Homily for February 11th, 2021: Mark 7:24-30.
I told you
yesterday that there are many things in the Bible that we do not understand.
Yesterday we heard Jesus overthrowing the distinction in Jewish law between
clean and unclean foods. Why then was there the great controversy, perhaps less
than a decade later and reported in the Acts of the Apostles and three of
Paul’s letters, over whether Gentile converts to Christianity must keep the
Jewish food laws? We simply don’t know.
Today’s gospel
poses another question which we cannot answer. Why did Jesus initially refuse
the request of a Gentile woman that he heal her daughter? It cannot be because
Jesus lacked compassion. The gospels show that he was a man of total
compassion. Did Jesus want to test the depth of this mother’s love for her sick
child? If so, she passed the test with flying colors. Throwing herself at
Jesus’ feet, she shows that she is out to win. Her daughter means everything to
her. She refuses to take no for an answer.
Jesus’ words about the sons of the
household being fed first seem to be a reference to his mission of feeding his
own people first. When Jesus says it is not right to take the children’s food
and throw it to the dogs, he is using traditional Jewish terminology. Jews in
his day often referred to Gentiles as dogs. Jesus softens the word, however.
The word he uses means not dogs but puppies. Even this does not discourage the
woman. Without missing a beat, she comes right back with the remark: “Lord,
even the dogs under the table eat the children’s scraps.” To understand what
she is saying, we must know the eating habits of the day. Food was
eaten with the fingers, which were wiped afterwards with pieces of flat bread
that were then cast aside to be eaten by the household dogs.
Or was Jesus testing
the woman’s faith? If so, she passed that test too. For Jesus responds: “For
saying this, you may go. The demon has gone out of your daughter.” Illness of
all kinds was thought in Jesus’ day to be caused by demons.
The beautiful
conclusion of this moving story follows at once. “When the woman went home, she
found the child lying in bed and the demon gone.”
This desperate
and nameless woman is a model of love and faith. We pray in this Mass for the
Lord to make us like her.
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