During
Christmas we celebrated God’s becoming human in Jesus, an event at once so
familiar that perhaps we take it for granted, but at the same time so
incredible that we can’t really absorb its meaning. So the Church gives us, in
the liturgy of the days and weeks following Christmas, lessons on who Jesus
really was. That’s what the Epiphany formally does. But it doesn’t stop with
the Magi. We have the baptism by John, the wedding feast at Cana, the walking
on the water, and the many healing stories such as the one in Luke’s gospel when Jesus heals the leper (Luke
5:12-16).
With our
individualist mindset we tend to think of illness (and healing) as something
that affects primarily the individual (though often the family as well). But
the many stories of lepers and those suffering from convulsive disorders, for
example, illustrate another feature of illness. The afflicted were literally
marginalized. People couldn’t have contact with them. Even to touch them made a
person ritually impure. They were relegated to the outskirts of towns and
villages, even to living in cemeteries. To some extent, we still do something
similar in our times. Think of how we have marginalized AIDS victims. In the
not very distant past we sent people with tuberculosis to sanitaria. I don’t
question the motives behind such practices. Rather I think about the
marginalizing that is a feature of illness – one we too easily overlook today.
It is not just the person who is sick; it is the community that is, in a sense
“broken” by the illness of one of its members. Ill people make us
uncomfortable.
We don’t much like being with them, except perhaps for a
perfunctory “visit the sick” (as in the corporal works of mercy). The healing
of the afflicted individual restores the community to its wholeness. Jesus was
healing both.
By His actions
in this story, as well as by His words throughout the gospels, Jesus is saying
that there is no marginalizing in God’s view of how humanity ought to order its
affairs. Luke makes a point of saying Jesus touched the leper, a man “full of
leprosy”. That very touch brings the sufferer back into the community from
which he had been excluded. Notice, in other healing stories, that Jesus looks
the sufferer in the eye, speaks to him/her by name, and touches – almost always
touches.
That’s the
God who is revealed to us in these Epiphany feasts.
After people
heard about how Jesus miraculously cured the leper, He was besieged with crowds
following Him, to listen and be cured. But, we are told that He withdrew to
deserted places to pray.
Why?
Certainly it
couldn't have been that He didn't want to have people listen to Him or that He
didn't want to cure people, and certainly it would seem He was always in the
presence of the Father and the Spirit. Why then did He withdraw to pray?
It seems
that there is more to it than just giving us an example of the need to pray -
important and helpful though His example was.
Could it
have been that while on earth, Jesus really felt exiled, and not just wanted,
but needed, the unity of the Father and the Holy Spirit, which could only be
achieved through the practice of prayer?
So, He gives
us an example of what is absolutely necessary! Unity! Not only is the Trinity
meant to be undivided -- we, too, as the Body of Christ are meant to be
undivided in unity with the Trinity.
I think this
is why during every single Marian apparition approved by the Church, our
Blessed Mother asked us to pray the rosary.
We begin with the prayer that is the Apostle’s Creed, which professes our faith in the Trinity in a nutshell. Then as we meditate on Jesus’ life through
the Mysteries of our faith, we begin each Mystery with an Our Father and end
each Mystery with the Glory Be. Can’t be
much more in unity with the Trinity than that, this side of Heaven!
Therefore,
we must go forth like Jesus and with Jesus to that deserted place within, to
pray and so be with the Father and the Spirit. It is not something that's just
nice to do, but something essential to do, as Jesus taught and as His mother reminds
us.
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