Reaching out in Solidarity
Susan in SanPedro
Open our eyes, O Sanctifier of life, to the hurts and needs of others that
challenge us to ministry. Teach us to see where our own abilities and resources and
the worlds deep hunger meet. Loving God, open our eyes.
These words from the Prayers of the People weve been using in the 10:15
service -- that we all used last week at the Annual Meeting -- have sort of haunted me all
week. What are the deep hungers around us -- and where do my abilities and
resources meet them? And do I really WANT God to open my eyes to them ... or
am I afraid of what I might see? Of being overwhelmed -- going where I dont want to
go? I found myself dwelling on all this as I mulled this Gospel lesson for today: and in
the end, I found great comfort ... and some more challenge. Comfort in that it was
precisely those hurts and needs of others that challenged Jesus himself to the
fullness of the ministry he was called to: Challenge in looking to see where I am called
to go and do likewise. Our gospel this morning is from Mark; and of the four
gospels, it is Mark who offers us the fast forward approach to recounting
Jesus ministry. Lets look for a moment at this first chapter of Mark: it
STARTS with Jesus meeting John and being baptized. Then WHAM: Temptation in the Wilderness
(2 verses) ... he begins his ministry, calls disciples, casts out a demon, heals Peters
mother-in-law, and is surrounded by a crowd of people seeking healing ... all before the
first chapter is even over!!! Exhausted by these experiences, he retires to a deserted
place to pray ... and when his disciples find him, he says, Let us go on to the next
towns, that I may preach there ... for that is why I came out. Sounds like hes
pretty clear about what to do next: Enough of this healing and miracle working: I
dont want to get pidgeon-holed as the healer of the day. Let me get on
with the work I came out to do. Open our eyes, O Sanctifier of life, to the
hurts and needs of others that challenge us to ministry. That challenge, for Jesus,
was right around the corner. The very next verse says, And a leper came to him,
beseeching him, and kneeling said to him, If you choose, you can make me clean.
Moved with compassion, Jesus stretched out his hand and touched him and said, I
choose. Be clean. And he was. Teach us to see where our own abilities
and resources and the worlds deep hunger meet. Loving God, open our
eyes. Jesus had both the ability and the resources to meet the deep hunger of the
leper yearning for wholeness ... but he had to both open his eyes and stretch out his hand
to do so. To open his eyes to how this healing part of his ministry would be a vehicle of
Gods grace rather than a distraction from the work of proclaiming the Kingdom. To
stretch out his hand and touch the untouchable ... the unclean: to cross boundaries hed
been taught never to go near. You see, leprosy was a big deal in first century
Palestine. Yet the diagnosis was about as general as it could get. Basically any condition
of the skin considered abnormal was leprosy by the terms of the age. Any rash, any patch
of dry skin, any physical discoloration,
you name it, if it was on the skin, it was
leprosy. For all we know, the only thing this man needed was a lathering up with Vaseline
Intensive Care lotion and a good nights sleep. Yet the label of leprosy meant a
whole lot more. Leviticus 13:45 & 46 gives us the instructions for dealing the
conditions labeled as leprosy. The person who has the leprous disease shall wear torn
clothes and let the hair of his head be disheveled; and he shall cover his upper lip and
cry out, unclean, unclean. He shall remain unclean as long as he has the
disease; he is unclean. He shall live alone; his dwelling shall be outside the camp. In
short, according to Levitus, leprosy was a social death sentence. Cut off and completely
cast outthis man was living dead. The leper was physically ostracizedplaced
outside the community. The curse of leprosy was the loss of ones humanity --
according to the letter of the law. Yet moved by his great compassion, Jesus entered into
his world of isolation and spoke to this man. Yes, I do choose! -- and he
reached across the boundary the law had set -- risking becoming unclean
himself in the eyes of his community. This was risky business ... a challenge to the very
fabric of the culture. We can look at many of these purity codes -- these rules and
regulations in Levitcus and elsewhere -- with some bemusement from 2000 years away. Yet
they were the building blocks of Jewish society ... Hebrew culture ... Israels
identity. If was widely believed that afflictions such as leprosy were manifestations of
Gods displeasure. Start touching lepers ... healing them, no less ... flew in the
face of that theology and their tradition. And who knew what would happen next! It was
precisely the kind of behavior that the religious establishment would not tolerate: would
stop at nothing to end. Imagine the mobilization that would occur if word got out about
this healing: thered be the 1st Century equivalent of a Proposition on the Jerusalem
ballot to make sure that lepers stayed lepers -- and outside the city walls where they
belonged. Let the people vote -- that would settle this issue once and for all. Yet Jesus
didnt see an issue -- he saw a child of God, diminished by a stigma he
has the power to cure: and so he did. Jesus had both the resources and the ability to meet
this mans deep hunger: both for physical wholeness and return to the community.
Jesus stood in the midst of this mans life-less hell and restored his humanity with
the simple power of human touch. Jesus liberated him from the prison of rejection and
graciously gifted him with that which should never have been taken in the first place: his
humanity.
Yes, Jesus told the now-former-leper to go and tell no one: to buy
some time so he could get on with the work of proclaiming the Gospel? To give himself the
chance to continue to process this experience and figure out where it fit in
his ministry? We dont know: Mark doesnt tell us. What he does tell us is that
the grateful man couldnt keep the good news to himself: and Jesus was once again
swamped by those seeking the healing he had both the resources and ability to offer.
Open our eyes to the hurts and needs of others that challenge us to ministry. Teach
us to see where our own abilities and resources and the worlds deep hunger
meet. Loving God, open our eyes. We all have different abilities and
resources ... different from each others and different at various times in our
lives. But theres sure enough deep hunger out there to go around. And
thats OUR call to ministry. For though we live in very different times than Jesus
did, many of the needs are not so different at all. We are still faced with those who
place themselves in our paths -- as individuals and as the church -- yearning to be whole
and seeking a community to support them ... not exile them. Like Jesus, we have to decide
... to choose ... to reach out. Opportunities abound. The Ministry Fair coming up in March
will offer over 85 workshops on various ministries throughout the diocese. Check out the
table in the parish hall. The vestry will be exploring a program called Sharing the
Ministry -- designed to enable all parish members to explore where their gifts are
and how best to use them. Stay tuned for more on that. As Alan mentioned in his Annual
Meeting Sermon, we are gearing up to offer new and exciting programs for our youth and
children: calling some of the best and brightest of our parish leaders into this important
work with the next generation. Our abilities and resources can be as varied as serving on
a Diocesan commission or giving a shut in a ride to church. Some of us have time. Some of
us have money. Some of us have patience. Some of us have vision. When we pool those
resources -- when we open our eyes to where God is calling us to reach out in compassion
and love -- then we truly take up the ministry of Jesus on earth ... then we live up to
our call to be the Body of Christ.
The apostle Paul likened it to running a race. The ministry of Jesus Christ is a
ministry of compassion and love that involves constant, focused effort. This ministry
demands that we sometimes challenge the powers and principalities that seek to dominate
and eliminate the humanity created in Gods image in any one. Yet, like the healing
power of Christs touch, the simplicity of human touch -- the act of physically and
emotionally reaching out in solidarity with anothers pain -- is the beginning of a
powerfully compassionate ministry of healing, of love and liberation.
That is the work we have been called to do. May the God who has given us the will
to do these things, give us the grace and power faithfully to accomplish them
Thanks be to God. Alleluia. Amen.