The Tenth Sunday After Pentecost 
Dogs Are People, Too, 
& One Crumb Will Be Fine 
Grace, mercy and peace to you from God our Father and our Lord Jesus Christ! 
Amen. In today’s Gospel, a woman knelt before Jesus, saying, 
“Lord, help me.” And He answered, “It is not right to take the children’s bread 
and throw it to the dogs.” She said, “Yes, Lord, yet even the dogs eat the 
crumbs that fall from their master’s table.” 
Dear Christian friends, 
Whenever the Gospel of Jesus is read in our midst, each Christian has but one 
job. We must each find a place to stand, so to speak, in that Gospel. We must 
each locate ourselves therein. If you fail to see yourself in the Gospel, you 
also will fail to see Jesus. 
Today’s Gospel does not give us any options. Present here are only Jesus and a 
woman kneeling at His feet. Jesus calls her a dog. 
Here is the thing to remember about Jesus, no matter what He might say: your 
Lord Jesus Christ does not have a mean bone in His body! He NEVER speaks with 
cruelty. He ONLY speaks love and compassion. Even our Lord’s harsh Words—even 
His rough actions, like making a whip and driving people from the temple 
(Matthew 21:12-13, John 2:15)—even things are said and done for us and for our 
salvation. Do not consider it an insult that Jesus calls this woman a dog. 
Consider it a proclamation of the faith. 
“It is not right to take the children’s bread and throw it to the dogs.” Our 
Lord did not call the woman a dog because of the way she looked. Jesus only 
called her a dog because she did not have any more Jewish blood in her veins 
than you do. It was customary for the Jews to call their gentile neighbors 
“dogs.” To the Jews “belong the adoption, the glory, the covenants, the giving 
of the law, the worship, and the promises” (Romans 9:4). To the dogs—to this 
woman—belonged nothing. 
Why did this woman throw herself at Jesus’ feet? She was seeking the benefit of 
gifts that had been sworn on an oath to someone else. She wanted to receive the 
blessing that had been promised to Abraham and Isaac and their descendants 
forever. This woman did not pretend that she had any inherent right to receive 
the things promised. She felt no sense of entitlement. She stood as a foreigner 
and stranger in someone else’s house. She made her appeal to “the Lord, the Son 
of David,” on the solely basis of His grace and mercy; solely on the basis of 
who Jesus is, rather than who she is. This woman had nothing, but she knew 
Jesus had plenty: “Yes, Lord, yet even the dogs eat the crumbs that fall from 
their master’s table.” 
Is it really so insulting for you and me to identify ourselves with the dog in 
today’s Gospel? This woman’s lack of qualification did not prevent her from 
receiving the benefit of being with Jesus, and that is a VERY GOOD PLACE for 
you and for me to stand! Like this woman, we should not even try to offer Jesus 
our resumes. Like this woman, we should each grant that many other people are 
much more worthy to be with Jesus than I am. We should kneel in the place where 
this woman kneels if we want to see Jesus as she sees Him. Above all, we should 
NOT be insulted by unbecoming analogies or unflattering figures of speech just 
because they sting. 
“It is not right to take the children’s bread and throw it to the dogs.” She 
said, “Yes, Lord, yet even the dogs eat the crumbs that fall from their 
master’s table.” 
“Even the dogs eat the crumbs that fall from their master’s table.” With these 
Words, this Canaanite woman spoke the very Christian faith by which you and I 
are saved. With these Words, this woman was saying, 
•       I am not worthy, Lord, but my worthiness is NOT the point. 
•       God’s promise of forgiveness and salvation in Christ extend beyond the 
bloodlines of Israel and reach even to those who are far from Jewish. 
•       “Just a tiny bit of Your infinite mercy will be fine, my dear Lord! A 
crumb is all I need!” 
“It is not right to take the children’s bread and throw it to the dogs.” She 
said, “Yes, Lord, yet even the dogs eat the crumbs that fall from their 
master’s table.” 
Now let’s take our Lord’s analogy a little farther than it is customarily 
taken. There is, after all, at least one very good thing about being a dog: 
Dogs are interested in the things that nobody else wants. Dogs pay close 
attention even to tiny morsels of food and they find nourishment where others 
see only a waste of time. Yet what is the Holy Communion, which we are about to 
receive? There is present in the Communion only a crumb, a tiny morsel of food; 
one that very few people desire: 
•       The Jews did not want the Body and Blood of their Lord Jesus for the 
forgiveness of sins. For them it was enough that His body was pierced and His 
blood was shed—just so long as Jesus went away and stayed away. As St. Paul 
wrote, to the Jews “belong the adoption, the glory, the covenants, the giving 
of the law, the worship, and the promises… from their race, according to the 
flesh, is the Christ who is God over all, blessed forever” (Romans 9:4). But 
the Jews did not want Him! To use the imagery of today’s Gospel, the children 
of the house wanted nothing of the lavish banquet of salvation that God had 
prepared in the body of His Son Jesus, the very bread that God had promised. 
What good thing resulted from their disinterest in the banquet of salvation? 
There are plenty of crumbs left for the dogs to live on. 
•       Many Christians likewise share the same disinterest in Jesus’ Body and 
Blood. “The Holy Communion is merely bread!” they claim. “Jesus cannot possibly 
be present in a crumb,” they complain. These Christians imagine that when Jesus 
said of the Bread, “This is My body, given for you for the forgiveness of you 
sins” (Matthew 26:26, 28), He must have been talking about something else. So 
they have no interest in our meal. They have interest only in making the meal 
something that it is not. 
Drop a dollar on the ground, and even a guy with a backache will stoop over to 
pick it up. Serve the Holy Communion, and most people cannot be bothered. Yet 
this woman was right in today’s Gospel. This woman gives us a good place to 
stand because she speaks our faith: “Amen, Lord! Even the dogs eat the crumbs 
that fall from their master’s table.” 
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