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Thursday 2 September 2021

23rd Sunday Year B 2021

 

23rd. Sunday (Year B)

(Isaiah 35:4-7; James 2:1-5; Mark 7:31-37)

 

 

 

In our reading from the prophet Isaiah we heard:

Say to those whose hearts are frightened, "Be strong, fear not!  Behold, here is your God, He comes with vindication; with divine recompense He comes to save you."

For a small nation -- conscious of being God’s Chosen People and, despite that, having a long history of suffering as a pawn in the conflicting endeavours at empire building by the surrounding powers in the Fertile Crescent -- such a prophecy of salvation became, as the years passed by and the suffering and humiliation piled up, more and more commonly regarded as fighting talk.  That, certainly, was how many Jews in the days of Jesus, experiencing a long-standing occupation by Roman forces, understood them: they longed for, many even expected, their God to help them overthrow the military might of their hated and despised oppressors.  With such expectations they were pre-disposed to see Jesus’ miracles -- such as His recent feeding the five thousand in the desert -- as evidence that He, surely, was the one for whom they were looking.

However, the reaction of the religious authorities to Jesus, especially that of the Pharisees who were most influential with the people generally, was different.  The Pharisees thought they were well prepared for God’s judgment and the Messiah’s coming thanks to their meticulous observance of God’s Law as laid down in the Torah and as understood and interpreted for daily living by the many oral traditions from their elders.   They regarded the person of Jesus with suspicion, despite His miracles, because He was not one of them, and quite evidently did not consider Himself or His disciples to be bound by Pharisaic traditions.   Moe than that, however, was the fact  that He did not regard the Pharisees themselves as being purified and justified by their meticulous practices:

You nullify the word of God in favour of your tradition that you have handed on.   And you do many such things.  (Mark 7:13)

And so, the prophecy from Isaiah with which we began our readings today serves to highlight the mistaken aspirations of both the ordinary people and of their religious leaders in Jesus’ times: the people, frightened of Rome, were looking for a warrior Messiah, and the blind Pharisees did not appreciate that they themselves needed a Messiah to heal them of a sickness they could not, or would not, recognize:

Say to those whose hearts are frightened, "Be strong, fear not!  Behold, here is your God, He comes with vindication; with divine recompense He comes to save you.  Then will the eyes of the blind be opened, the ears of the deaf be cleared; then will the lame leap like a stag, then the tongue of the mute will sing.”

Jesus, journeying beyond the confines of Israel in today’s Gospel reading, was teaching His disciples by His ordinary words and every-day behaviour, gradually enlightening their minds and stirring their hearts by the gentle inspiration of His Spirit:

And people brought to Him a deaf man who had a speech impediment and begged Him to lay His hand on him.

Why did ‘people bring the man’ to Jesus?   Were they perhaps Jewish people living abroad, so to speak, and their friend a pagan whom they hoped might convert to Judaism?  Or did they perhaps bring him because he was a fellow Jew who had not wanted to come to Jesus himself?  Had he perhaps become bitter over the years with this his trial and only came to Jesus ‘under pressure’, so to speak, from good friends?    Whatever the case, sensing His Father’s will behind this unsolicited incident:

            Jesus took him off by himself away from the crowd.

The man was being given the opportunity through his experience of personal closeness with Jesus to overcome his original difficulties or mistaken apprehensions:

            Jesus put His finger into the man’s ears and, spitting, touched his tongue.

Jesus was calming down his possible anxieties and stirring up any embers of confidence and trust by doing things not unexpected in those days by one hoping to be healed.

Then Jesus looked up to heaven, groaned, and said to him “Ephphatha!  -- that is, ‘Be opened!”

That glance up to heaven by Jesus and His accompanying groan or deep sigh may have constituted the irreligious man’s introduction to faith in the goodness of Israel’s God or the saving suffering of Jesus, for:

Immediately the man’s ears were opened, his speech impediment was removed, and he spoke plainly.

Now, let us look yet more closely at Jesus as we see Him broadly portrayed in this whole seventh chapter of St. Mark’s Gospel, for He has so much to teach us: most eloquently by His words and most instructively by His actions.

He had, recently, performed the miracle of feeding the five thousand, and then He discomfited both the Pharisees and Scribes who had wanted to confront Him and His disciples for failing to observe the traditions of their elders.  Jesus had been close, at that time, to being hailed by the common people as the expected Messiah, the longed-for and irresistibly victorious, leader.   That seems to have been in the forefront of His mind, for He went – straightway -- out of Israelite territory and entered the region of Tyre and Sidon where Greek-speaking was prevalent and any worship was pagan.

There, as Jesus and His disciples were walking unnoticed and free, they were suddenly accosted by a woman who began to pester Him and His disciples to heal her daughter and provoked that memorable and, I think, divinely beautiful, conversation:

Let the children be filled first, for it is not good to take the children's bread and throw it to the little dogs.   Yes, Lord, yet even the little dogs under the table eat from the children's crumbs. (Mark 7:27-28)

Jesus, habitually alive to His Father’s influence , immediately recognized that such an answer was way above the woman’s natural capabilities:

He said to her, "For this saying, go your way; the demon has gone out of your daughter."

He had not wanted to be lionized by over-enthusiastic Israelites imagining the Lion of Juda crushing Israel’s oppressors, and therefore He had entered this non-Jewish region.  And now, having encountered this Syro-Phoenecian woman so surprisingly gifted by His Father, He decided to continue on His journey going towards the Sea of Galilee indeed, but not directly, rather by a long, circuitous route through further Decapolis territory: perhaps His Father might still have some further purpose for Him there?

And such was indeed the case, because, in our Gospel passage today, Jesus was invited by His Father, to perform yet another miracle: this time upon a deaf-mute man, a providential miracle that would fulfil what the prophet Isaiah had long foretold and would serve to emphasize the holiness and sanctifying capacities of the sacred humanity with which Jesus had clothed His divine nature:

Then will the eyes of the blind shall be opened, the ears of the deaf be cleared; then will the lame leap like a stag, then the tongue of the mute will sing.

Jesus always walked before His Father, seeking to know and do His Father’s will at all times and in all things, and during this relatively short journey outside Israel He gave a priceless example for all future Christian apostles, missionaries, and even ordinary, humble yet active, disciples – including you and me hopefully -- to respect and sympathetically adapt themselves to all who they might be privileged to meet, to evangelize, or just spiritually help. 

Jesus brought His immediate disciples back to Israel and God’s Chosen People, inspired and better equipped to follow the example of Him Who, it was said:

            He Has done all things well!                                                                            

Dear Brothers and Sisters in Christ, let us now take part in the Holy Sacrifice with like appreciation for what Our Blessed Lord continues to do among us and in Mother Church in our deeply troubled times.