Sunday Scripture Reflection: Jesus, A Leper, and Divine Power (Or, God is Not Like the Super Bowl)

Today’s Gospel reading from Mark used to strike me as just one variation on a common theme of Jesus’ ministry: person is sick, Jesus feels bad, Jesus cures person, Jesus tells person not to say anything for some reason (fear of the paparazzi, perhaps), person tells everyone anyway. Rinse and repeat.

But then, this happened: When I lived in Wisconsin, I taught a fourth grade religious ed class. I was blessed with a great group of kids. My favorites were a pair of twins I’ll call Sammie and Alex. Sammie had Type I diabetes and a host of other health problems. She had been through more than 20 surgeries by the time she was 10 years old. She was about a foot shorter than the other kids, walked slowly, and had a slight speech impediment. She is incredibly sweet with a streak of sass.

Her brother Alex is a devoted caretaker, and genuinely seemed to enjoy coming to Tuesday night religious ed, which means he is likely bound for sainthood.

One night, when we were talking about the way Jesus cared for the sick and downtrodden, I broke the class up into groups and gave them different Scripture passages to act out. Sammie’s group was assigned this passage from Mark. Somebody had to play the part of Jesus. With a sensitivity surprising for 4th graders, the group suggested Sammie should take on the role. She did, with gusto, winning a nice round of applause for a convincing: “BE MADE CLEAN!”

Sammie was clearly the class’ best fill-in for Jesus: Jesus the wounded healer who says to the broken – to all of us – I know what it’s like to suffer and I will be with you in the muck.

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Easter Thursday: Tornadoes?

When Mike presented our Easter week project, he promised we’d post a daily reminder of the resurrection through the Octave of Easter. It feels forced and inauthentic to name signs of resurrection when the death toll from tornadoes in the South pushed three hundred.

So all I have is a few thoughts and a prayer.

Mike mentioned that his pastor, Fr. Vince, said that while the world may be in Good Friday, we are an Easter people.

What does it mean to be an Easter people while this kind of devastation happens?

It means something different for folks who are living the trauma then it does for those of us who are safely in front of computers and TVs, as we click through pictures of demolished neighborhoods and gasp at Twister-like footage.

I have no idea what it means, for them or for us. I do know that especially in the midst of something like this, we can’t dismiss the question: How do we be an Easter people, when the world is in Good Friday?

Loving God,

Embrace all who have been killed or injured this week by tornadoes in the South.

Send your peace to those whose family, friends,

homes, neighborhoods, and workplaces

have been ripped away.

Root compassion deep in our hearts,

that we will listen and answer our call

to reach out to those who we can help–

through generous giving

acts of service

intentional time for prayer.

Make clear what it means for each of us to live Easter in a Good Friday world.

Be with us in the tension

as we wrestle with how there could be a God like you,

who died for us that we might be free–

and yet still allows us to live

in the bondage of natural disaster and moral evil.

Give us the grace to transform the world into your kingdom,

by living out the call to be who we really are–

so that the light of your resurrection

might slowly dawn on the darkness of Good Friday.

Amen.


Scripture Reflection 2.0: First Sunday of Lent (Japan, Suffering, and an All-Loving God)

Our first two readings on the power of sin and death rang terribly true today, as the world was rocked by another unfathomable natural disaster this weekend. The images and stories coming from Japan are surreal, sickening, and inexplicable. In times like these, people of faith — like me, for one — often return to the same questions, like “Why?” and “Where’s God in all of this?” and “Why didn’t God stop the tsunami, steer it back to sea or something, if he’s all-loving and all-powerful?” Indeed, the existence of evil in world, especially grave natural evil like earthquakes and disease (as opposed to moral evil, which is directly caused by humans), is one of the most popular arguments against the existence of God. Heck, it’s the most popular argument my skeptical self makes against my believing self, and on weekends like this one, it almost seizes the upper hand.

If there were easy answers, we’d have come up with them a long time ago. So instead of answers, the following (after the jump) is a sampling of some interesting folks struggling with the problem in their own ways.

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