February 15th 2015. Sixth
Sunday of Ordinary Time
Gospel: Mark 1:40-45
Translated from a homily by Don Fabio Rosini,
broadcast on Vatican Radio
Don
Fabio’s reflection follows the Gospel reading . . .
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GOSPEL Mark 1:40-45
A leper came to Jesus and pleaded on his knees: ‘If you want
to’ he said ‘you can cure me.’ Feeling sorry for him, Jesus stretched out his
hand and touched him. ‘Of course I want to!’ he said. ‘Be cured!’ And the
leprosy left him at once and he was cured. Jesus immediately sent him away and
sternly ordered him, ‘Mind you say nothing to anyone, but go and show yourself
to the priest, and make the offering for your healing prescribed by Moses as
evidence of your recovery.’ The man went away, but then started talking about
it freely and telling the story everywhere, so that Jesus could no longer go
openly into any town, but had to stay outside in places where nobody lived.
Even so, people from all around would come to him.
The
Gospel of the Lord: Praise to you Lord Jesus Christ
Kieran’s
summary . . . A leper presents himself
to Jesus and says, “If you want to, you can heal me”. God wants us to be healed
in the fullest sense of the word! But the Gospel reveals that being healed is
not just the absence of disease. It involves living a new way of life. In our
parishes and churches, we receive innumerable graces. We ask God to heal us, to
help us overcome anguish, resolve problems, take away suffering. But what do we
do when God grants us the grace we ask? It is an indisputable fact that we
behave in a frivolous and stupid way with the graces we receive, just like the
leper in the Gospel. We return from Holy Communion and start silly chatter with
the person sitting next to us. Graces and healings are not momentary events!
Being healed of an illness is not just the absence of disease. Being purified
by God is not an act that happens once and lasts forever. God wants us to
assimilate and nurture these graces and healings, as the Gospel story
demonstrates. Sometimes we doubt that God wants us to be healed and purified, but
there can be no doubt that he wants us to be healed in the fullest sense of the
word! The problem is that we do not nurture and possess the graces that he
gives us. We have a responsibility to assimilate these graces and make them
into a way of life that is beautiful, pure and wholesome.
The first reading gives the Old Testament regulations
regarding leprosy. The leper was basically excluded from society
The
first reading provides the perfect introduction to the Gospel and gives the
regulations that are to be followed by those suffering from leprosy. Because it
was such a contagious disease, the leper had to show concrete signs that he had
the condition, such as torn clothes. He had to shout, “Unclean! Unclean!” This
made other people keep their distance. The leper, in fact, was required to
remain on his own apart from the rest of society.
The leper appeals to the will of Jesus. What is God’s
will for us? That we be healed in the fullest sense of the word!
In
the Gospel, a leper approaches Jesus and says, “If you wish, you can cure me”.
This man appeals to the will of Jesus. What is the will of God for us? When we
pray, “Thy will be done!” we are speaking of that which God truly wants. Is
what God wants something that has little regard for us? Or is the will of God
totally bound up with his care for us? What God wants is that we are healthy,
whole, and full of life! He wishes us to be clean and pure. When he sees the
leper, he is moved to compassion. Our term for “compassion” derives from an
expression that means “to suffer in solidarity with another”. But the Greek
word for compassion in the original text of this Gospel means to be
dramatically moved interiorly. Jesus is profoundly affected by his desire to
heal this man. God, at the depths of his being, wants humanity to be happy.
The difference between being sick and being healed is not
simply the absence of disease. We must live a healthy life. When God gives us a
grace, we mustn’t just take it, end of story. This grace is not just an event
in itself, but must be nurtured by us so that it becomes the beginning of a new
way of life.
Jesus
touches the man, even though he is a leper and the rules did not permit the
touching of lepers. “Of course I want to!” Jesus says, “Be purified!” This is
the will of God – that we be purified. The leprosy disappears, but Jesus then
gives him some instructions that concern his convalescence. What does it mean to be healed? Does it mean to be
simply without leprosy? Or does it mean to begin to possess a new state of
existence that consists in living a life without leprosy? Many people ask for
healings and graces. But graces are not simply received, they must also be possessed. The difference between being
sick or healed is not solely the absence of illness. Being healthy involves
living a healthy life with healthy attitudes. Otherwise a person cannot remain
healthy for long. Jesus tells the man to go to the priest and to make the
offerings prescribed by the Law. In other words, the healing has not finished
here. He must now begin the process of living a spiritual life. Similarly, we
should not simply “obtain” graces unthinkingly. When we return to our seat from
Communion, do we start chattering about silly things with our neighbour? Do we
spend even a moment contemplating what we have received? Do we give this grace
a container in which it can be possessed for at least a moment?
When we receive grace, do we assimilate it and nurture it?
Or do we use it frivolously and stupidly?
Jesus
wants this man who has been freed from leprosy to remain silent about his
healing and go through a process by which he can assimilate the gift that he
has received, but he does not do so. The first reading tells us that the leper
is someone who must remain excluded from society. We do not know how long the
man in the Gospel had been ill, but it may have been a significant time, and
during all that period he would not have been able to speak to anyone. So,
instead of taking the time to possess his healing, he immediately exploits his
new-found permission to speak with others. And how he speaks! He speaks with
everyone and this means that Jesus is unable to enter the town. It is a curious
fact: before the healing the man was expected to remain in desert places; after
the healing it is Jesus himself who must remain in the desert because of the
fuss that this event causes. How Jesus takes upon himself our illnesses, the
consequences of our condition, and also of our stupidity! In our churches and
parishes we receive innumerable graces, but it is an undisputable fact that we
often manage these graces with frivolity and stupidity. We receive new and
wonderful gifts, but we assimilate them according to the habits and attitudes
of the “old man”. The leper in the Gospel has been given the gift of being restored
to human society, but he uses this gift impulsively and reactively. His previous condition of being not allowed
to speak conditions his response to being healed.
Being purified by God is not a once-off event. It is the
beginning of a process of living a healthy and beautiful life. God wants us to
possess the graces that he gives us and bring them forward, nurturing them into
a way of life.
This
Gospel tells us of the desire of God to heal us and purify us. But it also
relates the need for each one of us to possess the graces we have been given
and nurture them. We must not be
content with the bare reception of the grace itself! This is only half of the
real picture! God does not want us simply to escape from some vice, anguish,
suffering or illness. He wants us to begin the process of living a life that is
healthy, beautiful and pure in the fullest sense of the world. Becoming
purified is not a once-off event. It is the beginning of a process that never
ends. For all of our lives we must take possession of what is healthy, holy and
really counts.
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