Sunday, October 13, 2013

God reveals Himself as He heals us – 2 Kings 5:14-17; Luke 17:11-19

Sunday of Ordinary Time, Year C, Week 28.  Holy Cross Parish.

He was scared.  I was sitting with Br. Thomas, a Holy Cross brother 30 odd years my senior, and I knew he was scared.  They’d found out why he’d lost his appetite and hadn’t been able to keep food down: it was because of the cancers in his GI tract.  He’d been told about how the course of chemo would go, how hard it would be, and he was scared.  We talked, I tried to offer comfort, to just be there, and we prayed, we prayed for healing.  I next visited him right after we’d received a new prognosis from the doctor: the cancer had spread much more aggressively than they’d first thought.  The chemo was now useless, there was nothing to do but manage the pain before he died.  Given how scared the prospect of chemo had made him, I’ll admit that I was scared to go back into his room and be with him, but I went.  He was breath-takingly peaceful.  God had healed Br. Thomas.  He hadn’t taken away his cancer, but he had cast out his fear.  It wasn’t the healing I wanted.  But I couldn’t deny God had healed.  I couldn’t blind myself to the clearly manifest work of God’s hand.  I had to swallow pride, fear and sorrow to do it, but I couldn’t not give thanks.  At Brother’s funeral Mass a month or so later, together we offered the sacrifice of the Mass, our deepest form of thanksgiving.

God heals.  God heals, but not always in the way we expect it.  Naaman was a successful Syrian military commander who contracted some kind of skin disease.  Earlier in the chapter, from which we read part of as our first reading, we hear the very human story of Naaman not really wanting to do anything about this, until his wife cajoles him into going to see some Israelite prophet who’s known as a healer.  Elisha the prophet tells him to bathe seven times in the Jordan, and Naaman complains that it’s not even a very impressive river (they have much better ones in Syria) and it’s stupid and he shan’t.  Eventually, his servant persuades him to try it and he consents (probably dreading the long trek back to Syria just to tell his wife he didn’t go through with it).  That’s where our reading picks up.  He bathes and he comes out healed of his leprosy.  But not just that.  We might expect him to see his new skin and say to Elisha, “I’ll admit it, your river’s not much, but your god’s pretty powerful.”  He sees deeper than that.  It’s not just the lesions have fallen from his skin; the scales have fallen from his eyes – he sees that the God of Israel is the God of the world, the one true God!  He becomes a monotheist at a time when most Israelites aren’t!  His first response to is want to thank Elisha the prophet, but he soon learns that that’s not quite right and he lets go of his need to be in charge, he follows the natural movement from awareness of God’s graceful power to worship; he gives a sacrifice of praise.  Worried that he won’t be able to worship Israel’s God in Syria, he even takes two mule-loads of earth back with him so as he won’t be offering sacrifice on alien soil.  The healing changes his life, and not just his skin: from awareness of his healing, he comes to faithful awareness of God which moves him to worship, to sacrifice, to give thanks.

God heals, but we don’t always realize it.  The nine lepers who didn’t return did trust in Jesus’ word.  As lepers, they would have been completely driven out of society as impure people.  The priests functioned as sort of ‘purity inspectors,’ so Jesus tells them to go see the priests so as they would be declared clean and allowed to return to their place in society.  And they go.  They risk ridicule to go see the priests.  But, they don’t realize they’ve been healed.  The defenses, the walls they must have built up over years of being ostracized, excluded, mocked, hated… they had learnt to hate their own skin so much that they didn’t even notice they’d been healed.  They’d accepted the names they’d been called, they saw themselves as unclean and couldn’t begin to see themselves as healed.  The one, a foreigner like Naaman, is more perceptive.  He realized he had been healed.  He never gave in to despair, never dreaded that God had given up on him.  He knew God, God of the universe, was powerful enough to heal even him.  And now, he knew: he was healed.  That awareness takes over and leads him inexorably to worship, to praise, to thanksgiving.  Not just his skin was healed; the scales fell off his eyes: he knew that by falling to his knees in front of Jesus, he was worshiping God.  Something greater than the Temple is here. 

God heals, but not always in the way we expect, and we don’t always realize it.  A growth in virtue, a drop in anxiety or frustraition, the washing away of sins in baptism or reconciliation, a lowered temptation, a conquered vice, a renewed capacity to love… God heals.  To know yourself is to know yourself as healed; to know yourself as in need of healing, as worth healing and to know God as all powerful, all gracious, a healer.  God heals, and opens our eyes to see it.  And He’s gracious enough to hang around afterward, so as we can fall at his feet and say, “thank you, thank you, thank you.”  So as we can say, “Please… this is the healing I need now.”


We will soon embark on the Eucharistic Prayer, the most profound form of thanksgiving the Church has to offer.  Like the Samaritan leper, we fall to our knees in adoration; like Naaman, we offer sacrifice, making present anew the One Sacrifice Christ offered for us on Calvary.  How much richer would that moment be if we entered into it fully mindful of how God has healed us, is healing us!  We’ll never know it all, but for the glimpses we’re granted of His tender hand… Thanks be to God!

1 comment:

  1. Beautiful, Adam! Solid fare for the spirit.

    Justin Bartkus

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