Homily for July 8th, 2019: Matthew
9:18-26.
Today’s gospel
recounts two miracles: one a miraculous healing, the other a resurrection from
the dead. All the healings reported in the gospels are Jesus’ response to
faith. Mark’s gospel tells us that when Jesus visited Nazareth , where he had grown up, “he could
work no miracle,” because the people who had known him for years lacked faith.
(Mk 5:6).
In today’s
gospel the first person to manifest faith is a synagogue elder whose daughter
has just died. He believes Jesus can bring her back to life. Greater faith than
that one cannot imagine. The second person who approaches Jesus with faith is a
woman who has suffered hemorrhages for twelve years. Jews had a special
aversion to blood. Still today the Jewish dietary laws say that to be kosher,
and hence fit for human consumption, meat must have all the blood drained from
it before it before it comes to the table. This helps us understand that the
situation of the woman with hemorrhages is desperate. She makes her request for
healing not in words, but by grabbing hold of the tassel on one of the four
corners of the prayer shawl worn by Jewish men. She is so confident in the
power of Jesus that even this contact with his garment can bring her his
healing.
Both petitioners
receive what they seek in faith. Sensing that power has gone out from him,
Jesus turns around and confronts the woman. “Courage, daughter!” he tells her.
“Your faith has saved you.” “And from that hour,” Matthew
tells us, “the woman was cured.”
When Jesus
arrives at the house of the synagogue elder, he finds a crowd already mourning
the death of the man’s daughter. Hired flute players are playing a funeral
dirge. “Go away,” Jesus tells them. “The girl is not dead but sleeping.” Not
for the first time in the gospels, the people ridicule him, confident that he
has lost touch with reality. When the crowd has dispersed, Jesus enters the
house, takes the girl by the hand, and raises her to life.
What better
response could we make to the story of these two miracles than to repeat the
anguished words of the father in Mark’s gospel seeking healing for his deaf
mute son who seems to have what we would call epilepsy. Asked by Jesus whether
he believes healing is possible, the man replies – and we repeat: “Lord, I do
believe! Help my unbelief!” (Mark 9:24).
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