is some symbolism here… maybe those who grabbed him wanted to keep him in this world, where power and wealth rule, but the young man wanted to strip away everything having to do with this world, and embrace the kingdom Jesus came to establish and proclaim…
Or, maybe Mark just thought it was funny, and figured that a story as heavy as the arrest and crucifixion of Jesus needed a little comic relief. I don’t know.
But I do know that this woman’s spirit was naked before Jesus…that nothing was hidden… and he covered her with grace and mercy and forgiveness and love.
And he said to her: “Your sins are forgiven.”
And he said to her: “Your faith has saved you.”
***** Whenever Jesus said “your faith has saved you,” he meant that your faith has made you whole; your faith has brought you healing; your faith has made you well; your faith has restored unto you the joy of living the abundant life God intends for you to live.
I’m also reminded that, in ancient times, it was common for those getting baptized to strip off all their clothes, and enter the water naked, to symbolize the stripping away of everything in this world that keeps us from God, and keeps us from being our true, authentic selves. Entering the water naked also symbolized that the one being baptized had nothing to hide, but was presenting themselves to God just as they were.
And then, upon emerging from the waters of baptism, they were given new clothes… clean, white clothes, symbolizing that God’s mercy and forgiveness has fully restored them to life—to new life.
I find the symbolism in that meaningful. Sometimes I feel that it’s just so hard to be fully open, to be my true, authentic self. Even before God.
Sometimes I think I have more in common with the Pharisee than I do with the woman who so courageously opened herself up to God.
Maybe we all do.
Yet this story tells us that nothing about who you are—nothing in your past, nothing you have done—can keep God from loving you.
Quite the contrary.
For when you open yourself up to God, and present yourself to God as you are, God accepts that as a gift—perhaps the greatest gift you can give—and God surrounds you with his love.
And, like the woman in today’s scripture, when you present your true self before God, you will find healing and wholeness, and you will experience the joy that comes from being welcomed into the presence of God.