Thirteenth Sunday in OT B
2021
This week’s
Gospel speaks of the healing of two women.
It tells two different stories that are woven into one. They both involve women in crisis. We don’t know them by name, just by their
need.
The
Scriptures reveal to us the heart of God.
As in the case of the woman who been afflicted with hemorrhages for
twelve years in today’s Gospel, Jesus did not see an unclean woman with
uncontrollable bleeding, he saw a beloved daughter of God who is
suffering. May we too see in those who
are suffering God’s beloved sons and daughters.
We may ask
ourselves at times what keeps us from recognizing people in need as God’s
beloved sons and daughters. I find the
words of Mother Theresa as very helpful.
Mother Theresa says: “When our
hearts area filled with judgments about others, there is no room left for
love.” May we repent of our judgments so
that we may be able to love others as God loves them.
The words of
Mother Theresa give us such an important message. When a person’s skin color, when a person’s
way of praying is different than ours, when a person’s speech is different than
ours, when a person’s sexuality is different than ours, whatever it is, we ask
for the grace to see that person as God’s beloved son or daughter. We ask for the grace that our hearts can be
filled with love toward one and all.
May we
always be mindful of the words of Jesus:
“Come to me all you who labor and are burdened and I will give you
rest.” The people of Jesus’ day were
sometimes scandalized because Jesus seemed to be too welcoming to sinners and
people who stood in need of healing and forgiveness.
Today’s
scriptures also invite us to consider what areas of our life stand in need of
healing? If you were to ask the Lord
this day for healing, whether this be physical, emotional, relational—if some
relationship in your life needs healing, or if it is an addiction that brings
you down from being your better self; perhaps it is financial shipwreck;
perhaps anxiety or depression.
In our personal
suffering, may we hold onto our spiritual identity as did this woman afflicted
with uncontrollable bleeding. Her deeper
spiritual identity gave her the courage to reach for God’s love as it was
manifesting itself in Jesus. God’s love
is for God’s children, and she is one of God’s children. This is her faith.
She touched
the clothes of Jesus and was healed. Do
you believe that the healing touch of Jesus is meant for you as well? Jesus is here today, and you have a chance to
touch not only his clothes but his very body.
This is what we are privileged to do in the Eucharist. Let us put our heart and soul into that
privilege. May we trust that the healing
grace is meant for you and me.
Also, In
today’s Gospel, there is a girl of 12 years of age who is near death, struck
down by an unknown illness, driving her father to extremes in his desperate
search for help in going to Jesus.
Jairus risks being ridiculed and risks missing the last precious minutes
in his daughter’s life. When the news of
his daughter’s death arrives, Jesus preaches the shortest sermon of his
career. He simply says: “Do not fear, but believe.” That sermon Jesus preaches to us as well who
suffer from those human conditions in which we cannot control. “Do not fear but believe.”
The meaning
of faith is that we are not to fear; rather we are to trust in God’s love for
us.
In the eyes
of Jesus, there is no death, only a passage from one form of love into another
form of love. In the words of the
preface of the funeral liturgy: in
death, life is not ended; it is merely changed.
When Jesus
arrived at the house of Jairus, he put
the crowd outside, and took the child’s father and mother and those who were
with him, and went in where the child was.
He took her by the hand and said to her:
“Talitha koum,” which means, “Little girl, get up!”
As we pray
over today’s Gospel, may we be reminded that Jairus’ daughter lies dying today
in little girls jeopardized by illness, lack of food and water and the
necessities of life, the safety and the security they deserve. Jairus’s daughter can be found in the
children of Haiti, the children who live in Iraq and Afghanistan, the immigrant
children at our border and all the children in need who live in this the
wealthiest nation on the planet.
What can we
do to affirm the sacredness of the lives of all children? What can we do as a Church which affirms our
desire to form our own children and all children after the mind and heart of
Jesus?
If you will,
imagine ourselves as that 12 year old girl and Jesus taking us by our hand and
telling us to rise and live: “Talitha
koum.” Jesus gives life not only to the
dead but to those of us who are only partially alive. Instead of feeling sorry for ourselves
because of some illness or setback, may we hear the healing of Jesus being
spoken to us. In deep gratitude, enjoy
the blessedness and giftedness of this day and make a difference in someone’s
life as a way of sharing your giftedness with people in need. Our life really, really is a gift of God.
May God give
you peace.
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