Homily for June 26th, 2015: Matthew
8:1-4.
People
afflicted with leprosy in Jesus’ day suffered not only physically but socially
and spiritually, as well. They were banned from public places. And since they
were considered spiritually unclean they could not participate in Temple worship. Anyone who
touched a leper became spiritually unclean as well.
This helps us
understand why the man we have just heard about in the gospel reading prefaces
his plea for healing by doing homage to Jesus. “Lord, if you wish, you can make
me clean, he pleads.” The man’s faith in
Jesus’ power to heal is crucial. It is faith that opens the door for God’s
action in our lives.
Out of
compassion with this social outcast Jesus responds at once. Reaching out across
the boundary between clean and unclean, Jesus touches the man, saying: “I will do
it. Be made clean.” Jesus has restored the man to the community of God’s
people. At once he tells the newly healed man to fulfill the provisions
of the Jewish law by going to a Temple
priest and offering sacrifice. Jewish priests were then also quarantine
officials.
Where did
Jesus get this power to heal? He received it in his hours of silent waiting on
his heavenly Father in prayer. Just before encountering this leper, Jesus has
been on a mountain, Matthew tells
us. Mountains in those days were considered especially close to God. Jesus had
just been praying. He needed those times of silence, alone with his heavenly
Father. It was in those
hours of solitude that Jesus nurtured the power to heal, to say to rough
working men, “Follow me,” and have them obey him on the spot. And if Jesus,
whose inner resources were infinitely greater than hours, needed those times
alone with God, we are fools and guilty fools, if we think we can do without
them.
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