To read the texts click on the texts: Wis1:13-15;2:23-24; 2 Cor 8:7,9,13-15; Mk 5:21-43
“Everyone
wants to go to heaven but no one wants to die”. This statement of a wit brings
out the fear that many have of death. However, the readings of today though
they speak about death, regard death as something that is not to be feared if
one believes in a God who is the giver and sustainer of life.
The first
reading from the Book of Wisdom makes this point emphatically when it states
that death cannot be part of God’s plan because God does not act only to see
his work end in corruption. The purpose of creation is not death but life and
the natural orientation of all created things is life. This is true especially
of humans who alone are created in the image and likeness of God. Death thus is
not natural and comes about when one stifles the life that God gives.
That God
gives life and sustains it is brought out even more powerfully in the Gospel
text of today. Mark uses here what is known as the “sandwich construction”. He
introduces the incident about Jairus’ daughter being ill and even at the point
of dearth but interrupts it with the cure of the woman with the flow of blood.
He then continues the incident of Jairus’ daughter who is now dead, but whom
Jesus raises. The reason for the sandwich construction here seems to be to
heighten the suspense for the reader. Since Jairus’ daughter is at the “point
of death”, Jesus must not tarry but hurry if she is to be saved. Yet, Jesus
tarries because he knows that the basic orientation of the human is not death
but life and that God’s power over death will prevail. Jesus tarries, confident
in the knowledge that he can indeed raise even the dead. Jesus tarries because
he knows that he is the giver of life. This gift of life is given not only to
Jairus’ daughter but also to the woman with the flow of blood, who though not
dead, had reached a stage when she was tempted to give up on life. She had
reached the end of her tether and her last hope was the Lord. She was not
disappointed. She received healing, she received life.
The
Psalmist sings the words that the woman, Jairus and his daughter would have
wanted to sing. They have indeed been rescued by the Lord. He has liberated
them from all bondage. He has saved them from death.
What is
responsible for this turn of events? Is it the power of God alone? Is it God
acting of his own accord and solely according to his will? The answer is an
emphatic “NO”. It is evident in both the first reading and Gospel that it is
faith in God’s life giving and sustaining power and the action of God that is
responsible. This is made even clearer in the Gospel when Jesus attributes the
healing of the woman to her faith and exhorts Jairus not to fear but to
believe.
The force
of faith and the power of God become manifest in the life of Christians are
narrated by the second reading of today. Indeed, thanks to the power of faith
they were able to overcome ethnic and cultural barriers, and express their
fraternal charity to others by the concrete action of reaching out to their
material needs in imitation of Jesus. It is a faith that manifested itself not
only in words but also in action.
The
challenge of the readings of today may be summed up in the words “persevering
faith”. This means that there may be numerous times when we are faced with
death like situations. These are situations when like the woman in the gospel
story we have done all that is required of us and there seems to be nothing
more that we can do. These are situations when like Jairus we have nowhere to
turn. It is at times like these when we may tend to give up and give in.
However, like the woman and like Jairus we are called never to do this to
ourselves because the God we believe in is a God of everything that is
positive, a God who never gives up on us and a God of life. Since he is also a
God who gives and does not hold anything back, we who are created in his image
and likeness cannot live selfish self centred lives, but like Paul invites the
Corinthians, we too are invited to live faith filled lives, faith which is
shown in action.
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