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Friday 25 June 2021

13th Sunday of Year B 2021

 

Thirteenth Sunday of Year (B)

(Wisdom 1:13-15; 2:23-24.  2nd. Corinthians 8:7-9, 13-15; Saint Mark 5:21-43)

 

Today’s Gospel emphasises the importance and the fruitfulness of a personal awareness of, and relationship with, Jesus.

We were told there, as you heard, that:  

When Jesus had crossed again (in the boat) to the other side (of the Sea of Galilee) a large crowd gathered around Him, and He stayed close to the sea.  One of the synagogue officials, named Jairus, came forward. Seeing Him, he fell at His feet and pleaded earnestly with Him, saying, “My daughter is at the point of death. Please, come lay your hands on her that she may get well and live.”  He went off with him, and a large crowd followed Him and pressed upon Him.

 

Now Saint John (John 4:46–48has a similar story about a father seeking Jesus’ help for his son:

 

(Jesus) returned to Cana in Galilee, where He had made the water wine. Now there was a royal official whose son was ill in Capernaum.  When he heard that Jesus had arrived in Galilee from Judea, he went to Him and asked Him to come down and heal his son, who was near death.   Jesus said to him, “Unless you people see signs and wonders, you will not believe.” 

And so, the synagogue leader pressed through a large crowd surrounding Jesus by the sea and fell at Jesus’ feet; whereas, the royal official simply went to Jesus and asked Him.

The depth of Jairus’ faith was most clearly shown by his publicly falling at Jesus’ feet despite the general disapproval of Jesus by the Pharisees and their Scribes so active and important in the synagogue ‘movement’ so to speak.  That humble act of faith by Jairus could easily have cost him his reputation and authority in the synagogue.

The royal official, on the other hand, would seem to have simply approached Jesus privately and asked Him to heal his son, thereby meriting those words of Jesus:

            Unless you people see signs and wonders, you will not believe.

 As a result of that healing, however, Jesus’ name would be proclaimed in royal palaces that were no fit places for Jesus’ Personal preaching, which was for the poor and needy, the sick and lowly, but above all for the repentant and faithful.

Now let us look more closely at the woman who had suffered from hemorrhages for 12 years, an illness which had ritually prevented her from being able to worship in the temple and even, perhaps, in the local synagogue.

Like Jairus, she pushed through a crowd to get close to Jesus, but, because of the nature of her ailment, she made no public gesture.   Now desperate after many notable figures in medicine had failed her and cost all her money, and yet with a true faith in the holiness and power of Jesus -- the only One, she now realized, Who could possibly help her– she simply touched His cloak, possibly just the hem of that long garment.

That, however, was too much like magic for Jesus Who immediately made it known that He was acutely aware that someone had purposefully touched His garments.  He turned around to face the crowd, and looking deliberately at those nearest to Himself, He thus compelled the already deeply anxious and now most nervous woman to reveal herself to Him and make known the whole truth.

Jesus then said to her both privately and ‘sotto voce’:

Daughter, your faith has made you well; go in peace and be healed of your disease.

Oh, Lord Jesus, gentle and accommodating Saviour, how true of You are those prophetic words (Sirach 42:21–23):

Perennial is His almighty wisdom; He is from all eternity one and the same, no need of a counselor for Him! How beautiful are all His works even to the spark and the fleeting vision!

Yes, dear People of God, that was but a momentary incident absolutely unknown to the crowd, and even now -- for us recalling it to our memory -- it is but a very short glimpse of Jesus’ tender solicitude, “Daughter, your faith has made you well”, and gentle encouragement, “go in peace and be healed of your disease”, for a woman so long alone, anxious, and so deeply embarrassed.  There were very few people to whom Jesus could have shown that aspect of His humanity and divine love: for Jairus in his moment of trial it was simply “Do not be afraid; just have faith”; for the daughter of Jairus, it was “Talitha koumi, little girl arise”; while for both parents, it was that very practical advice, “Give her something to eat”.

What about you, my dear fellow Catholics and Christians?  Has Jesus, has God, ever spoken, whispered, words of importance, or tender concern, words of guidance both encouraging and possibly life-changing, to you?  If so, then treasure those words for the rest of your life, for they were and are words of life for you.

If not? Why not, do you think?  All I can say is that such words of Jesus are expressions of a certain closeness, loving concern, intimate awareness.  If you have never heard the like yourselves that cannot be Jesus’, God’s, fault: we have all just heard that Jesus on earth did speak to some people in such a way, and we all know that God our Father in heaven and the Holy Spirit dwelling in our hearts, are capable and do want to be that close to us, for us: Jesus is our Saviour, God is our Father, the Paraclete is the Spirit given us expressly to divinize us and whisper in our very hearts!!  And yet you have heard nothing, never sensed anything, somehow never even thought or guessed that Jesus, the Father, or the Spirit within you has ever said or intimated anything to you for your guidance and help??

In such a situation I must just urge you never to forget those words of Jesus to the woman of Samaria:

God is Spirit, and those who worship Him must worship Him in spirit and in truth.   (John 4:24)

Those are words to think on, work at, and above all, pray over.  For the Holy Spirit given us makes us Christians, and He ever recalls Jesus’ teaching, for Jesus said ‘I am the Truth’.  And the relationship He, the Spirit, establishes in us, Faith, is a P/personal relationship : a relationship, on our part, of humble obedience; a relationship of steadfast, ever-clinging-on, trust; a relationship of heart-warming and supremely committed love.  A relationship on God's side expressed by a most loving Fatherly embrace, and an invitation to sit at the table set for the heavenly  feast of God's family and kingdom.