Monday, June 29, 2015

News That Heals

News That Heals


The Rev. Jack Alvey

One Saturday morning, while on-call as a chaplain resident at Baptist Princeton in Birmingham, I was greeted with the news that a family had just learned there loved one had died.  Like I normally did, I went into the family room to pray with those who were grieving. 
During the middle of my prayer, a family member interrupted to tell everyone that their loved one was being kept alive on a ventilator.  It was a miracle, so everyone thought!  But it was really just miscommunication—the patient never died.
I left the family in peace and later that night I received a Code Blue for the same patient.  There was no question, the patient had died.  I made sure to double check with the nurse.  I gathered with the family around the deceased for prayer. 
As I usually do, I asked the family for prayer requests.  One of the family members asked if I could pray for a miracle.  They wanted me to pray that their loved one come back to life because of course, that prayer worked just hours earlier.  Another one of those things that they don’t tell you about in seminary. 
I hesitated.  I wanted to tell them that I thought that kind of prayer was a bad idea, but I thought that now was not the time for a theological explanation on the meaning of prayer.  So I prayed for a miracle.  Meanwhile, the nurse stared a hole through the back of my head with her piercing glare.  Maybe the nurse should have because, after all, the prayer did not magically bring the deceased back to life.  Maybe I shouldn’t have prayed for a miracle but then again don’t we believe in a God who is in the business of miracles.    
We see the God who is in the business of performing miracles in today’s Gospel lesson.  In fact, we get a 2 in 1 miracle today.  First, Jesus is met by Jarius, a man with status and importance in the community.  Jarius has a twelve year old daughter who is dying.  A rumor has it that Jesus, the miracle worker, is back in town so Jarius takes to the streets and asks Jesus back to his house. 
On the way to the house, a woman who is hemorrhaging pushes her way through the crowds to find Jesus.  The sad reality is that she probably didn’t have to push her way through the crowd.   She was probably one of those people who parted the crowds by her very sight.  She is a nobody, but Jesus notices her when she reaches out to touch him and says, “Daughter, your faith has made you well.”  Thanks be to God! 
After the short detour, Jesus makes his way to Jarius’ house where the twelve year old girl who was sick is dead.  However, Jesus calmly tells the family that she is only sleeping.  Jesus takes the young girl by her hand and lifts her to life.  Thanks be to God!    
As miraculous as the healings Jesus’ performed in today’s lesson, one must have to wonder, “What about the old man who was too weak to stand when Jesus came walking through the town?”  “What about the orphaned boy who didn’t have a dad who could pull a string or two to get him in to see the healer sooner?” 
Even today, “What about the friend who survived the cancer and on the other hand the friend who died?  What about the child who has everyone in the world rooting them on and on the other hand the child who has nobody who cares about their future? 
What does Jesus say about the people who don’t get healed or about the people who don’t have others who will advocate on their behalf?  Is it because all the others were less deserving?  Does only 1/1,000,000 get healed by Jesus?  Why does Jesus heal some and not others?  Why do some have it so good while most have it so hard?
These are indeed hard questions, emotional questions, questions that cause many to have a crisis of faith.  I imagine these are questions that have run across your mind at least once or twice.  The ultimate question that we must consider says, “What is the purpose of Jesus’ healing?”  “Why is Jesus in the business of healing if he doesn’t heal everyone?”    
Perhaps this last question is our first clue.  If Jesus isn’t in the business of healing everyone he comes across, then maybe he is on a mission to do more than our eyes can see.  Unlike a Doctor who takes the Hippocratic Oath, Jesus does not do everything in his power to heal the masses, at least not physically.  Because if Jesus is who Jesus says he is, the Son of God Almighty, then he could heal the masses with the snap of a finger.  But he doesn’t.
Maybe this means that there is something more important for Jesus’ mission than physical healing.  While physical healing is certainly a part of what God is doing through Jesus, maybe there is something God is telling us that goes beyond healing the lame or raising the dead to life.  After all, physical healing in this broken and fallen world is only a temporary fix because physical death is inevitable—for we are dust and to dust we shall return. 
Our text gives us a clue that the kind of healing that Jesus is ultimately interested in is a type of healing that is eternal.  The kind of healing that Jesus wants us and the world to experience is a kind of healing that lives beyond our earthly world—your will be done on earth as it is in heaven.
In both healing stories, a relationship is a vital part of the healing story.  In the case of the hemorrhaging woman, Jesus basically asks, “Who just touched me?”  Jesus wants to know who came to him for healing.  And when Jesus identifies the woman he speaks to her and says, “Daughter, your faith has made you well.”  Jesus wants to know this woman who came seeking healing.  In the case of the twelve year old daughter, Jesus takes her by the hand and lifts her up.  Jesus touches this twelve year old child, someone whom the law probably prohibits him from touching, and makes her well.  
In both stories, Jesus is breaking the rules on who you are supposed to have a relationship with.  In a society that depends very much on social structure, what Jesus is doing is radical.  And even more than healing the sick without condition, Jesus is in the business of calling all nations and races together into the family of God where no distinction is made between a poor widow who is unclean and a twelve year old girl whose parents have everything in the world to offer her except eternal life.
So basically, these physical healings are pointing to the bigger truth.  Like Bishop Sloan says, we are often like a dog who looks at the finger and not what the finger is pointing at.  While miraculous and life giving, miracles stories are not ends to themselves.  Miracle stories point to the bigger truth of God, a truth that calls the world to know and see the healing touch of Jesus not only on the outside but on the inside.
Ultimately, Jesus is in the business of changing hearts.  As one of my favorite prayers says, we call on Jesus’ love to heal us and make us whole.  Yes, anything is possible with God even raising the dead to life and making the lame well again.  And these stories of healing do enrich and enliven our faith and compel us to say, “Thanks be to God!”  This is the God we put our hope in.   
But even more miraculously, Jesus is transforming the broken world and the broken hearted.  As we continue to be bombarded with news of all types—the good, the bad, the ugly—it is clear that our world needs to be soaked in love.  And not just any kind of love—not love that is rooted in rules or laws, not love that is based on who is right and who is most deserving.
 Instead, a kind of love that we know through our Lord, a love that breaks society’s rules, a love that is rooted in grace, a kind of love that doesn’t discriminate between rich and poor, black and white, red or yellow, gay or straight.  The kind of love that sees beyond our deservedness and this is the good news because somewhere along the way we all come to realize how underserving we are of God’s love.
As Christians we don’t have wallow in this place where we and others have fallen short.  Instead, we proclaim news that goes beyond sin and death and hate and prejudice.  We boldly proclaim the good news of a God who has revealed himself in the flesh and blood of Jesus Christ so God can touch and heal this broken world.  Good news that says we are defined not by our sin and falleness but by our risen Lord who has removed our sin, healed us, and made us whole.    
And this is the news that we are sent forth with today, news that shows us that “We are all beloved sons and daughters of God Almighty—no matter who your earthly father is.  We are all members of the same race—the human race.  And at the end of the day, news that says there is only one orientation that really matters and that is God’s orientation toward the human family, an orientation that says, ‘you are loved beyond measure, you are loved despite your sinfulness, you are loved by the One who is touching and healing the whole world with life everlasting.’”  Amen. 

          

      

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