The texts from the Roman Catholic Lectionary today challenge us to seek increased understanding of areas in which we have not heard the cry of earth and the cry of the poor and to accept our mission to share our faith with others.
Hearing the need
In the reading from the First Book of Kings, Ahijah announces Jeroboam’s Kingship.
* [11:26–43] The last major unit of the Solomon story tells how the prophet Ahijah announces the divine intention to take the larger part of Solomon’s kingdom from his control and give it to Jeroboam, Solomon’s servant. This counterbalances the first unit of the story, 1:1–2:12a, where another prophet, Nathan, managed to influence the royal succession and obtain the throne for Solomon. The unit is also the first part of the story of Jeroboam (11:26–14:20). It thus acts as a literary hinge connecting the two stories. Chronicles contains a death notice for Solomon in 2 Chr 9:29–31.1
Psalm 81 praises God’s appeal to stubborn Israel.
* [Psalm 81] At a pilgrimage feast, probably harvest in the fall, the people assemble in the Temple in accord with the Sinai ordinances (Ps 81:2–6). They hear a divine word (mediated by a Temple speaker) telling how God rescued them from slavery in Egypt (Ps 81:7–9), gave them the fundamental commandment of fidelity (Ps 81:9–11), which would bring punishment if they refused to obey (Ps 81:12–13). But if Israel repents, God will be with them once again, bestowing protection and fertility (Ps 81:14–16).2
In the Gospel of Mark, Jesus cures a deaf man.
* [7:36] The more they proclaimed it: the same verb proclaim attributed here to the crowd in relation to the miracles of Jesus is elsewhere used in Mark for the preaching of the gospel on the part of Jesus, of his disciples, and of the Christian community (Mk 1:14; 13:10; 14:9). Implied in the action of the crowd is a recognition of the salvific mission of Jesus; see note on Mt 11:5–6.3
George Butterfield refers to the motif in Mark’s Gospel known as the Messianic Secret and asks if it could be that Jesus simply wants to minister to people and has no interest in making a name for himself?
In the very first chapter of Mark, I believe we get a hint as to why Jesus does this. Jesus ministers in Capernaum. It says that the whole town was gathered at the door. He cured the sick and cast out demons. Early in the morning he went outside of town to pray. Simon and the others went looking for him and, on finding him, said, “Everyone is looking for you” (Mk. 1:37). You have this city in the palm of your hands. You can make a name for yourself. Jesus’ response? Let’s get out of here. My purpose, my desire, is to reach out to the people, not to hit it big. “For this purpose have I come” (v. 38).4
Don Schwager quotes “The touch of the Lord,” by Ephrem the Syrian (306-373 AD).
"That power which may not be handled came down and clothed itself in members that may be touched, that the desperate may draw near to him, that in touching his humanity they may discern his divinity. For that speechless man the Lord healed with the fingers of his body. He put his fingers into the man's ears and touched his tongue. At that moment with fingers that may be touched, he touched the Godhead that may not be touched. Immediately this loosed the string of his tongue (Mark 7:32-37), and opened the clogged doors of his ears. For the very architect of the body itself and artificer of all flesh had come personally to him, and with his gentle voice tenderly opened up his obstructed ears. Then his mouth, which had been so closed up that it could not give birth to a word, gave birth to praise him who made its barrenness fruitful. The One who immediately had given to Adam speech without teaching, gave speech to him so that he could speak easily a language that is learned only with difficulty (Genesis 1:27-28). (excerpt from HOMILY ON OUR LORD 10.3)5
The Word Among Us Meditation on Mark 7:31-37 comments that our heavenly Father loves it when we trust him. He wants to give his children good things—and not only good things. Sometimes he wants to give us miracles. So take him at his word! Ask him for the healing of a loved one. Ask him for our own healing. Ask him to intervene in a situation that seems hopeless. And leave the results to him, trusting that he will do what is best.
Most importantly, don’t think that your faith is too weak for God to care about you. Exercise the faith you have and believe that God can work. Keep asking him for what you need. It’s not that he requires your extra prayers to act—but you need them, to stretch your faith and to grow closer to him. “Lord, I believe you can do the impossible. Please give me the faith to ask for it!”6
On the Memorial of Our Lady of Lourdes, Bishop Robert Barron recalls a portion of the video series, Catholicism (https://youtu.be/dwx8g8z7FUo).
Friar Jude Winkler explains the division of the tribes of Israel between Jeroboam and the descendants of David. The role of spit in healing is noted. Friar Jude reminds us that pagans, in Mark’s Gospel, recognize the authority of God in the person of Jesus.
CAC teacher Barbara Holmes recounts her visit to Fellowship Church, a visionary, multi-racial church co-founded in 1944 by Howard Thurman and his wife Sue Bailey Thurman. Howard Thurman (1900–1981) writes about the conviction that shared worship and encounter with divine presence could unite diverse people.
Sue and I knew that all our accumulated experiences of the past had given us two crucial gifts for this undertaking: a profound conviction that meaningful and creative experiences between peoples can be more compelling than all the ideas, concepts, faiths, fears, ideologies, and prejudices that divide them; and absolute faith that if such experiences can be multiplied and sustained over a time interval of sufficient duration any barrier that separates one person from another can be undermined and eliminated. We were sure that the ground of such meaningful experiences could be provided by the widest possible associations around common interest and common concerns. . . . One basic discovery was constantly surfacing—meaningful experiences of unity among peoples were more compelling than all that divided and separated. The sense of Presence was being manifest which in time would bring one to his or her own altar stairs leading each in his [or her] own way like Jacob’s ladder from earth to heaven. [2]7
The Spirit guides us to experience that opens us to hear others and to speak about our relationship with God.
References
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