Sunday’s Readings: Wisdom 1:13-15; 2:23-24; Psalms 30:2, 4, 5-6, 11, 12, 13; 2 Corinthians 8:7, 9, 13-15; Mark 5:21-43 OR 5:21-24, 35b-43
…From Your Pastor’s Desk
It often happens that we want to do something, and we proceed accordingly. But then, someone comes along that we were not expecting and holds us up and we do not get to do what we set out to do at the time we intended to do it.
If you are a certain type of person, you can get very annoyed by this – waiting for the person to get on with it so that you can get back to doing what you think you are supposed to be doing. I can be a bit like that at times. Yet, I have come to appreciate that every encounter is in some way providential.
What can seem initially like an interruption can be where we are meant to be. The person who unexpectedly crosses my path and who could be seen as interrupting what I have set out to do, can be one whom the Lord has sent into my life. Rather than seeing the encounter as interrupting something else, it can be better seen as a Grace, an opportunity. What I set out to do may not be what is most important. Rather, the call of the present moment may be what really matters, the person who stands before me here and now.
Such is the case in today’s Gospel. One of the synagogue officials, Jairus, pleaded with Jesus to come to his daughter who was desperately sick. Jesus set out with him on this very important journey. On the way to the house of Jairus, Jesus had an encounter with a woman, which delayed him. It took up precious time. Yet, Jesus did not react angrily or dismissively to this interruption. Indeed, quite the contrary. The woman with the flow of blood simply wanted to touch the clothing of Jesus, without holding him up in any way.
It was Jesus who ensured that the fleeting encounter that the woman was looking for became, in reality, a truly personal encounter, a real meeting between two human beings. When Jesus noticed that power had gone out of him because of the woman touching his clothing, he stopped, turned around in the crowd, and asked, ‘Who has touched my clothes?’ He wanted to meet this woman, despite the urgency of the journey on which he had set out.
Eventually the woman came forward, frightened and trembling, not knowing what to expect. Jesus addressed her in very tender terms, “Daughter, your faith has saved you.” He engaged her in a very personal way; he called her into a personal relationship with him.
This was the task of the moment. Some people saw this encounter as an unfortunate interruption; as a result of the delay, Jairus’ daughter had died. Yet, for Jesus this encounter with the woman was of ultimate significance; it was a moment of Grace. It was the prelude to an even more wonderful moment of Grace in the house of Jairus when Jesus not only healed the very sick girl as he was asked to do, but raised her from the dead!
This Gospel encourages us to pay attention to the interruptions in life. What can seem like distractions can be where the Lord is calling us to be. When our plans do not work out as we wanted because of some unexpected turn of events, it may not be the disaster that we think it is at the time. Sometimes it can create the space for something else to happen that we did not plan but which can have great value for ourselves and for others.
In the story we have just heard, Jesus gave himself fully to the interruption. He could have kept walking when the woman touched his clothing, but he attended to her.
That was the call of the present moment for Jesus. In answering that call, he was doing God’s work, and the task he initially set out to accomplish did not suffer. Jairus had his daughter restored to him.
There are times in life when we need to embrace the interruptions, rather than just driving on with our head down towards the goal we have set for ourselves. We can misjudge where the real Grace lies. We often need to come to a deeper appreciation that the interruptions are our work, especially when they involve responding with compassion to the needs of others.
When we set out on a journey, what happens on the way can be more important… than arriving at our destination.
Father Ron