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The
Fifth Sunday after Epiphany
Readings:
Based
on the Gospel, Mark 1:29-39 When
I visited the Holy Land, one of the scenes that came alive to me was the
story in today’s Gospel. We
visited Capernaum where we stood on the site of the Synagogue.
We walked across the road to a church built above a small house,
believed to be that of Simon. There
we read the passage of the healing of Simon’s mother.
Jesus
was teaching in the synagogue in Capernaum.
He and his disciples left the synagogue and walked the few steps
to the house of Simon and Andrew. Simon's
mother-in-law was in bed with a fever.
When the others told him about her illness, he did not hesitate
for a moment. He went in to
her, took her by the hand and lifted her up.
The fever left her. She
began to minister to their needs. The
one who is healed becomes the one who serves.
Indeed,
the story does not end there. It
is just the beginning. Later
that evening the crowds gathered around the door of the little home.
Jesus’ fame had spread like wildfire.
The place quickly filled up.
It seemed as if everyone was there.
They came out of desperation.
They came in their neediness.
He healed many who were sick, and cast out many demons.
The
story calls out for a response on our part, for it serves as a pattern
for the Christian life. The
woman, who is brought to Jesus by others, is given new life and responds
with service. Her
restoration is immediate and complete.
She is in touch with God. She
becomes the deacon, the one called to a position of service.
Women did not traditionally serve at the table, yet that is her
response to the healing that has taken place in her life.
The
life of wholeness in the Christian requires just such a response.
The story is a graphic reminder of the desperate need of the
masses of people in our world. It is a graphic picture of the one who is able to provide
healing and fulfillment for those needs.
What the Gospel calls us to remember, and what we too often
forget, is that this same Christ applies his divine touch to the
ailments of suffering people in and around us today.
What is more, he does it through us.
"We
live in another age," you may say.
"We don't believe in that kind of thing any more.
We don't expect miracles. I
mean, get real. In Jesus’ time they believed in demons and heaven only
knows what else!" Yet
even the medical community is beginning to accept the role that faith
has in healing. They are
more likely to consider that healing has to do with a better outlook on
life, but they agree that Spiritual wellness is an important aspect of
healing. Historically
science has not embraced the connection between faith and health but an
increasing number of scientific authorities acknowledge that spiritual
practices, including prayer, worship, and service to others, influence
our health. It comes from a new holistic sensitivity that has made
medicine re-examine its perspectives.
It comes to from examining stories of miraculous cures.
The
gospel calls us to examine what keeps us from wholeness.
What demons afflict us? Do
we have worries and fears that keep us from being truly alive?
Do we have bad habits and unhealthy practices that nag at us?
Do we have weaknesses or compulsions that we know keep us from
God? We
know that we must trust medical science.
After all, God uses the skills of doctors and nurses to bring
about healing. However, we
must also recognize the healing power of God.
As Christians we believe that the healing power of God is present
in every celebration of the Eucharist.
We have Intercessions each Sunday when we bring our own needs and
those of others before God. On
Wednesdays at our Eucharist we pray for each person on that list by
name. We offer the ministry
of reconciliation, recognizing the connection between wholeness and
being right with God and with the community.
We offer the reserved sacrament to shut ins and those who are
sick. And in the tradition
of the early church, we offer anointing with oil.
Using holy oils consecrated by the bishop at a special service
during Lent, we anoint and lay hands on the sick and on those who are in
need. When
people came to Jesus for healing, Jesus said that he did not come only
to heal sick people, but to bring wholeness to the world.
He came to change the world in such a way that sickness would
disappear. He asked them to
look for the reasons for so much of the sickness in our society and to
change their priorities. That
too is the call of the Church. Some
mission sisters went from Europe to start a clinic in an impoverished
area in Africa. People came
bringing their children. The
clinic was successful, but the sisters wondered whether they were doing
the right thing. Almost all of the cases they treated were children suffering
from diarrhea. It
dehydrated them, so the sisters would treat them overnight, and it would
seem like a miraculous recovery. Yet
they knew that the cause of the sickness was the drinking water.
They knew that treating the symptoms was not an answer.
They knew they needed to prevent the disease.
They started visiting people in their homes and addressing
community groups to bring about a change in lifestyle for the people
We
need to explore the whole process of healing.
We need an awareness of the power of God to heal.
And we need to recognize our neediness before God.
Like Jesus we need to take time out of our busy lives to renew
our strength. That, it seems to me is the key to wholeness.
Jesus knew that there were times when he needed to withdraw from
the crowds. How many times
do we read in Scripture that he withdrew to a lonely place to pray?
That is no mistake. There,
in the quiet, he came in touch with the source of his power.
There he renewed his strength.
How
important it is for us in our busy lives to withdraw for prayer, to be
in touch with God. To know
God. To recharge our
batteries. To be alone. To be renewed. How
can we find the power, that inner joy and peace, the spiritual health to
keep ourselves strong and motivated and whole through the difficult
times of our lives? How can
we channel such power and peace and joy to the difficult people and
situations all about us? There
is only one way. We must
keep in touch with God and allow God to keep in touch with us through
Word and Sacrament, through daily communion with God through prayer and
praise. Then God will work
in and through us for the wholeness of the world.
I need your divine touch, O Lord. Only then can I be what you want me to be. Have your way in me and through me today. Amen.
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