Homily for January 11th, 2019: Luke 5:12-16.
The Bible
commentators tell us that the disease of leprosy mentioned often in Scripture
is not the same as leprosy today, which doctors call Hansen’s disease. In the
Bible leprosy is any kind of disfiguring skin disease. People afflicted in this
way 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 is so
desperate. He “fell prostrate,” Luke tells us, and “pleaded” with Jesus, “Lord,
if you wish, you can make me clean.” The
man’s faith in Jesus’ power to heal is crucial. Faith 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 do
will it. And the leprosy left him at once,” Luke tells us. Jesus has restored
him to the community of God’s people. Jesus then orders the man to fulfill the provisions of the
Jewish law by going to a Temple
priest and offering sacrifice. In Jesus’ day Jewish priests were also
quarantine officials.
The gospel
writer, Luke, was what passed in those days for a physician. This is evident from
the care he takes to tell us that the man’s cure was instantaneous. Note also
what Luke tells us about Jesus at the end of the reading: “He would often
retired to deserted places to pray.” Luke’s choice of words makes it clear that
Jesus did this repeatedly. Why?
Jesus was
constantly surrounded by people clamoring to get at him, to speak with him, to
touch him. 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.
No comments:
Post a Comment