Sunday, August 17, 2014

God’s table of plenty heals with but a crumb – Matt 15:21-28, Isa 56:1, 6-7, Rom 11

Twentieth Sunday in Ordinary Time; Holy Cross - St. Stan's.

In Dante’s comedy, after traveling through hell and purgatory, our hero eventually finds himself being taken on a tour through heaven.  Heaven, for him, is ordered, there’s lower-heaven and various grades of upper-heaven, each granting its residents an even more intense closeness to God from the last.  But, in a sense, the order is irrelevant, for all the inhabitants of heaven are incomparably blessed.  Dante starts his tour at the Moon, the lowest level of heaven.  Upon its pock-marked surface the first person he meets is Piccarda.  It takes him a while to recognize her, as her happiness has rendered her more beautiful than she ever appeared during her life on earth.  She is completely aware that there are higher levels of heaven above her, but she suffers not a jot for it.  She is happy.  Not just content, she lives a life of bliss.  She has been purified of all jealousy and wants nothing but what she has, for she only desires that God’s will be done.

The Canaanite woman is not yet where Piccarda is, but she’s on her way.  She does want more than what she has.  She wants healing and wholeness for her daughter.  Like Piccarda, she desires that God’s will be done.  Unlike Piccarda, she lives on earth where God’s will does not yet fully reign.  She responds to that tension in the most virtuous way possible: fervent prayer.  Like Jacob wrestling with God at Peniel, her unflinching crying reveals both the magnitude of her distress and of her trust and confidence, what Jesus will call her “great faith.” 

We heard last week Jesus talk of St. Peter’s “little faith,” which is in itself a marvelous gift.  The two stories are not quite back to back in the Bible, unlike in the lectionary, but they’re pretty close.  Sandwiched between them is a story of the hostility of some of the Pharisees towards Jesus, who not just show no faith in Jesus, but actively work against him.  This is a bold and shocking claim Matthew is putting before us: little faith is shown by the fisherman disciple; no faith is shown by the religious leaders; great faith is shown by this mother, doubly invisible to the disciples, on account of her gender and her ethnicity.  But never invisible to God.  They say hunger is the best chef, and need is the best teacher: of faith, and of fervent prayer.

Jesus paints a picture of a banquet, the kind of banquet we know God has prepared for us, and what he says is true, so far as it goes.  It would be wrong to take the food from the children and give it to the dogs (what are described here are household pets, not wild dogs).  But the woman points out that while what he has said is true, it ignores another possibility.  It’s not necessary to take anything away from the children.  I imagine some of you may have seen a room in which children have been eating … some of you regularly clean such rooms!  Children’s eating is hardly a surgically precise procedure.  There are crumbs aplenty (and, of course, there are those children who give some of the most nutritious things on their plates directly to the dogs!).  Nothing needs to be taken away from the children for the dogs to be able to receive food during the banquet itself.  Excited, jubilant, messy eating naturally leads to crumbs.  And the woman knows that all she needs is a crumb.  This is the greatness of her faith, that she sees how lavish the feast God has prepared is, that she knows that but one crumb will work wonders, will work God’s purpose out, will heal.

Here in this place, we are invited to the feast.  Lord, I am not worthy that you should enter under my roof, but only say the word, one word, one speech-crumb, and my soul shall be healed.  We, the baptized, come here as true daughters and sons of our heavenly father, adopted into God’s family, gathered around the table and fed.  But one crumb, that’s all we’d need, that’s how rich the fare is.

And that’s all the woman wants.  Her will is conformed with God’s already, like Piccarda she doesn’t want more.  She just wants enough.

In a way, we are all the daughters of this woman, all of us, that is, who are Gentiles.  We are the second wave of comers to this feast, the wave Isaiah spoke of, the foreigners, the Gentiles, joining ourselves to the Lord.  And in all that we have received from God, nothing has been taken from his first children, the Jews.  As St. Paul exclaimed in last week’s readings: “theirs [is] the adoption, the glory, the covenants, the giving of the law, the worship, and the promises.”  And as we heard from him this week (just a little further on from his letter to the Romans), “God’s call and promise are irrevocable.”  Nothing has been taken from them.  We have been enriched, not at their expense, but at Christ’s, who willingly, lovingly impoverished himself for us.


I said we are the second wave of comers to this feast.  I should have said, I hope we are.  Because Isaiah describes what this second wave do: they love the Lord, they hold to the covenant, they make joyful in the house of prayer and offer sacrifice.  They make fervent prayer, like the Canaanite woman; they seek God’s will; they ask for healing, and wholeness; they act in wonder, love and awe of how great a gift sits on the table.  Maybe we’re not there yet.  Maybe we’re still on that pilgrimage, streaming toward the holy mountain.  But one crumb will bring us healing.

No comments:

Post a Comment