This blog follows traditional one-year lectionaries.

Saturday, November 13, 2021

Trinity XXIV- Healing- Matthews 9 18-26

For the Twenty-Fourth Sunday after Trinity, the written collect has roots in the seventh century. It stresses divine goodness and pardon in contrast to human frailty. 

The Gospel from St. Matthew 9:18-26 gives two interwoven examples of Christ's restoration of frail human beings- one young and one who has suffered for twelve years. The account begins with the synagogue official whose daughter is at the point of death. In response to the father's urgent appeal, Jesus sets out to see the girl. Along the way, the woman with the bleeding problem reaches out for what she hopes will be an anonymous cure. She does not escape unnoticed, and Jesus says that her faith has enabled her healing. Then at the synagogue ruler's house, the situation is serious. The daughter seems to have died, and the official mourners have already arrived. Jesus, however, puts a stop to the mourning and lifts the girl up from her deathbed. 

 In these two situations, we see different examples of human desperation: the urgent illness of the official's daughter and the chronic condition of the older woman. Jesus brings divine grace to both cases of human weakness. God in Christ is ready to reach out, but for healing to take place, there is a need for faith. The faith that both the girl's father and the afflicted woman had in Jesus the Christ opened the way for divine power to work. Whatever our frailties- of body, mind, or soul- may our faith in Christ open us to His restorative work.

No comments:

Post a Comment