When he was at table with them, he took the bread. He blessed the bread, and broke it, and gave it to them. And their eyes were opened and they recognized him!(Luke 24:13-35)

Thursday, December 2, 2021

According to our faith

 


On the TV show “America’s Got Talent,” there’s almost always a magic act that involves card tricks.  A couple of years ago, the magician actually won it all!  The audience and judges reacted to each of his ‘auditions’ with amazement and wonder.   

I like those acts as much as anybody, but—like any card trick, there was a skillful manipulation of cards and the audience in order to make something appear to be what it wasn’t.  My reflection on the scriptures today (Isaiah 25:6-10a and Matthew 15:29-37) made me consider how easily we pass from "wonder" at our observations, to the skeptical, "tell me how he did it".

We read in the Gospel of Matthew that Jesus cured persons who could barely walk, whose eyes didn’t work, whose joints were misshapen, and whose speech was held back.  "They placed them at his feet, and he cured them."  In Isaiah’s passage, the mortality of the people, the sentence of death under which we all live, is cancelled; "the web that is woven over all nations" and the "reproach of his people" will be removed.

Our human curiosity and desire to know drive us to ask, "how did Jesus do that?"  How does Jesus bring healing into our lives?  How did Jesus satisfy the hunger of thousands on the Galilean mountainside overlooking the Sea of Galilee?  Easily, we pass into the skepticism that makes us want to know "how".  Perhaps if we only knew how Jesus performed His saving miracles, then we might be better positioned to share in His healing, in His satisfying of our hungers, in His gift of everlasting life.  Perhaps if we knew "how" Jesus performed these wonders, then we might better believe that He is truly "the Son of God."

The truth of the life-giving work of Jesus isn’t found in the knowledge of "’How’ He did these wonders".  It’s in our faith’s insight into the fact "’that’ He did these wonders".  The "how" may tantalize us, but the "that" of Jesus as our Savior has saved us.  We can remember the conversation of the women on their way to the tomb on Easter Sunday morning, "Who will roll the stone away?" (Mark 16:3), of Mary at the sight of the one she believed to be the gardener, "If you took him away, tell me where you laid him” (John 20:15).  These questions and doubts are erased by the conviction ‘that’ Jesus is raised and He goes before them.  May we find in this Scripture, the encouragement to place our faith in what God, through Jesus, does for us daily; and in the conviction that God will continue to heal, comfort and nourish us forever.

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