To read the text click Hosea 2,16-18.21-22; Mt 9,18-26
In the text of today, which
Matthew has taken from Mark, the sandwich construction is maintained. This
means that the first incident is interrupted by the narration of another
incident complete in itself, and after this the first incident is resumed and
completed. The story that is inserted into the story of raising the ruler’s
daughter is the story of the healing of a woman with a haemorrhage. While Mark
gives us the name of the leader of the synagogue, Jairus (Mark 5,22), Matthew
omits his name. Matthew also omits a number of Marcan details namely Jesus’
question about who touched him and the disciples response, the fear of the
woman about being found out and her falling down before Jesus. In Matthew it is
very clear that the woman is healed not by a magic touch but by faith. While in
Mark, the messengers come to inform Jairus about his daughter’s death, this
whole scene is absent in Matthew, because in Matthew, the girl is already dead
when the ruler comes to him. This has the effect of the ruler professing
resurrection faith in his entreaty.
In Matthew, the story becomes a
confessional statement of faith in the power of the resurrected Jesus.
In the first few days or even
weeks of a terminal illness, the person who is ill continues to hope that
he/she will get well. As time goes by and the healing does not occur, soon hope
begins to dim. Finally the person gives up and gives in. The woman’s attitude
in the story of today is calling each of us to perseverance, hope and faith and
to develop an attitude of never giving up. That we must cultivate such an attitude
is made clearer when we realise that Jesus could raise even those whom others
gave up for dead.
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