Readings:
3 Jn:5-8; Ps 112; Lk 18:18
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Today’s readings are
all about faith, and prayer, and healing; but, essentially, they’re really
about faith. Without faith, prayer
is empty, like the self-centered prayer of the publican who prayed only to
himself. And remember what
happened when Jesus visited his hometown of Nazareth?
“…he did not work many
mighty deeds there because of their lack of faith” [Mt 13:58].
Yes, without faith, healing
doesn’t happen. Faith, then, is at the
heart of it, isn’t it? Even though we’re all
in need of healing, it’s through our faith we can cry out to God in our need.
But in our
relativistic, politically correct world, faith is seen as little more than
superstition. I’m speaking, of course,
about supernatural faith, not natural faith in what others tell us and do. We express natural faith: faith that the plane we’re
in will get us safely to our destination; faith that my phone calls the right number,
that the pharmacist gave me the right prescription; faith that Mongolia exists,
even though I’ve never been there; faith that the other driver will stop at the
stop sign. Human, natural faith drives almost everything we do.
But supernatural faith is
our free assent to all that God has revealed, all which we profess in the Creed,
that which we celebrate here today. As Scripture reminds us,
“Faith is the assurance of things hoped for, the conviction of things not
seen” [Heb 11:1].
Supernatural faith is a
gift from God, one that calls for obedience, but obedience demands humility. Those who live in a
world without humility, a world that needs no God, simply reject the gift of
faith. They can neither accept
what God has promised, nor believe He actually loved them into existence. Lacking faith, they
face the world alone, and afraid.
Some of us here today
are afraid: afraid because of an illness; afraid of getting old; afraid of
death. Some of us are afraid
because our lives haven’t turned out quite the way we’d planned, and we fear an
unknown future. Some of us are plagued by
guilt, and guilt breeds doubt and fear in our hearts. Some of us can’t accept
forgiveness because we are unable to forgive others, or to forgive ourselves. And so, the doubts and
fears remain. There’s a beautiful verse from Psalm 95:
"If today you hear His voice, harden not your
hearts" [Ps 95: 7-8].
Well, His voice is
calling us, calling you and me, calling each of us individually. But hardened hearts
are unlikely to listen to or even hear His voice. That’s what Satan does
when he attacks our faith; he does it through doubt and fear. And that’s why Jesus tells
us so often: “Be not afraid.”
And doubts? Don’t let them
trouble you. Even the Apostles doubted, when their faith should have been
strongest. At the very end of
Matthew’s Gospel, as the 11 accompanied the Risen Jesus to the mountaintop,
immediately before His Ascension, Matthew reveals:
“When they saw him, they
worshiped, but they doubted” [Mt
28:17].
Remarkable, isn’t it? It’s
why the Risen Jesus, after confronting Thomas and his doubts, says to us:
“Blessed
are those who have not seen and have believed” [Jn
20:29].
And that’s you and me.
We are blessed.
Let me share an experienced
from a few years ago. The deacons in my
previous parish on Cape Cod conducted a weekly Liturgy of the Word with Holy
Communion at a local nursing home. After the liturgy, if we had time, we
usually helped our volunteers return the residents to their rooms.
Well, one day I was
pushing Teresa in her wheelchair. Now, I’d known Teresa for several years. She
was in her early 90s, but had recently started to have some mild memory
problems. But one thing hadn’t
changed: Teresa talked incessantly. It didn’t always make complete sense, but
it never stopped.
On this particular day
as we approached the elevator, Teresa was chattering away when we encountered
Connie. Connie, also in her 90s,
stood in the center of the corridor, but was screaming, loudly. Teresa asked me to stop
the wheelchair, and then reaching out she touched Connie’s forearm, rubbing it
gently, not saying a word. The three of us
remained there for what seemed like an eternity – Connie screaming, Teresa
rubbing, and I wondering how long this would go on. But then Connie’s
screaming eased and soon stopped completely. She became very calm. Teresa gave
her arm a final squeeze and said quietly, “We can go now.”
I wheeled her into the
elevator and as soon as the door closed, she said, “Connie’s OK, she’s just
afraid because she doesn’t have much faith.” She then went on
talking about how good the lasagna had been the night before.
Whenever I read today’s
Gospel passage from Luke, I inevitably think of that day, about Connie's fears
and her lack of faith, and about Teresa's faith and her lack of fear. You see, at the very end of that
Gospel passage Jesus asked a rather frightening question:
“But when the Son of Man
comes, will he find faith on earth?” [Lk 18:8]
If we’re here on that
day, will you and I be another Teresa or another Connie? Of course, I learned
something else in that nursing home. I learned that faith is contagious. Through her faith
Teresa calmed Connie’s fears, helping her accept God’s gift of faith. And, not surprisingly,
Teresa taught me my own faith was far from perfect.
God, you see, gives us
this wondrous gift so we can share it with others, just as Teresa shared it
with Connie and me. This is how much God
loves us. He loves us so much that He entrusts us to share this most valuable
gift with everyone we encounter.
Teresa recognized
something else. She had come to understand that God calls us to do one thing in
this life: to serve Him and His people. We’re called to be
servants, expecting nothing in return. God doesn't promise his
servants safety. He doesn't promise us long and happy lives. He doesn't promise
success, or fame, or wealth, or beautiful children, or a nice home.
God promises us one
enduring thing: eternal life, which is the greatest gift He could ever give us. He also told us that to
achieve eternal life, to collect on this promise, we must love Him in return,
and do His will. That can mean carrying our cross.
Now, you might think
this is a strange thing to say right before a healing service. After all, shouldn’t we
be talking about healing rather than cross-bearing? Shouldn’t we be like
the widow in today’s Gospel passage? Through persistence didn’t she ultimately
get exactly what she wanted? Yes, but how does Jesus
explain this parable to the disciples? Listen again…
“Will not God then
secure the rights of his chosen ones who call out to him day and night? Will he
be slow to answer them? I tell you, he will see to it that justice is done for
them speedily” [Lk 18:7-8].
Did you hear the promise?
You can expect justice from God – not man’s justice, but divine justice. And
His justice is an enduring, eternal justice, always tempered with mercy. If we have a faith that
endures, a faith that refuses to give up even when all else has been taken from
us, God will bless us with His justice and mercy.
What form this justice and
mercy will take, we don’t know…and so we leave that up to God, for He knows
what is best for each of us. But the faith that
endures is the faith Jesus showed us, a faith that persisted to the end, even
as He hung on the Cross.
Jesus’ sacrificial act
of faith was for us; it was for our salvation. This is the Good News. Our
God loves us so much, He’s willing to die for us...which begs the
question: what are we willing to do for Him? Fortunately, Jesus
answers this for us: We must serve. How did John put it in our first reading?
“Please help them in a
way worthy of God to continue their journey” [3 Jn 1:6].
Here again, then, we called
to serve, even as we ourselves beg for God’s mercy. In other words, those
of us who seek healing must also become healers. I’ll repeat that: if
you seek healing, you must become a healer, and a forgiver. That’s right, all of us
here today for healing are called to be healers and forgivers of others.
Think of what that
means. Do we spend our days
and our nights wrapped up in ourselves, thinking only of our own brokenness,
our own fears and doubts, our own need for healing, thinking about those who
have hurt or offended us?
Or do we follow the
example of our Savior? Do we reach out to
others, as Jesus reaches out on the Cross, helping them overcome their fears by
extending God’s love.
John also promised that
“perfect love drives out fear” [1 Jn 4:18] and only God’s love is perfect. But just as we are
called to share the gift of faith, God expects us to spread his perfect love
throughout the world, at least in the tiny slice of the world in which God has
placed us.
Today, as you come
forward in need of God’s healing touch, carry all those you know in need of
healing, all those in need of forgiveness…carry them with you and lay them at
the foot of the Cross.
Brothers and sisters, become
healers, ambassadors of God’s love and forgiveness.
God’s peace…