Homily for Sept. 18th, 2018: Luke 7:11-17.
Can there be
anything more tragic than parents having to bury a son or daughter? The tragedy
is deepened in the story we have just heard by the fact that the mother who
must bury her son is the only child he has, and she is a widow. It was a man’s
world. Women were the property of men in Jesus’ day: the property of their
fathers until they married, then the property of their husbands. The
Commandment, “Thou shalt not covet,” lists a man’s wife among the things one
must not covet. With her husband already dead, and now her son as well, this
widow of Nain has no man to speak for her or protect her.
This tragedy
has parallels even in an age of women’s liberation. I remember as if it were
yesterday standing as a young priest in a bleak and rocky cemetery in Arizona , where I had
just laid to rest beside his long deceased father the only son of a widow named
Nellie. Her deep Christian faith strengthened my faith then, and I continue to
pray for her today. “There are my two men-folk,” Nellie told me when the
prayers of committal were over.
How could
Jesus be indifferent to such grief? We heard in yesterday’s gospel about Jesus
healing the gravely ill slave of a Roman military officer, to whom the sick slave
was “very dear.” The young man being carried to burial at Nain is no less dear
to his mother. Disregarding the Jewish law of ritual purity which said that one
must not touch a corpse, Jesus unhesitatingly reaches out to touch the coffin
saying: “Young man, I tell you, arise!” Whereupon, Luke tells us, the young man
“sat up.” The Scripture commentators tell us that the Greek word which Luke
uses for “sit up” is a medical term – hardly surprising when we know that Luke
was what passed in those days for a medical doctor. The people who witnessed
this miracle respond with the simple but powerful words: “God has visited his
people.”
What better
response could we make to this moving story than to pray the words of an old evangelical
hymn: “What a friend we have in Jesus / All our sins and griefs to bear! / What
a privilege to carry / Everything to God in prayer. / Are we weak and heavy
laden, / Burdened with a load of care? / Precious Savior, still our refuge /
Take it to the Lord in prayer.”
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