Tuesday, November 18, 2025

She Kept Kissing the Savior’s Feet

 

Understanding the Woman Who Broke Barriers to Worship

Luke 7:36-38(NLT)

“36 One of the Pharisees asked Jesus to have dinner with him, so Jesus went to his home and sat down to eat. 37 When a certain immoral woman from that city heard he was eating there, she brought a beautiful alabaster jar filled with expensive perfume. 38 Then she knelt behind him at his feet, weeping. Her tears fell on his feet, and she wiped them off with her hair. Then she kept kissing his feet and putting perfume on them.”

Understanding the Woman Labeled “Immoral”

At first glance, it’s easy to judge her. She’s labeled “immoral” in the text, and the Pharisees had no trouble condemning her. But to understand her actions, we need to step into the culture of her time.

In Jesus’ day, it didn’t take much for a woman to be labeled a sinner. Simply working and earning her own money could mark her as a prostitute. A young woman’s life was largely determined by marriage—her father’s ability to arrange it and the community’s judgment of her reputation. If no man claimed her, she could be seen as a burden to her father, and her opportunities were limited by what society thought of her.

Reputation was everything. One misstep, one deception, one rumor—and doors closed. A woman’s life could be shaped—or even shattered—by circumstances beyond her control. And even when she did nothing wrong, the label could stick. Life for women in this position was often hard, lonely, and filled with invisible barriers they had done nothing to create.

A Heart Open to Grace

The woman in Luke 7:36–38 had run into circumstances that caused her to be labeled immoral. She was a known outcast, dismissed by many, and considered by men to have little or no worth. Women in biblical times were already at the bottom of the social ladder. They were often seen as the property of men. A “good wife” was measured more by her usefulness than by her heart, her character, or her worth as a person. It doesn’t take much imagination to picture all she had endured. And yet, even at her lowest, she saw an opportunity to step into a dimension of grace and worship that far exceeded the life she had known for so many years.

Jesus Moves Toward the Broken

Jesus has always had a way of drawing the ones the world throws away. Our Lord and Savior wasn’t intimidated by sinners, the broken, or the publicly shamed. He moved toward them. For the ones people whispered about… for the ones society tried to bury under labels and low expectations… He became a safe place. He taught them the Word of God, and when that Word hit their souls, something awakened. They fell in love because they met compassion wrapped in truth.

She Recognized Who He Was

Our beloved Savior was a guest in the home of a Pharisee when this woman came to tend to him with her alabaster box. The Pharisees were notoriously arrogant, and had no good intentions where Jesus was concerned. When he entered this man’s home, Jesus wasn’t treated as the King he is. There was no water for His feet. No oil. No greeting of peace. But this woman with the alabaster box knew who he was. She recognized the Light. She had been changed by His teaching, healed in a way no human could reach. What she received from Him was worth more than life itself, and her worship poured out of her the way the fragrance poured out of that jar.

Humility in Action

This woman came to acknowledge what Christ had done for her, but notice something powerful—she didn’t rush into the room demanding His attention. She didn’t ask for a title, a seat, or a moment. She came behind Him. She didn’t even lift her eyes to His face. That is humility in its purest form… not insecurity, but a soul fully aware of the greatness of the One who healed her. Her tears weren’t polite tears—they were the overflow of a heart that had been shattered and remade. And when those tears fell on His feet, she didn’t search for a towel. She offered the most intimate, personal thing she had—her hair. She kissed His feet, the place of His walk, the place of His journey, and she poured out the expensive fragrance she carried. She brought Him her very best because she knew He had given her what no one else ever could: life, dignity, and the healing only the Messiah can give.

The Healing That Changes How We Love

Some of us walk through life with a deep, aching need to be loved by a man, and we don’t always understand why that desire feels so fierce. Sometimes it’s loneliness… sometimes it’s unhealed places in the soul… sometimes it’s the absence of healthy love in our past. But Jesus Christ said something in this record that should make every woman pause and look inward. Speaking to the arrogant Pharisee, He said in Luke 7:46-48(NLT), “You neglected the courtesy of olive oil to anoint my head, but she has anointed my feet with rare perfume. 47 “I tell you, her sins—and they are many—have been forgiven, so she has shown me much love. But a person who is forgiven little shows only little love.” 48 Then Jesus said to the woman, “Your sins are forgiven.”

What Jesus revealed in that moment is this: When He forgives and restores a woman, He doesn’t just deal with her sins—He deals with her emptiness. He changes the way she loves and fills the parts that felt unloved or unseen. Then, she begins to love from a healthier place. It’s a process, but it’s a real one. This happens not because she’s needy, but because she knows the One who healed her. The Pharisee couldn’t love Jesus because he didn’t think he needed Him. But this woman? Her whole soul recognized the One who restored her dignity. Her longing for love had finally found its fulfillment, not in a man’s arms, but in the Messiah’s mercy. And until we let Jesus fill that inner ache, we will keep trying to hand our hearts to men who were never designed to heal what only Christ can touch.

Love That Flows From Healing

Examine this extraordinary statement Jesus made about this woman. He said, “she has shown me much love.” That one sentence uncovers the secret behind everything she received. Her honor, her humility, her boldness, her worship — it all flowed from a heart that had been touched and healed by Christ. And because of that, the record of her devotion is etched into God’s Word for all eternity. Imagine that. Her legacy isn’t in what she owned, who she knew, or how people labeled her… her legacy is that she loved Jesus deeply.

Where Every Transformation Begins

This is the testimony every woman of God is called to carry. To love the Lord with all our heart, soul, mind, and strength — not because we’ve done everything right, but because He has met us in the places we were wrong, broken, or empty. Deep down, the yearning we feel — the longing we sometimes mistake for needing a man, needing validation, or needing acceptance — is really a yearning to love Christ the way this woman did. To pour everything at His feet. To come to Him with humility, honesty, and a soul finally ready to rest.

And when we love Him like this — not perfectly, but genuinely… not loudly, but deeply… not for what He can give us, but because of who He is — something shifts. Our hearts unlock. Our souls settle. And we begin to walk into the blessings, direction, and healing we once tried to chase on our own. The woman with the alabaster box didn’t earn anything; she simply loved the One who first loved her. And that love—pure, humble, and real—is where every transformation, every blessing, and every new beginning starts.

Scripture quotations marked (NLT) are taken from the Holy Bible, New Living Translation, copyright © 1996. Used by permission of Tyndale House Publishers, Inc., Wheaton, Illinois 60189. All rights reserved.

“She Kept Kissing the Savior’s Feet”, written for https://rescuefromdomesticviolence.blogspot.com© 2025. All rights reserved. All praise and honor to God through Jesus Christ, our Lord and Savior.


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